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For immediate release:
October 3, 2000

CONTACT:

Mary Ann Hill
(781) 283-2373

 

WELLESLEY COLLEGE ALUMNA
TO PILOT SPACE SHUTTLE


WELLESLEY, Mass. -- When the space shuttle Discovery blasts off this month, Wellesley College will have special reason to cheer. Pamela A. Melroy, an alumna from the class of 1983 and the third US woman in the history of NASA to be the shuttle's pilot\, will be at the helm, and she will be carrying a blue Wellesley pennant as a memento. (The first female pilot was Eileen Collins and the second was Susan Still.)

"When I blast off for my first shuttle mission . . .I will be thrilled to be Wellesley's first (but not last!) daughter in space," Melroy wrote to President Diana Chapman Walsh last spring. "As a Wellesley alumna, I am extremely proud of my alma mater and grateful for the fantastic education and wonderful friends and mentors that Wellesley has given to me."

Photo courtesy of NASA

The blue felt pennant that will accompany Melroy has its own bit of history, having been taken by two teams of Wellesley physics students conducting experiments in zero-gravity environments as part of a NASA program.

Three members of Wellesley's astronomy faculty, Wendy Bauer, Richard French, and Jeff Regester, will travel to Florida to watch Melroy's launch. Both Bauer and French taught Melroy during her undergraduate years. Alumnae in Florida and in Melroy's hometown of Rochester, New York, plan to gather for mini-reunions to watch the launch.

Wellesley students, faculty, and staff will gather on campus for a special viewing of the launch when NASA gives the green light. (For up-to-the-minute launch information, visit: www.nasa.gov.)

Melroy double-majored in physics and astronomy at Wellesley and went on to earn a master's degree in earth, atmospheric and planetary sciences from MIT. A lieutenant colonel in the Air Force, she has logged over 4,000 hours of flight time in more than 45 different aircraft. She was selected for the astronaut program from a field of over 4,000 applicants to fill one of 20 openings in the entering class in 1994.

Melroy returned to her alma mater in 1998 to deliver the commencement address. She spoke of her dream, at age 11, to be an astronaut, and lauded the "help toward our dreams Wellesley gives all of us. The environment here gives women a place to dream without being restricted or blinded by culturally generated limits. . . . I look forward to seeing our beautiful campus from space, and returning this [pennant] afterwards, and to share the story of my experience."

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