Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Dixie Tighe" in English language version.
Another press representative who detailed the Hauptmann story was Dixie Tighe. Dixie, working for International News Service {I.N.S.), and Evelyn Shuler, of the Philadelphia Ledger, were ·the only women who wrote the lead stories on the trial for their respective employers. However, Dixie's real specialty was of another sort; her real flair was in the foreign correspondence field.
Correspondence with Hobby may also be found in the papers of high-ranking Air Force officer and aviation pioneer Ira Eaker, who supported the training of women pilots; who successfully lobbied Hobby and his superiors for a WAC Company to be assigned to his command, first in England and later near the front in Italy; and, who, despite his own reservations, put before his commanders the request of Dixie Tighe, a woman war correspondent who wanted to go on a bomber mission as her male counterparts had.
However, when American women reporters Betty Gaskill and Dixie Tighe and Briton Judy Barden requested to go, Eisenhower's press aide informed them that 'the sharp jolt of the exploding parachute canopy' could damage their ''delicate female apparatus,'' causing vaginal bleeding.'
Correspondence with Hobby may also be found in the papers of high-ranking Air Force officer and aviation pioneer Ira Eaker, who supported the training of women pilots; who successfully lobbied Hobby and his superiors for a WAC Company to be assigned to his command, first in England and later near the front in Italy; and, who, despite his own reservations, put before his commanders the request of Dixie Tighe, a woman war correspondent who wanted to go on a bomber mission as her male counterparts had.
Another press representative who detailed the Hauptmann story was Dixie Tighe. Dixie, working for International News Service {I.N.S.), and Evelyn Shuler, of the Philadelphia Ledger, were ·the only women who wrote the lead stories on the trial for their respective employers. However, Dixie's real specialty was of another sort; her real flair was in the foreign correspondence field.
However, when American women reporters Betty Gaskill and Dixie Tighe and Briton Judy Barden requested to go, Eisenhower's press aide informed them that 'the sharp jolt of the exploding parachute canopy' could damage their ''delicate female apparatus,'' causing vaginal bleeding.'