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31 votes
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On 8 March, 1910 Raymonde de Laroche became the world's first licensed female pilot
I don't really have any cool articles about de Laroche besides the Wikipedia page on her, but it is quite good and a shortish read, so very worthwhile. There is also this short article from the...
I don't really have any cool articles about de Laroche besides the Wikipedia page on her, but it is quite good and a shortish read, so very worthwhile. There is also this short article from the University of Houston, complete with a 3-minute audio version.
The week of 8 March is also International Women of Aviation Week, celebrating all the female aviators (people are getting away from using gender-specific words like aviatrix that weren't necessary in English anyway), including Jacqueline Cochran, the wartime head of Women Airforce Service Pilots in the U.S. and who would go on to be the first woman to break the sound barrier; Elizabeth "Bessie" Coleman, the first African-American and Native American woman aviator and presumably the first licensed female pilot of mixed race to participate in air races and barnstorming stunt shows across the U.S. and Europe; Leah Hing, the first Chinese-American female pilot and who started her own flight school after the Japanese invasion of Manchuria in 1931; among many other women past and present who are earning their pilot's license.
10 votes -
India is home to six visa temples where many NRIs got visa boons to live American Dream or work in other countries
2 votes -
Beyond the politics of nostalgia: What the fall of the steel industry can tell us about the future of America
16 votes -
How to build 300,000 airplanes in five years
9 votes -
Book review - A Fabulous Failure: The Clinton Presidency and the Transformation of American Capitalism by Nelson Lichtenstein and Judith Stein
4 votes -
A man plagiarized my work: Women, money, and the nation
19 votes -
Employees can be banned from wearing headscarves, top EU court rules
28 votes -
Hold the line - The short history of women switchboard operators
20 votes -
Eleven magic words
5 votes -
How factories were made safe
5 votes -
The abolition of work
13 votes -
The filing cabinet was critical to the information infrastructure of the 20th-century. Like most infrastructure, it was usually overlooked.
10 votes -
What is it like to work as a philosopher in South Korea?
1 vote -
The Church of Sweden has more female than male priests for the first time – a sign of huge strides for gender equality since women were first allowed to be ordained in 1960
8 votes -
How to keep teachers from leaving the profession
9 votes -
When workers stopped Seattle
6 votes -
A union fight at Marquette University
6 votes -
"How to do what you love": An essay on finding goals and discovering what things you really enjoy doing.
9 votes -
So I became a historian—Now I’m telling how it worked out
6 votes -
Economic update: The great American purge
6 votes