Mary Jean Logan Sweet, from Ruthven, Iowa and a student at Morningside College, was chosen along with nearly 100 other college women to participate in the Curtiss-Wright Engineering Cadette Program at Iowa State College (University) in 1943. Sponsored by the Curtiss-Wright Corporation, this was a nation-wide program designed to ease wartime labor shortages, and also included more than 700 female students at Cornell University, Purdue University, University of Minnesota, Pennsylvania State College (University), Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and the University of Texas. The program at Iowa State was an intensive course in aeronautical engineering. The students received a certificate upon completion of the ten-month course (February to December 1943), and were then hired by the Curtiss-Wright Corporation for the duration of the Second World War. As they completed the course, the Curtiss-Wright Corporation paid for the students' room and board, and provided a salary of ten dollars per week. More than 90 percent of the participants graduated, and 75 percent joined the workforce. Sweet worked in the Materials and Processes Department in St. Louis for nine months before she left to teach school under emergency wartime certificate in her hometown. She married Homer C. Sweet, an electrical engineer, and together they raised five children. Mary Jean eventually went back to school and received her B.A. and M.A. (1974) in English from the University of Northern Iowa. She published a number of books related to the history of Cedar Falls, Iowa, and won several state and national poetry awards. She still resides in Cedar Falls, Iowa and continues to keep in contact with the other former Curtiss-Wright Cadettes.
From the description of Curtis-Wright Engineering Cadettes Records, 1938-2006. (Iowa State University). WorldCat record id: 77553993