Panel is set to discuss women in engineering

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A woman and her baby in Zambia, Africa near the capital city Lusaka where engineer Dorothy Timian-Palmer has worked to help design a method to secure clean water.
A woman and her baby in Zambia, Africa near the capital city Lusaka where engineer Dorothy Timian-Palmer has worked to help design a method to secure clean water.

The son of engineers Dorothy Timian-Palmer and Mark Palmer, Logan is sticking to family traditions.

“It helped that both of my parents are engineers, but that isn’t the whole story of why I was drawn to the profession,” he said. “I’ve got a very scientific mind, and I’m very detail-oriented. But I always thought I was going to be a writer or something. When I went to school for engineering, all my friends thought I was crazy. You don’t need to be completely math oriented to be a great engineer, other skills are important too.”

Logan and Dorothy, president and chief operating officer of Vidler Water Co., will be among five panelists featured in a discussion about women in engineering at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Carson City Library. The panel discussion will be presented to coincide with the library’s traveling exhibit, “Discover Tech: Engineers Make a World of Difference,” supported by the National Science Foundation.

Dorothy Palmer worked with Seattle group of physicians and engineers who returned this month from a project focused on bringing a clean water supply to a slum outside of Zambia, Africa, near the capital of Lusaka.

“Within this slum of approximately 70,000 people, the majority of them are children who are orphans and HIV-positive,” she said. “The folks with whom I serve on the board discovered that without sanitary sewer and clean drinking supply, there is no chance to cure intestinal problems. We are working on finding a solution to a very pressing problem.”

Panelists will include representatives from the public and private sectors. Other presenters are Megan Suter, general EIT focused on land development from Minden-based R.O. Anderson Engineering; Maria Maness, ADA coordinator for the Nevada Department of Transportation; and Xuan Wang, transportation modeling program manager for the Regional Transportation Commission of Washoe County.

Discover Tech, scheduled to visit nine public libraries throughout the U.S., is a part of the STAR Library Education Network.

The exhibit will remain at the library through May 24 during regular library hours. Find the full list of events is at www.discovertechcarson.com

 Source – Nevada Appeal

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