delta air lines

Archive for September, 2013

DFW IAH newletter Sept. 29 2013

YOU DID NOT THINK THE COWBOYS WOULD WIN 2 IN A ROW WOULD YOU?

IN TRYING TO REACH KEITH PARDEW BY PHONE TODAY HE WAS IN NORTH CAROLINA SEEING HIS DAD.

KEITH IS ANOTHER ONE THAT KNOWS HOW TO PICK THE FLIGHTS ON STANDBY FLYING. WHAT LITTLE SKILL I EVER HAD ON THIS MATTER IS COMPLETELY GONE WHEN NOT FLYING IN THE LAST 10 YEARS TIME.

THE CAPT. THAT PASSED AWAY THIS WEEK ENROUTE FROM HOUSTON TO SEATTLE HAD THE BEST OF CARE BUT IT WAS NOT GOOD ENOUGH. THEY BROUGHT THE PLANE DOWN AT BOISE, IDAHO.

I STILL REMEMBER WHEN THIS HAPPEN ON BRANIFF FROM HAWAII TO DALLAS. HIS WIFE WAS F/A CORDINATOR AND HOW THEY KEPT IT FROM HER I NOT KNOW. THIS WAS WHAT THEY CALLED THE BIG ORANGE BIRD WHICH WAS A 747.

“LIVE SO THAT YOUR FRIENDS CAN DEFEND YOU BUT NEVER HAVE TO”.

“HOW IS IT THAT WE PUT A MAN ON THE MOON BEFORE WE FIGURED OUT IT WOULD BE A GOOD IDEA TO PUT WHEELS ON LUGGAGE.”

DELTA VAN

SAYONARA

Norman Vanlaningham

VN POWs – 40 years later

> http://www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=LemllfcAY8A&sns=em
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Pearl Harbor: after the tours have gone.

Pearl Harbor: after the tours have gone.

REMINGTON 870

Today I swung my front door wide open and placed my Remington 870 right in the doorway. I left 6 shells beside it, then left it alone and went about my business.

While I was gone, the mailman delivered my mail, the neighbor boy across the street mowed the yard, a girl walked her dog down the street, and quite a few cars stopped at the stop sign near the front of our house.

After about an hour, I checked on the gun. It was still sitting there, right where I had left it. It hadn’t moved itself outside. It certainly hadn’t killed anyone, even with the numerous opportunities it had been presented to do so. In fact, it hadn’t even loaded itself.

Well, you can imagine my surprise, with all the media hype about how dangerous guns are and how they kill people.

Either the media is wrong or I’m in possession of the

laziest gun in the world.

Well, I’m off to check on my spoons…. I hear they’re

making people fat.

Classic!!! Norman Rockwell’s ‘People’s Expressions’

‘People’s Expressions’

Here are forty-eight years of Norman Rockwell’s famous paintings of ‘People’s Expressions’— if these paintings don’t give you one of the greatest emotional trips you’ve had in the past few years, I would be very surprised. Just sit back, reminisce and enjoy.

http://www.kingsacademy.com/mhodges/11_Western-Art/27_Popular_Modern-Realism/Rockwell/Rockwell.htm

http://www.kingsacademy.com/mhodges/11_Western-Art/27_Popular_Modern-Realism/Rockwell/Rockwell.htm

Utah Flight Attendant

THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE
PUBLISHED: SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 11:16AM
UPDATED: SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 04:05PM
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Steve Griffin | The Salt Lake Tribune Longtime Delta Air Lines flight steward, Perry de Vlugt, has turned his seven-room basement in Salt Lake City into a museum of old Delta memorabilia, complete with a lavatory from an old plane. Friday, Sept. 20, 2013

The largest collection of Delta Air Lines memorabilia this side of the company’s headquarters in Atlanta is not found inside a museum or proudly displayed at the Salt Lake International Airport.

Instead, it resides in the basement of veteran Delta flight steward Perry de Vlugt’s traditional bungalow home in Salt Lake City.

