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Coye, Beth F.: An examination of U.S. Navy policy options towards women line officers, in light of the status of American women or the future of the restricted unrestricted line officer, 1971 Aug 9
Student paper by Lt. Cdr. Beth Frances Coye in which she presented various perspectives relating to the role of women, the significant trends in theory and factual evidence related to the changing status for American women, and the special considerations which circumscribe the Navy's woman line officer program. In her findings, Coye ascertained that the role and status of the women line officer needed to be reevaluated by the Navy with a view towards eliminating problem areas and ambivalences wherever possible.
Examination of U.S. Navy policy options towards women line officers, in light of the status of American women or the future of the restricted unrestricted line officer, by Beth F. Coye
Photograph of woman working in airplane manufacture
Woman working in airplane manufacture, 1942 Oct
8x10 black and white photo. Caption reads: "Women work side by side with men in the engineering department of North American Aviation, Inc. at Inglewood, Calif. The young woman pictured above traces complicated drawings of the thousands of parts that go into a modern fighting plane. This plant produces the battle-tested B-25 ("Billy Mitchell") bomber, used in General Doolittle's raid on Tokyo, and the P-51 ("Mustang") fighter plane which was first brought into prominence by the British raid on Dieppe."