Showing posts with label Topic Tuesday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Topic Tuesday. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Air India's All-Female Boeing 777 crew takes to the skies to mark the annual feminism festival

[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="500.0"]  Full flight: The Air India's all women flight AI173 is set to mark International Women's Day (photo credit: Air India)  Full flight: The Air India's all women flight AI173 is set to mark International Women's Day (photo credit: Air India) [/caption]


"The flight is a symbol of women empowerment and it will encourage women to step out of their comfort zone and succeed in male-dominated arenas too," pilot Ramya Kirti Gupta told broadcaster NDTV.

International Women’s Day is being marked around the world on Tuesday, but it'll also be noted in the skies thanks to Air India.

The airline is operating its first-ever all-women crew flight from Delhi to San Francisco.

Flight AI 173 also features the longest ever women-only flight crew, covering a total distance of 14,600kms in 17 hours.

Captain Kshamta Bajpayee and Captain Shubani Singh are heading up the crew of females on the Boeing 777-LR, and the airline has received praise for its efforts.

The four pilots and 10 cabin crew took off from Delhi on Sunday and will return on March 8.

Ten things to know about International Women's Day:

1. While International Women's Day is now largely aimed at inspiring women across the world and celebrating their achievements, its roots are in movements campaigning for better pay and voting rights.

2. The first National Women’s Day was marked on 28 February 1909 in the United States after a declaration by the Socialist Party of America.

3. During an International Conference of Working Women in Copenhagen the following year, Clara Zetkin, leader of the 'Women's Office' for the Social Democratic Party in Germany, suggested the idea of an International Women's Day.

She proposed that every year in every country there should be a celebration on the same day. The idea was met with unanimous approval.

4. 1911 saw IWD honoured for the first time in Austria, Denmark, Germany and Switzerland on March 19. Over a million people attended rallies campaigning for women's rights to work, vote, be trained, to hold public office and end discrimination.

5. On the eve of World War I campaigning for peace, Russian women observed their first International Women's Day on the last Sunday in February 1913. In 1965, it was declared as a non working day in the USSR.

6. International Women's Day was transferred to 8 March that same year and has remained the global date for the event ever since.

7. In 1975, the United Nations gave official sanction to International Women's Day and began sponsoring it.

8. The United States now designates the whole month of March as 'Women's History Month'.

9. IWD is also an official holiday in 15 countries including China, Ukraine and Vietnam.

10. Over the past few years Google have marked the occasion with a “Google Doodle”, changing their logo on the search engine’s homepage to reflect the occasion. Sky News are marking today's 100th International Women's Day with an all female line-up.

Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Janet Harmon Bragg: Flying in the Face of Convention

“I’m not afraid of tomorrow because I’ve seen yesterday, and today is beautiful.”- Janet Harmon Bragg.



[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="980.0"] Janet Bragg (African American Registry) Janet Bragg (African American Registry) [/caption]


It was a normal day in 1940s Chicago when a young black woman disembarked the test plane to receive her pilot’s license. There was nothing to distinguish this credential from the many issued to aspiring aviators before it, yet its recipient was not a normal person. This was Janet Harmon's second time testing for a pilot’s license and her groundbreaking success was the culmination of many years spent fighting against the current as an aspiring pilot who was both black and a woman.

Bragg lived a life of challenges and victories, and found herself a unique heroine of aviation by its end. She was a woman who truly embodied the spirit of the WASP although the ugly social realities of her time prevented her from joining the organization itself or even participate in medical army service despite her clear professional qualifications. Her story is one of indomitable will over obstacles, bravery in the face of harsh discrimination, and the poignant strength of looking beyond the horizon at a more inclusive future in a world where boundaries of convention were only beginning to inch forward on a long and continuing journey.

Bragg was born "Jane Nattie Harmon" on March 24, 1907 in Griffin, Georgia, the youngest of seven children of Samuel Harmon and Cordia Bates.  As a young woman, she pursued a nursing degree at Spelman Seminary (now Spelman College) in Atlanta. In her training at MacBicar hospital she was one of the two out of twelve students in her class to receive a registered nursing degree in 1929. After graduation she moved to Rockford, Illinois where she soon began work at Wilson Hospital.

One day in 1933, Bragg spotted a billboard depicting a bird’s nest and the phrase “Birds learn to fly. Why can’t you?” As she recalled in a 1989 interview with the Arizona Historical Society, her mind was drawn back to her childhood, when she had watched birds take flight outside and wished to do the same. Wasting no time, she enrolled at Aeronautical University in Chicago, receiving instruction from Cornelius Coffey and John C. Robinson in meteorology, aeronautics, and aircraft mechanics.

Although her classmates were black, Bragg once again found herself the odd one out as a only woman in a class full of men. However, it wasn’t long before being one of the few students with a job paid off and she was able to purchase her first plane for $600. Since the school owned no airplanes ,and was therefore not able to offer hands-on flight instruction, Bragg was able to earn a measure of respect from fellow students while collecting money from renting out her plane. Since black pilots were restricted from departing at airports used by whites, Bragg and a number of her classmates and instructors formed the Challenger Aero Club (later known as the National Airmen’s Association of America), purchased land, and built an airfield in the all-black town of Robbins, Illinois.



