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Profile in Courage: Tammie Jo Shults, the Southwest Airline Pilot who Saved a Passenger-full Plane

“She has nerves of steel,” said a passenger aboard the plane about the pilot who remained remarkably calm and safely landed the plane even though it had a massive hole and lost one of its engines.

1992 photo of Tammie Jo Shults, SW pilot currently, Photo by Thomas P. Milne, U.S. Navy/Distributed by Reuters

1992 photo of Tammie Jo Shults, SW pilot currently, Photo by Thomas P. Milne, U.S. Navy/Distributed by Reuters

On April 17, 2018, Southwest Airline flight 1380 heading out of New York City on route to Dallas, was forced to make an emergency landing at Philadelphia International Airport after an engine failed mid flight. Carrying 149 people on board, the plane had 21,000 pounds or roughly five hours of fuel to last when the pilot discovered the hole along the side of the plane.

The 737 plane had just reached a cruising altitude of 32,500 feet when an engine exploded. 56-year-old Captain Tammie Jo Shults, née Bonnell, remained calm under extreme pressure, safely landing the plane despite the ensuing chaos and protecting the lives of 144 passengers and five crew members. In six minutes, the plane dropped more than 20,000 feet in altitude.

Engine debris crashed into a plane window, breaking it and nearly sucked out a passenger, Jennifer Riordan, seated nearby. A Wells Fargo executive from Albuquerque, New Mexico, Riordan was saved by other passengers who held on to her and saved her from being sucked out of the plane. Riordan was still alive when the plane landed safely on the runway in Philadelphia. Nonetheless, Riordan still suffered intense blunt force trauma to the head, and passed away later that night despite efforts by medics to save her life. All other passengers arrived safely to the emergency destination of Philadelphia after the pilot deftly maneuvered the plane to the runway.

Remarkably calm and focused, Southwest Airline pilot, Captain Tammie Jo Shults, a former fighter pilot for the U.S. Navy, radioed into the air traffic controller. According to audio of the interaction, the conversation did not skip a beat.

“Southwest 1380, we’re single engine,” said Tammie Jo Shults. “We have part of the aircraft missing, so we’re going to need to slow down a bit.” She told the air traffic controller that they needed medical personnel to meet them on the runway. “We’ve got injured passengers.”

“Injured passengers, okay, and is your airplane physically on fire?” asked the air traffic controller.

“No, it’s not on fire, but part of it’s missing,” Shults said, pausing. “They said there’s a hole, and, uh, someone went out.”

In fact, an entire engine had exploded, spreading shrapnel back into the aircraft and destroying an entire window. The intense and powerful damage left one passenger, a woman, dead, and injured seven others.

While passengers screamed and panicked upon hearing the noisy explosion, Shults diverted the plane to an emergency landing in Philadelphia, guiding the plane smoothly onto the runway. She touched down at 190 mph and saved the lives of 148 people on board the sinking plane, thus averting an even bigger catastrophe.

Tammie Jo Shults today; photo of the broken engine of the Southwest Airline plane

Tammie Jo Shults today; photo of the broken engine of the Southwest Airline plane

Here are three powerful lessons we can learn from Tammie Jo Shults’ heroism.

Lesson 1. Leadership Under Pressure


Staying calm in an emergency is no easy feat, especially when you have a sinking plane, do not know if the plane will safely land and you are surrounded by screaming, terrified passengers. Tammie Jo Shults showed remarkable fortitude and remained calm under high pressure.

In fact, a passenger, 55-year-old Alfred Tumlinson who was traveling with his wife from George West, Texas, was amazed by Shults’ calmness.

“She has nerves of steel.”
— Alfred Tumlinson, passenger

Tumlinson and his wife Diana Self (who took the photo of Shults and passengers after safely landing), did not expect to make it home safely after hearing the loud engine explosion. In interviews later with news channels, Tumlinson shared how calm Shults was and how soothing her voice sounded over the plane intercom after the loud explosion. Shults told the passengers that they were descending and not going down and to stay calm and brace themselves. She told the passengers to keep their masks on.

The plane landed safely. The passengers were amazed to have landed safely to the ground. As medics filled the plane, Shults entered the cabin to talk to each of the passengers, shake their hands and comfort them.

