Wasn’t there a movie made about three black “girls” who worked for NASA in the 1960’s?
Venomtech announces new drug development collaboration with Charles River
News Medical Sciences ^ | April 12, 2022 | Danielle Ellis
Posted on 4/13/2022, 7:16:53 PM by CheshireTheCat
Venomtech is collaborating with Charles River Laboratories, International Inc. to help drug developers explore venom-derived compounds for a wide range of therapeutic targets. This newly formed collaboration will bring together Venomtech’s biology expertise and vast venom-derived peptide library, with Charles River’s drug development and screening knowhow, providing pharmaceutical manufacturers with a one-stop service to explore this unique natural resource. Millions of years of evolution have made venom-derived peptides highly specific, even for many of the hardest-to-hit drug targets. Venomtech’s Targeted-Venom Discovery Array™ (T-VDA™) libraries provide researchers with a straightforward solution to rapidly screen thousands of individual venom fragments, with each array specifically designed to maximise hits for a specific target. Through the new collaboration, Charles River will be able to use this innovative resource – closely supported by Venomtech – to accelerate its clients’ pipelines, addressing difficult therapeutic targets, uncovering new mechanisms of action and minimising off-target effects....
https://freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/4054822/posts?page=5#5
Wasn’t there a movie made about three black “girls” who worked for NASA in the 1960’s?
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yes but they were brilliant mathmeticians, unlike HRC
Yes, I can’t remember the name of it though.
“Wasn’t there a movie made about three black “girls” who worked for NASA in the 1960’s?”
The movie is “Hidden Figures”. Good movie.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt4846340/
I remember a film about a maths genius black girl that could solve differential calculus problems almost instantaneously.
Katherine Johnson: The Girl Who Loved to Count
In 1953, after years as a teacher and later as a stay-at-home mom, she began working for NASA's predecessor, the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, or NACA. The NACA had taken the unusual step of hiring women for the tedious and precise work of measuring and calculating the results of wind tunnel tests in 1935. In a time before the electronic computers we know today, these women had the job title of “computer.” During World War II, the NACA expanded this effort to include African-American women. The NACA was so pleased with the results that, unlike many organizations, they kept the women computers at work after the war. By 1953 the growing demands of early space research meant there were openings for African-American computers at Langley Research Center’s Guidance and Navigation Department – and Katherine Johnson found the perfect place to put her extraordinary mathematical skills to work.
As a computer, she calculated the trajectory for Alan Shepard, the first American in space. Even after NASA began using electronic computers, John Glenn requested that she personally recheck the calculations made by the new electronic computers before his flight aboard Friendship 7 – the mission on which he became the first American to orbit the Earth. She continued to work at NASA until 1986 combining her math talent with electronic computer skills. Her calculations proved as critical to the success of the Apollo Moon landing program and the start of the Space Shuttle program, as they did to those first steps on the country's journey into space.