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A new fellowship program seeks to draw more Black students into space

Posted on October 7, 2020 by Xordac Prime
A woman excepts an award from a man in factory-style work clothes.

Enlarge / Patti Grace Smith was an important figure in the commercial space industry. (credit: Patti Grace Smith Fellowship)

Alvin Drew remembers becoming entranced with airplanes a few months before his fifth birthday. In the fall of 1967, he went to the airport in Baltimore to see his father off on a business trip. In those simpler times, he recalls walking outside to watch the takeoff from a designated area on the runway.

Four-year-olds are into all things big and loud, and seeing an airplane come racing down the runway, popping a wheelie, and then taking off was just about the coolest thing he could imagine. His mom and grandmother, both educators, noted his interest and bought him model airplanes. This nurtured a budding interest in flying and later becoming an astronaut.

“They saw a smoldering fire of curiosity inside me,” Drew said. “They went out and threw as much gasoline on the fire as possible.”

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Source: Ars Technica – A new fellowship program seeks to draw more Black students into space

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