[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="1964.0"] Janet Bragg & relatives, 1937.  (Smithsonian) Janet Bragg & relatives, 1937.  (Smithsonian) [/caption]


Following her graduation from Aeronautical University, Bragg received her private pilot’s license. During the 1930s she wrote a bi-weekly column in the Chicago Defender under the name Janet Waterford and by 1939, along with several colleagues started the only Civilian Pilot Training Program for African Americans located outside of a college campus.

By 1943, as World War ll raged on, a white female student of Bragg’s suggested that she apply to Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP). To this end she met with Ethel Sheehy, the assistant to WASP head Jacqueline Cochran, who was surprised to discover Bragg’s race, noting “I’ve never interviewed a colored girl for flying.” To this Bragg simply replied “Well, we have plenty of them to fly.” Bragg was sent home without an interview, but with the faint hope that she would hear more from the organization. Any expectations she may have harbored were dashed several weeks later when she received a letter from Cochran herself, definitively rejecting Bragg because of her race. She went on to apply to the military nurse corps, who also rejected her on the grounds that their “colored quota” had already been filled.

Bragg then attended the Commercial Pilot Training Program at Tuskegee, Institute in Alabama as she worked toward achieving her license. Although she completed her written work, her efforts were hampered by rampant racism and sexism. Despite demonstrating that she was more than competent in the air and passed her flight test, Bragg’s instructor declared, “She gave me a ride I’d put up with any of your flight instructors. I’ve never given a colored girl a commercial pilot’s license, and I don’t intend to.”  Unwilling to accept defeat, Bragg took the examination again in Chicago and this time passed, becoming the first black woman to hold a commercial pilot’s license.



[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3PbK56TcTh8&w=420&h=315]

After her return to the windy city, Bragg and her brother purchased and opened a health care center for patients on welfare. She and her second husband Sumner, managed two nursing homes in Chicago until their retirement in 1972.

Even in retirement, Bragg’s life would continue to be colorful and shaped by her interest in aviation. In 1955, after befriending some Ethiopian students studying in the U.S., Bragg was invited to visit the country and meet Emperor Haile Selassie. Throughout the late 1970s she returned to Africa,  leading tour groups. She also volunteered with the Black Wings exhibit at the Pima Air and Space Museum in Tucson, where she lived. Bragg contributed to her community through participation in local organizations such as the Tucson Arizona Urban League, Habitat for Humanity, and the Adopt-a-Scholar program at Tucson’s Pima College.

In 1996, the Smithsonian Institution Press published Soaring Above Setbacks: The Autobiography of Janet Harmon Bragg, African American Aviator a book that allowed Bragg, with the assistance of author Marjorie M. Kriz, to finally chisel out a place for herself in the public consciousness as the pioneering and tenacious leader in aviation and race and gender advancement that she was.

Before her death in 1993, Janet Bragg finally experienced recognition of her achievements, receiving awards and appearance requests for aviation events around America. Her legacy lives on in all the young women who have followed in her footsteps, defying social norms to fulfill their dreams.

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Former Senior Enlisted Leaders From the Five Branches Come Together To Help Veterans!

by Jess Clackum



[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="500.0"] Jack L. Tilley, 12th Sergeant Major of the Army, Alford L. McMichael, 14th Sergeant Major, US Marine Corps, James L. Herdt, 9th Master Chief Petty Officer of the US Navy, Frederick J. Finch, 13th Chief Master Sergeant of the US Air Force, Vincent W. Patton III, 8th Master Chief Petty Officer of the Coast Guard. (Photo credit: Pinnacle Five, LLC) Jack L. Tilley, 12th Sergeant Major of the Army, Alford L. McMichael, 14th Sergeant Major, US Marine Corps, James L. Herdt, 9th Master Chief Petty Officer of the US Navy, Frederick J. Finch, 13th Chief Master Sergeant of the US Air Force, Vincent W. Patton III, 8th Master Chief Petty Officer of the Coast Guard. (Photo credit: Pinnacle Five, LLC) [/caption]


Pinnacle Five, LLC is a group of five senior enlisted military leaders dedicated to taking care of military veterans and their families.Pinnacle Five's leadership consists of five men with 165 years of combined military experience:

Their mission is to help veterans and their families transition to civilian life productively by educating the public about the value of hiring veterans and gaining corporate commitment to provide jobs, housing, and mentoring for veterans/families; serving as a bridge between the Veteran community and resources available to them.; and strengthening citizenship by connecting corporate support and veterans in educational outreach targeted to schools where we prepare kids to be citizens.

On the importance of their mission, Vince Patton says,

"The most important thing we can do is help Veterans realize their value in the commercial world.I can say from personal experience that one of the most important stages in the life of a service member is their transition out of uniform and into the civilian sector.

Business needs a seat at the table with Congress, the Departments of Labor, Veterans Affairs and Defense in delivering a responsive, innovative 21st Century solution to our transitioning service members.

Now we have an agenda. We've got to get inside the heads and hearts of Veterans and show them what they're worth. We have to help them translate the valor of their service to the ability to lead in their business lives and careers."

Check out the amazing work they do at pinnaclefive.com