Benjamin Goldstein, a New York resident who was traveling to Dallas for a conference, shared his experience. He told news sources the next day, “I asked her, ‘Do I get a hug too?’ and that she replied, ‘Of course. I wouldn't let you by without a hug.’”

“It was very touching. Here at the most crucial moment, she had the presence of mind and the courage to act with excellence as it was required. It's a beautiful quality, and we have our lives to thank for it."

Photo of Southwest Airlines pilot Tammie Jo Shults, right, speaking to passengers after Flight 1380‘s emergency landing in Philadelphia by Diana Self.

Photo of Southwest Airlines pilot Tammie Jo Shults, right, speaking to passengers after Flight 1380‘s emergency landing in Philadelphia by Diana Self.

“She is a true American hero.”
— Diana Self, passenger
Image of the plane after landing safely

Image of the plane after landing safely

The National Transportation Safety Board sent investigators the next morning to determine the cause of engine failure. They found out that parts of the protective engine housing had broken off mid-flight and were recovered in Berks County, Pennsylvania, roughly 70 miles northwest of Philadelphia International Airport where the plane eventually landed.

Southwest Airlines issued a statement the day after the event, acknowledging the efforts of pilot Shults and first officer Darren Ellisor. Both Shults and Ellisor avoided media interviews at the time and gave a joint statement. They were empathetic to the Riordan family who had lost a family member aboard the flight, the one casualty of the engine explosion.

“As Captain and First Officer of the Crew of five who worked to serve our Customers aboard flight 1380 yesterday, we all feel we were simply doing our jobs,” the airline reported in the statement. “Our hearts are heavy. On behalf of the entire Crew, we appreciate the outpouring of support from the public and our coworkers as we all reflect on one family’s profound loss.”

Please see below a statement from the Captain and First Officer of Flight 1380. pic.twitter.com/RjoCpucGGS

— Southwest Airlines (@SouthwestAir) April 19, 2018

Lesson 2. Personal Drive


Tammie Jo Shults already had a list of remarkable achievements prior to her heroic act on the Southwest Airline flight. She was among the first female fighter pilots for the U.S. Navy, according to her alma mater, MidAmerica Nazarene University. After graduating college, Shults flew planes for the Navy and was one of the first women pilots to fly tactical aircraft. She finished her flight training in Pensacola, Florida and then became an instructor pilot on planes including the F/A-18 Hornet in Point Mugu, California.

A decorated pilot who won medals such as the Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal, National Defense Service Medal and an expert pistol Marksmanship Medal, Shults pursued a career in aviation when it was extremely rare to see a woman pilot. In fact, in the book “Military Fly Moms,” by Linda Maloney, Shults shared how she attended an aviation lecture as a senior in high school in 1979 and a retired colonel started the class by asking her if she was lost. Tammie Jo Bonnell (her maiden name) was the only girl in attendance. Shults responded that she wanted to fly, and while the colonel let her stay, he told her that there were no professional women pilots.

Shults was determined to fly though. The Air Force did not show any interest in her, but the Navy allowed her application. Still there was not much of a demand for women pilots. It took her a year to get a recruiter to process her application, but Tammie Jo did not give up. She got into aviation school in Pensacola and then was assigned as an instructor pilot to a training squadron at Naval Air Station Chase Field in Beeville, Texas. Soon after, she met her best friend and future husband, a fellow naval aviator pilot, Dean Shults.

Tammie Jo Shults still could not fly in a combat squadron like her husband due to the combat exclusion law. She was allowed to provide electronic warfare training to Navy ships and aircraft. She persisted and eventually became one of the first women to fly the F/A-18 Hornet in a support role. After ten years, she achieved the rank of Navy lieutenant commander. In 1993, she retired from the Navy and along with her husband, began flying commercial airlines.

Her brother-in-law, Gary Shults, in an interview with the Associated Press, called Tammie a “formidable woman, as sharp as a tack. My brother says she’s the best pilot he knows. She’s a very caring, giving person who takes care of lots of people.”


Lesson 3. Grace and Humility

Interview with Time

Interview with Time

After the safe landing, both Shults and her co-pilot, Darren Ellisor, gave a joint statement to the public via their airline. They downplayed their heroism and focused on the passengers and community. Shults retained this composure, humility and high integrity in interviews finally granted with ABC and Time magazine.

