Pauline Beery taught chemistry in the
home economics program at Penn State beginning in 1919. In 1941, she was appointed director of the Ellen H. Richards Institute at the Pennsylvania State University. In 1950 her work on calcium, nutrition, and bone density measurement was recognized with a Francis P. Garvan Medal from the
American Chemical Society. While her main work was in nutrition and physiology, she was also concerned with textiles, detergents, and dyes. She was technical advisor to the Pennsylvania Laundry Owners Association, and helped to develop the standards code of the Pennsylvania Association of Cleaners and Dyers. Dr. Mack was prolific in publications during her Penn State years, with titles including
Chemistry Applied to Home and Economy (1926),
Stuff: The Science of Materials in the Service of Man (New York: Appleton, 1930), ''Colorfastness of Women's and Children's Wearing-Apparel Fabrics
(American Home Economics Association, 1942), and Calories Make a Difference: Report of Studies on Three Groups of Children'' (Sugar Research Foundation, 1949). She also created and edited "Chemistry Leaflet," a magazine published by the
Science Service. In her later years, she became dean of the College of Household Arts and Sciences at
Texas State College for Women, and built an exceptionally well-funded and well-regarded research program there during a decade as administrator (1952–1962). At age 70, she retired from administration to become a research director, working mainly on grants from
NASA to understand the ways
weightlessness might affect
bone density. Her work resulted in a diet used to mitigate those effects. She was the first woman to receive a
Silver Snoopy award for professional excellence. == Personal life ==