AIR BAHAMA HISTORY BY FRED COX | CREW FRIENDSHIP REUNION WEBSITE FIRST PUBLISHED JULY 16, 2000 |
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Moos Pauletto My wonderful life as a flight attendant for International Air Bahama. ![]() Yvette ![]() photo no 2 - who are the persons on the photo? |
Yvette lives in beautiful Luxembourg and attended the Luxembourg reunion at the Hotel Italia in July 2000 as well as the Dream Come True Reunion in Nassau July 2006! ![]() photo no 1 - Barbara Bethel to the left and Beverly McKinney to the right and who is the person in center? (is it Joyce Varga Petrina?) (Tks for identifying, Beverly KcKinney!) ![]() Carnetha Carew and Marina Butler Mcclean ![]() |
> ![]() Allowed to feed crew in flight ... help the poor and needy ... long hours and sore feet ... Florence Nightingale alias F/A Beverly McKinney helping Diane Wildgoose to make it for landing! ![]() Barbara Bethel scurries for salvation at layover ... no more passengers in sight for at least 24 hours FAA rules. |
![]() Artie Bunch in the observerīs seat with captain? ![]() photo no 6 - please name pilot! ![]() photo no 7 - who is the handsome man? |
![]() Charming Bunch! ![]() Captain Richard Rogers and ? ![]() |
![]() photo no 12 ![]() Brownie - or Ferdinand the Ferocious? ![]() Got any coffee left? Long hours in the cockpit at nightflights between Nassau and Luxembourg. Brownie cathcing up on the news. |
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International Air Bahama places great demands on its cabin crew. Each cabin crew member is responsible for giving our passengers a good inflight experience. Furthermore, the cabin crew is responsible for passenger safety and comfort, which requires a sense of responsibility, collaborative skills and flexibility. As a cabin attendant you must be able to give first aid and prevent and handle any critical situation. You should have a desire to provide a good and personal service and be responsive to passenger requests and needs. You will be working at all hours of the day, often under time pressure and subject to high work requirements. |
![]() Margie Ave Torres, training instructor |
![]() Cabin crew check flight with secret agent Thelma Otto and Yvette |
![]() Flight attendants in the making at flight school - who are they? |
![]() abandoned cabin ... waiting for boarding. |
Emergency trainingIATA REGULATIONSMayday mayday - anybody out there? Emergency training, ditching on water |
![]() ... he he ... itīs not for real, weīre only testing lifevests on little innocent children like you ... |
![]() Maybe if you came into the water we would manage better ... I feel the asphyxia coming on ... I fear Iīm drowning ... only mouth to mouth resuscitation will help now ... |
![]() Help! I will be sinking ... I canīt swim ... |
![]() Whatīs the man saying? |
"Another issue is getting yourself and your passengers into the raft. With calm seas, warm water, and no injuries, itīs usually no problem. Some rafts are self-ballasted and have built-in ladders, making them easier to enter. Statistics show that most ditchings are successful. By one count, 88 percent of all ditchings were survived. Other statistics show a 92-percent successful egress rate." Cited from Airplane owners and pilots association. |