Her quick thinking and grace under pressure will always be remembered by the passengers aboard that plane and their loved ones.

 
tags: Southwest Airlines, hero, Tammy Jo Schulz, pilot, profile, lessons, courage, leadership, leadership lessons, Courage, Profile in Courage, tammy jo schultz, tammie jo schultz, tami jo schultz, tammy jo schultz pilot, tammy schult pilot southwest, tammie jo shults, tamme jo shults
categories: Profiles
Sunday 01.06.19
Posted by Elf
 

Profile: Kyxz Mendiola and the Smallest Concept Flying Car That Uses Drone Tech

Kyxz Mendiola, an inventor from the Philippines, recently successfully completed a test flight for the world’s smallest concept flying car.

Image via Kyxz Mendiola

Image via Kyxz Mendiola

Fascinated with the concept of flying cars and hoverboards from Back to the Future, Mendiola was determined to build his own flying car. A former dancer and camera operator, Kyxz Mendiola recently took his concept flying car out in a successful test flight, flying and hovering for a little over ten minutes. His concept flying car “Koncepto Milenya” is a single-passenger vehicle that is powered by unmanned drone technology or ‘multicopter’ technology. Koncepto Milenya can fly as high as 20 feet above ground and go up to speeds of 40 mph. 

 Mendiola spoke to Reuters after what he said was the first public test flight of his invention.

“It was amazing. All the hard work paid off. Everything worked perfect.”
— Kyxz Mendiola
Image via Kyxz Mendiola

Image via Kyxz Mendiola

Mendiola is not an aviation expert or engineer by trade, but he took the time to study the dynamics of a flying vehicle. He experimented with drones, and used drone technology to successfully create his own hoverboard prototype last year.

In fact, Mendiola is far from being an engineer by trade or schooling. He was a member of the Philippine All Stars, a hip hop band. Mendiola put in all of his life savings to build his dream project. His initial prototype was limited by what he could buy so he could not purchase the best motors that he wanted to use.

In his interview with Reuters, Mendiola explained how it took a long time for him to save up enough money for the components of the single-seater vehicle that is powered by six lithium-ion batteries. The passenger pilots the craft using a portable radio frequency controller similar to flying a drone.

Nonetheless, he continued undeterred. Finally, he built out his latest version using carbon fiber and excellent motors. The vehicle has a safety feature with 16 rotary motors so that the vehicle will continue operating even if one or two motors fail.

“When we have to go somewhere about an hour’s drive, this can take you there in five minutes.”
— Kyxz Mendiola
Image via Kyxz Mendiola

Image via Kyxz Mendiola

Mendiola’s concept car has been featured by Time magazine and the video has been viewed online over 10 million times. An Australian company, Star8, is partnering with Mendiola to develop the vehicle after viewing viral videos on social media. Star8 Chief Executive Jacob Maimon said that he wanted to mass produce the vehicle and market it in Australia, Europe and Hong Kong, after his company helped Mendiola perfect the machine.

“We will get there very fast now, what with the help that we can give him.”
— Jacob Maimon, CEO, Star8

Kyxz Mendiola demonstrates beautifully what you can achieve when you have got a great idea and the creativity and determination to make it happen.

tags: Star8, flying car, drone technology, invention, profile, creativity, kyxz mendiola, kyxz mendiola biography, inventor, Philippines, aviation, flying car concept
categories: Profiles, Inventions
Monday 11.26.18
Posted by Elf
 

Profile: Ernõ Rubik, Three-Dimensional Space and the Rubik's Cube

Invention begins with seeing familiar things in a new way. What can you learn from the Rubik’s cube and its inventor? Here we take a closer look.

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“If you are curious, you’ll find the puzzles around you. If you are determined, you will solve them.”
— Ernõ Rubik

The Rubik’s Cube has become a world-famous and instantly recognizable toy since its launch over 40 years ago. The toy is iconic as an intellectual challenge that people instantly pick up and start playing around with intuitive understanding of what the end goal (all same color squares on each side) is. This geometric puzzle is easily accessible, does not require written instructions and offers also a sense of order and completion.

In 1974, a 29-year-old Hungarian sculptor and architect Ernõ Rubik invented the Rubik’s Cube, which he initially called the ‘Magic Cube’ or ‘Buvos Kocka’ in Hungarian, as a way of teaching his students how to solve three-dimensional problems. The toy that he made that did not break no matter how much you twisted or turned it. Rubik’s architecture students at the Budapest College of Applied Arts (Iparművészeti Főiskola) loved it.

