Metropolitan Museum of Art Announces Fifth Avenue Renovation Plans

February 8, 2012 – 8:17 am |

The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York has unveiled plans for a comprehensive redesign of the four-block-long outdoor plaza that runs in front of its landmark Fifth Avenue façade, from 80th to 84th Streets in Manhattan. Rendering showing bird’s-eye view of proposed Fifth Avenue plaza redesign (image: OLIN) The plan also calls for the creation of new fountains—to replace the deteriorating ones that have been in use since they were built in the 1970s along with the existing plaza. The fountains will be ... Read More

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Museum of Flight Celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month with Sept. 25 Presentation by Two Women Pilots from South America

September 10, 2010 – 11:16 amNo Comment

Chilean Air Force’s first woman jet fighter pilot and Ecuadorian-born Boeing Flight Test Systems Operator share their experiences

SEATTLE – The Museum pays tribute to the legacy of Latin American women pilots with a special program on Sept. 25 featuring Chilean Air Force pilot Lt. Karina Miranda–the first women to fly fighter jets for the Chilean Air Force, and pilot Ruth Morlas–an Ecuadorian immigrant, flight instructor and Boeing Company engineer. Moderating the program is The Museum of Flight’s Senior Curator, Dan Hagedorn, a renowned expert on Latin American aviation. The program is at 2 p.m. in the William M. Allen Theater, and is free with admission to the Museum. Museum admission is free on Sept. 25 to anyone presenting a Museum Day Ticket, which is available to download at www.smithsonian.com/museumday.  

Lt. Karina Miranda
Karina Miranda decided to be a pilot after her first airline flight at age 8. She joined the Chilean Air Force when she was only 17. Miranda earned her Air Force wings in 2003 and has continued her service as a military pilot. In 2006 she became Chile’s first woman jet fighter pilot, flying a CASA 101. In 2010, while at the controls of a Northrop Grumman F-5, she became the first Chilean woman to fly faster than the speed of sound.

Ruth Morlas
Ecuadorian-born Morlas was 9 years old when she when she had her first plane ride–on an airline flight to Massachusetts with her parents, who hand been awarded green cards for permanent residency in the United States. Inspired by the experience, and driven by the example of her parents’ strong work ethic, she eventually earned a degree in aerodynamics at the University of Virginia. Now Morlas performs in-flight systems checks on Boeing transport aircraft. Previously, she was a design engineer on Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner. Morlas is also a commercially rated pilot and flight instructor in Seattle. In March 2010, Morlas was a participant in The Museum of Flight’s “Women Fly! Symposium,” which brought together successful women in aviation from around the world.

Top image: Lt. Karina Miranda in Chilean Air Force F-5. Photo courtesy The Museum of Flight.

Lower image: Ruth Morlas with Boeing 787. Photo courtesy Ruth Morlas

The Museum of Flight is located at 9404 E. Marginal Way S., Seattle, Exit 158 off Interstate 5 on Boeing Field half-way between downtown Seattle and Sea-Tac Airport. The Museum is open daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission is $15 for adults, $13 for seniors 65 and older, $10 for active military, $8 for youth 5 to 17, and free for children under 5. Group rates are available. Admission on the first Thursday of the month is free from 5 to 9 p.m. courtesy of Wells Fargo. For general Museum information, please call 206-764-5720 or visit www.museumofflight.org

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Related posts:

  1. Hispanic Heritage Month Lecture Looks at the Latin American Connections in the Museum of Flight Collections
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  4. Historic First Boeing 787 Dreamliner on Display at Museum of Flight on Oct 9
  5. Museum of Flight Black History Month Lecture Features NASA Administrator Charles Bolden

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