Luckily, the pilot offered her space in the cockpit. From the jump seat ... She stumbled upon a poster recruiting cabin crew and went for it, hoping it would expand her horizons.
An officer found the pilot “seated in the cockpit performing pre-flight checks," the incident report by airport police said. It said the pilot gave off ”a strong odor of what seemed to be ...
The U.S. Air Force will no longer teach its recruits about the Tuskegee Airmen, the more than 15,000 Black pilots, mechanics and cooks in the segregated Army of World War II, an official with the ...
The famed Black aviators included 450 pilots who fought overseas in segregated units during World War Two. Their success in combat helped pave the way for President Harry Truman's decision to ...
FILE - Tuskegee Airmen, from left, Audley Coulthurst of New York, William Johnson of Glen Cove, N.Y., Wilfred R. DeFour of New York, and Herbert C. Thorpe of Rome, N.Y., are honored by members of ...
Meanwhile, the Air Force had said earlier that it had removed training courses with videos of its Tuskegee Airmen and the Women Airforce Service Pilots, or WASPs, the female World War II pilots ...