Image via Rubiks

Image via Rubiks

His toy became very popular in Hungary. The country was Communist at the time, with tight regulations on imports and exports. Rubik shared his invention at toy fairs. At the Nuremberg Toy Fair in 1979, he met Tom Kremer who saw the potential in the toy and wanted to sell it worldwide.

Through Tom’s help, Rubik was able to sell over 100 million cubes of the newly renamed toy, the Rubik’s Cube worldwide. The updated version also was lighter. Soon there were competitions worldwide to see who could solve the Rubik’s Cube puzzle the fastest.

Image via Rubiks

Image via Rubiks


“Space always intrigued me, with its incredibly rich possibilities, space alteration by objects, objects’ transformation in space, movement in space and in time, their correlation, their repercussion on mankind, the relation between man and space, the object and time. I think the CUBE arose from this interest, from this search for expression and through increased acuteness of these thoughts.”
— Ernõ Rubik
Erno Rubik with his daughter Anna in 1981

Erno Rubik with his daughter Anna in 1981

Rubik revealed a keen awareness of what people liked and an appreciation for art and form. He also attributed his love of art and science to his parents. His father was a well known mechanical engineer who built gliders while his mother loved language and writing. Rubik initially studied to be a sculptor and then discovered that he had a keen interest and passion for technical applications. He went on to study architecture soon after. He credits the schools and universities that he attended as helping him in practicing his craft and giving him the necessary space and equipment to experiment, research and learn.

Rubik used wood for the blocks and rubber bands and paper clips to hold the pieces together in his first prototype. He used primary colors to help him bring some order to the cube rotations and used stickers on the finished cube. After his students had tested it out and loved it, Rubik found a plastics manufacturer to help him prototype his toy model. It was only after he met Tom Kremer that Rubik was able to build out his cube properly and then share his toy with the world.

“People like its beauty, simplicity and form. It’s really not a puzzle or a toy. It’s a piece of art.”
— Ernõ Rubik

People Love Order, Though Order is Harder to Achieve than Chaos

The Rubik’s Cube has 43 quintillion (43,252,003,274,489,856,000) possible configurations, with only one correct solution. Despite these odds, the toy itself has a wide appeal. Adults and children alike love to pick it up and attempt to solve the geometric puzzle.

Image via Cube20.org

Image via Cube20.org


Strategy can appear magical, when it is just well thought out and precise

Given the odds, solving a Rubik’s cube puzzle especially when someone hands you a random configuration, can seem miraculous. However, there are actual strategies that you can follow to solve this puzzle regardless of what configuration you receive. The key is to create order partially and to build on this since all ‘chaos’ cannot be resolved all at once. Systematically applying complex patterns can seem like magic to those that are unfamiliar, when in actuality, there is a strong logic and mathematical order to the process.

43 quintillion options definitely sounds daunting, but actually solving the Rubik’s cube puzzle follows a logical process of using 15 algorithms. No matter what configuration you receive, you can apply these 15 algorithms and solve the cube puzzle.


Don’t Be Afraid to Start Over and Try Again

Few things make starting over and trying again as appealing as the Rubik’s cube. In fact, the toy invites you to step outside your comfort zone, challenge yourself, think differently and learn something new.

Rubik said that the first time he solved the puzzle it took him weeks. Later on, it would take him roughly one minute. Some people are able to solve the puzzle in under 30 seconds.

The Rubik’s cube also offers a relaxed way to help you build your focus.


Engage Audiences in New Ways

The Rubik’s cube remains incredibly popular today, with contests, social media videos and exhibits such as Beyond Rubik’s Cube by the Liberty Science Center that promotes new ideas based on the cube.

Beyond Rubik’s Cube Exhibit by Liberty Science Center

Beyond Rubik’s Cube Exhibit by Liberty Science Center

Read more of our Profiles and learn with us! Have an individual in mind that you would like us to profile? Tell us at hello@elf.agency.

tags: Rubik Cube, Ernõ Rubik, invention, creativity, profile, inspiration, Elf, Elf agency
categories: Profiles, Inventions
Friday 11.09.18
Posted by Elf
 
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