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    <subfield code="a">Shetterly, Margot Lee.</subfield>
    <subfield code="t">Hidden figures.</subfield>
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    <subfield code="a">Hidden figures :</subfield>
    <subfield code="b">the untold true story of four African-American women who helped launch our nation into space /</subfield>
    <subfield code="c">Margot Lee Shetterly.</subfield>
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    <subfield code="a">First edition.</subfield>
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    <subfield code="b">Harper, An Imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, </subfield>
    <subfield code="c">[2016]</subfield>
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    <subfield code="c">©2016.</subfield>
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    <subfield code="a">231 pages :</subfield>
    <subfield code="b">illustrations ;</subfield>
    <subfield code="c">22 cm.</subfield>
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    <subfield code="a">Includes bibliographical references (pages 217-218) and index.</subfield>
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    <subfield code="a">Setting the scene -- A door opens -- Mobilization -- A new Beginning -- The double V -- The "colored" computers -- War birds -- The duration -- Breaking barriers -- No limits -- The area rule -- An exceptional mind -- Turbulence -- Progress -- Young, gifted, and black -- What a difference a day makes -- Writing the textbook on space -- With all deliberate speed -- Model behavior -- Degrees of freedom -- Out of the past, the future -- America is for everybody -- One small step.</subfield>
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    <subfield code="a">Before John Glenn orbited the Earth or Neil Armstrong walked on the moon, a group of professionals worked as "Human Computers," calculating the flight paths that would enable these historic achievements. Among these were a coterie of bright, talented African-American women. Segregated from their white counterparts by Jim Crow laws, these "colored computers," as they were known, used slide rules, adding machines, and pencil and paper to support America's fledgling aeronautics industry, and helped write the equations that would launch rockets, and astronauts, into space. Drawing on the oral histories of scores of these "computers," personal recollections, interviews with NASA executives and engineers, archival documents, correspondence, and reporting from the era, Hidden Figures recalls America's greatest adventure and NASA's groundbreaking successes through the experiences of five spunky, courageous, intelligent, determined, and patriotic women: Dorothy Vaughan, Mary Jackson, Katherine Johnson, Christine Darden, and Gloria Champine. Moving from World War II through NASA's golden age, touching on the civil rights era, the Space Race, the Cold War, and the women's rights movement, Hidden Figures interweaves a history of scientific achievement and technological innovation with the intimate stories of five women whose work forever changed the world -- and whose lives show how out of one of America's most painful histories came one of its proudest moments.</subfield>
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    <subfield code="a">Space race.</subfield>
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    <subfield code="a">Women mathematicians.</subfield>
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    <subfield code="a">African American women.</subfield>
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