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Monday, February 24, 2020

Pioneering NASA mathematician Katherine Johnson of ‘Hidden Figures’ fame has died at 101

HAMPTON, Va. (AP) — NASA says Katherine Johnson, a mathematician who worked on NASA’s early space missions and was portrayed in the film Hidden Figures, about pioneering black female aerospace workers, has died.

In a Monday morning tweet, the space agency said it celebrates her 101 years of life and her legacy of excellence and breaking down racial and social barriers.

Johnson was one of the so-called “computers” who calculated rocket trajectories and earth orbits by hand during NASA’s early years.

Until 1958, Johnson and other black women worked in a racially segregated computing unit at what is now called Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia. Their work was the focus of the Oscar-nominated 2016 film.

In 1961, Johnson worked on the first mission to carry an American into space. In 1962, she verified computer calculations that plotted John Glenn’s earth orbits.

At age 97, Johnson received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor.

Johnson focused on airplanes and other research at first. But her work at NASA’s Langley Research Center eventually shifted to Project Mercury, the nation’s first human space program.

“Our office computed all the (rocket) trajectories,” Johnson told The Virginian-Pilot newspaper in 2012. “You tell me when and where you want it to come down, and I will tell you where and when and how to launch it.”

In 1961, Johnson did trajectory analysis for Alan Shepard’s Freedom 7 Mission, the first to carry an American into space. The next year, she manually verified the calculations of a nascent NASA computer, an IBM 7090, which plotted John Glenn’s orbits around the planet.

The post Pioneering NASA mathematician Katherine Johnson of ‘Hidden Figures’ fame has died at 101 appeared first on TheGrio.



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The Oprah Winfrey Charitable Foundation Donates $5 Million to New Jersey After-School Program

Oprah Winfrey

The Oprah Winfrey Charitable Foundation has given a $5 million donation to  Pathways to College, a Newark, New Jersey-based and nationally-operated after school program that helps prepare students of color for a college education, according to NJ.com.

The program aims to expand the pipeline to college in underserved communities. The program also works toward:

  • Creating a nationwide, networked community of high-achieving primarily minority children.
  • Assisting these students, with their families, to become knowledgeable, attractive college applicants, students, and successful graduates.
  • Partnering with colleges, schools, and communities to provide ongoing, consistent encouragement and support to these children.
  • Building on the examples our students and teachers set, helping foster and support a school-wide cultural change that emphasizes academic and career achievement.

The founder of Pathways to College, Judith Griffin, received that important phone call last September from then-president of the Oprah Winfrey Charitable Foundation, Rebecca Sykes.

“Words cannot express how grateful we are for Ms. Winfrey’s support of Pathways to College,” Griffin said in a statement. “Ms. Winfrey’s extraordinary generosity will help us partner with an increasing number of schools that want our help and set in place the necessary plans to inform and involve local donors to help supply funding beyond what is possible for schools to absorb. We are deeply grateful to her.”

In a video, Winfrey said: “I celebrate and honor the work Pathways to College does in securing futures for young people who want to go to college. I am proud to sponsor and support all of these young people and their dreams for a better life through education.”



    from Black Enterprise https://ift.tt/2VjAASc

    The Oprah Winfrey Charitable Foundation Donates $5 Million to New Jersey After-School Program

    Oprah Winfrey

    The Oprah Winfrey Charitable Foundation has given a $5 million donation to  Pathways to College, a Newark, New Jersey-based and nationally-operated after school program that helps prepare students of color for a college education, according to NJ.com.

    The program aims to expand the pipeline to college in underserved communities. The program also works toward:

    • Creating a nationwide, networked community of high-achieving primarily minority children.
    • Assisting these students, with their families, to become knowledgeable, attractive college applicants, students, and successful graduates.
    • Partnering with colleges, schools, and communities to provide ongoing, consistent encouragement and support to these children.
    • Building on the examples our students and teachers set, helping foster and support a school-wide cultural change that emphasizes academic and career achievement.

    The founder of Pathways to College, Judith Griffin, received that important phone call last September from then-president of the Oprah Winfrey Charitable Foundation, Rebecca Sykes.

    “Words cannot express how grateful we are for Ms. Winfrey’s support of Pathways to College,” Griffin said in a statement. “Ms. Winfrey’s extraordinary generosity will help us partner with an increasing number of schools that want our help and set in place the necessary plans to inform and involve local donors to help supply funding beyond what is possible for schools to absorb. We are deeply grateful to her.”

    In a video, Winfrey said: “I celebrate and honor the work Pathways to College does in securing futures for young people who want to go to college. I am proud to sponsor and support all of these young people and their dreams for a better life through education.”



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      Katherine G. Johnson, the Groundbreaking NASA Mathematician Featured in Hidden Figures, Has Died at 101

      Katherine G. Johnson, the NASA mathematician who played a key role in helping America win the space race and whose story was featured in the 2016 film Hidden Figures, died Monday. She was 101 years old.

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