Monday, May 25, 2009

Unsung heroines of WWII finally get their due

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- From the time she was about 8 years old, Jane Tedeschi wanted to fly.

Jane Tedeschi when she was in the Women Airforce Service Pilot program.

Jane Tedeschi when she was in the Women Airforce Service Pilot program.

Click to view previous image
1 of 4
Click to view next image

"[Charles] Lindbergh was flying across the Atlantic, and a lot of other people were flying air races and things like that. It was very romantic," she said.

Flight was still relatively new in the 1920s and 1930s, and female pilots were few.

But Tedeschi was determined.

In 1941, she found a childhood friend who taught flying and started taking lessons. After the friend was sent off to war and the airport near her home in Bethesda, Maryland, was closed to private flying, she traveled about 40 miles to Frederick and spent nights on the floor of a farmhouse to continue her lessons.

Around the same time, Deanie Parrish was working in a bank in Avon Park, Florida, and kept seeing aviation students who were attending a flying school there.

"I asked an instructor 'Why can't I learn to fly,' and he didn't have an answer...so I decided to find out for myself."

Click here to read the rest of the article

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Still looking for the western feminists


"Despair can coarsen one's judgment. I knew enough about what Saddam Hussein and his talented son Uday were doing to women to want that regime toppled. The price of doing so might have seemed too high, but at least now, six years later, it is no longer official policy to rape a woman in front of her family. There may be unofficial forces still on the loose in Iraq who would like to do that, but the government no longer does it.

"Fighting the Taliban in Afghanistan still seems worth it when you have read about what the Taliban want to do with any woman who seeks an education, but it's easy to despair when you think of how hard it is to stop them. "

Read article in full here

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Marloes Horst - Russian Vogue by KT Auleta

Marloes rocks Miami Beach in this new editorial shot by KT Auleta for the June issue of Russian Vogue.



Neetu Chandra Looks Hot In Black Top

 Neetu Chandra

 Neetu Chandra

 Neetu Chandra

 Neetu Chandra

Recently, when actress Neetu Chandra (of Oye Lucky! Lucky Oye! fame) agreed to do a bold photo shoot for a men’s magazine, she hardly realised it would spark controversy and outrage from political affiliates creating some problems with the shoot.

Image Hosted by PicturePush - Photo Sharing  Neetu Chandra

 Neetu Chandra Image Hosted by PicturePush - Photo Sharing

Jessica Miller - i-D Iconic Woman

Jessica Miller shines in i-D's 300th issue as part of the "100 Iconic Women" story, shot by Kayt Jones in LA on April 16th.