9:00 AM - Science How? Webinar - Reptile Discovery Center Virtual Tour with Kyle Miller from the National Zoo
10:05 AM - Science How? Webinar - Clouded Leopard Virtual Tour with Juan Rodriguez
11:15 AM - Science How? Webinar - Handing It to the Mammals: What Anatomy Reveals About Animal Adaptations
1:00 PM - Science How? Webinar - What Makes Fish so Fishy with Adela Roa-Varón
1:55 PM - Science How? Webinar - Cicadas and the Brood X Emergence
3:00 PM - Science How? Webinar - Explore How Dinosaurs Moved with Curator of Dinosauria and Paleontologist Matthew Carrano
5:00 PM - Science How? Webinar - DNA Barcoding with Sarah Luttrell
6:30 PM - South Carroll High School Graduation 2025
8:00 PM - Board of Education Meeting 6/11/2025
ShowID
3259
Event Date:
2/18/2022
Length:
00:29:32
Category:
Science
Producer
Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum
Project
STEM in 30
Comments
S2_E07 February 24, 2016 Before 1941, there weren’t any African American pilots in the United States armed forces. The Tuskegee Airmen changed that. With the United States’ entry into World War II imminent, the U.S. Army Air Corps (the predecessor to the U.S. Air Force) decided to offer training to African Americans as pilots and mechanics. Called the Tuskegee Airmen because they trained in Tuskegee, Alabama, these airmen made a pioneering contribution to the war and the subsequent drive to end racial segregation in the American military. This episode of STEM in 30 will look at the role African Americans played during the war and how World War II changed aviation history.
Schedule Information:
This show is not currently scheduled.
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