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  2. 40 Historical Pictures of Flight Attendants Throughout the ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/40-historical-photos...

    1930s. American Airways flight attendants Mae Bobeck, Agnes Nohava, Marie Allen, and Velma Maul are poised, each with her right hand on the guard rail, as they descend the boarding steps of an ...

  3. Jump seat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jump_seat

    Jump seats are found both in the utility areas of the passenger cabin for flight attendant use (required during takeoff and landing) and in the cockpit — officially termed auxiliary crew stations — for individuals not involved in operating the aircraft. Cockpit uses may include trainee pilots observing the flight crew, off-duty crew members ...

  4. 39 retro photos that reveal what it was like to be a flight ...

    www.aol.com/article/finance/2016/10/17/39-retro...

    As Travel and Leisure magazine previously reported, in the 1950s and 1960s, "the requirements [for becoming a flight attendant] were draconian: Barbie-doll height and weight standards, girdles and ...

  5. Aircrew - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aircrew

    Aircraft cabin crew members can consist of: . Purser or In-flight Service Manager or Cabin Services Director, is responsible for the cabin crew as a team leader.; Flight attendant or Cabin Crew, is the crew member responsible for the safety of passengers.

  6. Cockpit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cockpit

    Cockpit of an Airbus A319 during landing Cockpit of an IndiGo A320. A cockpit or flight deck [1] is the area, on the front part of an aircraft, spacecraft, or submersible, from which a pilot controls the vehicle. Cockpit of an Antonov An-124 Cockpit of an A380. Most Airbus cockpits are glass cockpits featuring fly-by-wire technology.

  7. She flew a record-breaking US flight, but it was kept secret ...

    www.aol.com/she-flew-record-breaking-us...

    Lynn Rippelmeyer started out as a flight attendant in 1972. A few years later, she was part of a record-breaking all-female crew and became the first woman to pilot a 747.

  8. Flight attendant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_attendant

    The number of flight attendants required on flights is mandated by each country's regulations. In the U.S., for light planes with 19 or fewer seats, or, if weighing more than 7,500 lb (3,400 kg), 9 or fewer seats, no flight attendant is needed; on larger aircraft, one flight attendant per 50 passenger seats is required. [28]

  9. A flight attendant was sucked out of a plane over Hawaii. Her ...

    www.aol.com/flight-attendant-sucked-plane-over...

    An FAA air traffic controller was seated in the observer seat in the cockpit, while flight attendants Michelle Honda and Jane Sato-Tomita completed the crew, along with 58-year-old Lansing ...