If you have flown Delta in the past few years, there is a good chance you might have seen de Vlugt.

Though the safety video fliers watch before taking off changed about a year ago, the steward demonstrated how to put a yellow life vest on and off in a presentation seen by thousands for about five years. At the end of the video, his front teeth actually sparkled.

That video, of course, is part of de Vlugt’s amazing collection that takes up about 1,000 square feet of basement space. The special screen where it can be watched is guarded by a cutout of former Delta and Western Air Lines CEO Jerry Grinstein. A red Delta Help Desk phone stands nearby.

This isn’t just a collection of a few hundred random pieces. It includes thousands of items including playing cards, posters, models of Delta planes, mannequins dressed in old uniforms, working leather seats taken from first class of a defunct airplane, parts of overhead luggage bins and even four signs of the famous Delta “widget” logo that were once part of the Delta Center, now Energy Solutions Arena.

It is well organized and lovingly maintained, with not a speck of dust to be seen.

Perhaps the most impressive part of the collection is what de Vlugt has done with the downstairs bathroom. He has turned it into a larger version of a typical airplane lavatory complete with logo soap, stainless steel towel dispensers, and pretty much everything you would see in a jet airliner bathroom.

De Vlugt has worked for Delta for 29 years, six on the ground working in reservations and the past 23 flying. He came to Salt Lake when Delta merged with Western Air Lines, but his roots in the industry date back to his childhood.

“I started collecting as a kid,” he said. “I had relatives who worked for KLM. Whenever we visited, they had decks of cards, post cards and airplane models. I had a passion for these things. So I started collecting airline memorabilia.”

His focus shifted to Delta and its brand when he began working for the company. Collecting became a personal and professional hobby. De Vlugt thinks his collection is second only to the Delta Heritage Museum in Atlanta.

The collection isn’t open to the public, though de Vlugt loves showing it off to friends, collectors and airline executives.

“I do tours,” he said. “Most of the people who come are co-workers or other employees … I like to share it with people. It’s a unique collection. I feel that as big as our company is in Utah, it’s kind of a unique addition to our business to incorporate the history of the company.”

That is especially true this year because Delta, which originally began as the nation’s first domestic crop dusting company in the southern United States, will soon celebrate its 85th anniversary as a passenger carrier.

De Vlugt works hard to expand his collection. He is always on the lookout for new promotional items that Delta issues and scans eBay on almost a daily basis in search of something new. He also attends the annual Airliners International trade show once a year where airline collectable enthusiasts gather.

“Now I’m very particular,” he said. “I’ve pretty much seen everything there is to see.”

There is little hint of the Delta collection on the main floor of de Vlugt’s home. He does use two beverage carts in his kitchen for recycling and there are some galley carrier modules next to the fridge.

The magic comes when you walk down the basement stairs.

One wall is filled with models of the different Delta planes, a collection that shows the evolution of the company’s iconic symbol known as the widget.

The detail is amazing and includes items such as “Just Plane Cookies,” Delta beluga caviar once used in first class flights across the ocean, mini bottles, an oxygen bottle and mask, megaphone, pins, security cards, coffee mugs, Styrofoam cups with logos, luggage, carriers for international cargo documents, a runway light, torches used to direct planes into jetways, pencils, Thermoses, an old designated smoking sign and kids games.

There is even a can of spray paint containing a special Delta Air Lines color of blue.

Add to that dozens of iconic promotional posters including one each from the Salt Lake and Atlanta Olympic Games and another of the Statue of Liberty in the foreground with the World Trade Center twin towers in the back, and this could be a world class museum.

wharton@sltrib.com

Twitter: @tribtomwharton

History of the Delta Air Lines “Widget” Logo

It is intended to reflect the company’s roots in the Mississippi River Delta Region in Monroe, La.

The Greek letter “Delta” influenced the shape of the company’s symbol.

The inside of the triangle looks like the wings and tail of a plane flying overhead.

The triangle points to the sky where the company’s planes fly and represents the pinnacle of professional achievement.

The white “V” is the swept wing of a jet.

The flat base is the solid foundation of Delta Air Lines.

The red is for the flame of leadership that drives it upward.

Source: Delta Air Lines

WALK THE DOG

WALKING THE DOG

Reportedly, a woman was flying from Seattle to San Francisco.

Unexpectedly, the plane was diverted to Sacramento along the way.

The flight attendant explained that there would be a delay, and if the passengers wanted to get off the aircraft the plane would re-board in 50 minutes..

Everybody got off the plane except one lady who was blind.

A man had noticed her as he walked by and could tell the lady was blind because her guide dog lay quietly underneath the seats in front of her throughout the entire flight..

He could also tell she had flown this very flight before because the pilot approached her, and calling her by name, said, “Kathy, we are in Sacramento for almost an hour. Would you like to get off and stretch your legs?”

The blind lady said, “No thanks, but maybe Buddy would like to stretch his legs.”

Picture this:

All the people in the gate area came to a complete stand still when they looked up and saw the pilot walk off the plane with a guide dog for the blind!

Even worse, the pilot was wearing sunglasses !

People scattered.

They not only tried to change planes,

But they were trying to change airlines!

True story….. Have a great day and remember…..

THINGS AREN’T ALWAYS AS THEY APPEAR.

A DAY WITHOUT LAUGHTER IS A DAY WASTED. securedownload1

Moving to Detroit

Bob was sitting on the plane waiting to fly to Detroit, when a guy took the seat beside him. The guy was an emotional wreck, pale, hands shaking, moaning in fear.

“What’s the matter?” Bob asked.

“I’ve been transferred to Detroit – I’ve heard the people are crazy there. They’ve got lots of shootings, gangs, race riots, drugs, poor public schools, and the highest crime rate in the nation.”

Bob replied, “I’ve lived in Detroit all my life. It’s not as bad as the media says. Find a nice home, go to work, mind your own business, and enroll your kids in a nice private school. It’s as safe a place as anywhere in the world.”

The guy relaxed and stopped shaking and said, “Oh, thank you. I’ve been worried to death. But if you live there and say it’s OK, I’ll take your word for it. What do you do for a living?”

“I’m a tail gunner on a Budweiser truck.”securedownload

CAPT DAVE RENO

IN TALKING WITH MRS. RENO DAVE IS STILL IN A DALLAS HOSPITAL A WEEK HERE AFTER SURGERY. IS IN TREATMENTS AT THIS TIME.

AM SURE HE LIKE TO HEAR FROM OLD DELTA FRIENDS. WE KNOW HE REALLY DOES MISS THE GOLF COURSE.

4618 GULFSTREAM DR.

DALLAS, TEXAS 75234

DELTA VAN

Norman Vanlaningham

Airplane Catalog

Don’t get started reading unless you don’t have anything else to do today, tomorrow, next week, etc.

Lots of good stuff here.

AVIATION BUFFS

Even if you are not into this you might want to pass this

treasure trove on to others who are.

• Aviation Pioneers

• World War I Aces

• Hall of Fame of the Air

• WW2 European Theater (ETO)

• WW2 Pacific Theater (PTO)

• WW2 US Marine Corps

• WW2 US Navy Aces

• WW2 Mediterranean (MTO)

• WW2 German Aces

• Korean War Aces

• Russian Aces

• Vietnam Era Aces

• Airplanes

• World War I Planes

• 1930s Aircraft photos

• WW2 Fighters

• WW2 Bombers

• WW2 German Planes

• WW2 Airplane Pictures

• History of Airplanes blog

• Nose Art

• Postwar Jets

• World War Two

• WW2 Facts and Firsts

• WW2 Medals

• WW2 Museums

• WW2 Pictures

• WW2 Ships

• WW2 Weapons

This is unbelievable click on any link for WW2 Information. Great pic of planes


Tim McDonald


Larry Thomas Lanning