Posts in the category "":

Souvenir Sunday at San Francisco International Airport

Finishing touches on SFO T2

SFO T2

San Francisco International Airport’s Terminal 2, serving passengers on American Airlines and Virgin America, will host a community open house on Saturday, April 9, 2011, and begin hosting flights on Thursday, April 14, 2011.

In the meantime, workers are scrambling to get everything done. None of the stores were open when I visited last Thursday, but I’m looking forward to stopping by again to shop in Compass Books, Pacific Outfitters, the Mosaic Gallery (merchandise from local museums and work by Bay Area artists) and Greetings from SF, which promises “gifts, apparel, and souvenirs that reflect the unique culture of San Francisco.”

In the meantime, I made do with doing my Souvenir Sunday shopping in the SFO International Terminal.

Pretty much everything was tempting at the SFMOMA Museum Store, but I especially liked these 3-D magnets.

SFO MOMA MUSEUM STORE

 

And this make-your-own San Francisco postcard.

SFO postcard

 

Souvenir Sunday needs you.

If you find a great souvenir next time you’re stuck at the airport, please snap a photo and send it along. If you’re souvenir is featured on Souvenir Sunday, you’ll receive a special travel-related souvenir.

Traveling by Invention – part 1

The first ice-making machine, a light bulb Thomas Edison used in demonstrations and the prototype Apple 1 computer.

Surprise finds on the “Antiques Roadshow” TV program? Nope. Just some innovative treasures you might discover if your travel itinerary includes some of the invention-focused museums I included in a story titled Spark your trip with invention-focused museums for msnbc.com.

John Gorrie's Ice-Making machine

Replica of John Gorrie's ice-making machine

“What’s cool about these places is that it makes you appreciate that these things didn’t just appear out of thin air,” says Doug Kirby, publisher of RoadsideAmerica.com. “For example, at the John Gorrie Museum in Florida, even kids immediately understand the difference the invention of air conditioning made in their lives.”

Of course, traveling by invention isn’t just for kids. Or just for tourists. “It is common for members of a community — even long-time residents — to be unfamiliar with the hidden history that surrounds them,” said Ford W. Bell, president of the American Association of Museums (AAM). So consider adding some of these museums to your next local or long-distance vacation.

 

National Inventors Hall of Fame and Museum


This $1200 microwave oven, made by the Tappan Stove Company in 1955, was an improvement over earlier models that stood over 5 feet tall.

Courtesy National Electronics Museum

The National Inventors Hall of Fame and Museum in Alexandria, VA, is an ideal spot to get an overview of American inventors and their creations. Located in the same building that houses the headquarters of the United States Patent and Trademarks Office, the museum has a gallery filled with interactive electronic portraits of Thomas Edison and other noted inventors as well as exhibits that change annually. The invention of Jell-O, Borden’s Condensed Milk and the commercial microwave oven are explored in the current exhibit, Inventive Eats: Incredible Food Innovations. While at the museum’s sister institution, the Invent Now Museum, in Akron, Ohio, there’s an exhibit titled The Art of Invention.  Admission to both museums is free.

Schenectady Museum & Suits-Bueche Planetarium


Schenectady claims it, not New Haven, CT, is the city where Silly Putty was invented. Courtesy Schenectady Museum

The Power House exhibit at New York’s Schenectady Museum & Suits-Bueche Planetarium explores inventions and innovations credited to General Electric and other companies based in New York’s Capital Region. According to curator Chris Hunter, the list includes cloud seeding (artificial snow), television, superconducting cable, artificial diamonds and lasers, as well as wind and solar technology. The exhibit also stakes Schenectady’s claim to being the accidental birthplace of Silly Putty – during experiments with silicone – during World War II. “The official Silly Putty site says that James Wright developed Silly Putty in New Haven, CT, but General Electric never had a lab in New Haven. Wright’s silicone patents list his residence as Schenectady or [nearby] Alplaus,” said Hunter.

John Gorrie Museum State Park

He’s technically the father of modern air-conditioning, but you may call him Mr. Cool. In the mid-1800’s, John Gorrie was a young physician in Florida fretting over how to cool the rooms of patients suffering from yellow fever. His solution: a machine that could make ice. In 1851, Gorrie received the first U.S. patent for mechanical refrigeration and today his contribution to cooling is celebrated in Apalachicola, FL at John Gorrie Museum State Park. The museum displays a full-size replica of Gorrie’s patented ice-maker and the facility is, as you’d expect in a town where summer temperatures can top 100 degrees, fully air-conditioned.

American Museum of Radio and Electricity


One of the original 60 incandescent lamps Thomas Edison used to demonstrate his invention t to the public in 1879.American Museum of Radio and Electricity

In addition to a collection of rare and remarkable radios, the American Museum of Radio and Electricity in Bellingham, WA documents what museum president John Jenkins describes as “the incredible number of electrical  inventions produced in the relatively short time since Benjamin Franklin first described his famous Kite experiment.” Displays follow the electrical arc from Franklin through to the invention of radio and television and include the world’s first batteries, electrical motors, electric lights, telephony, telegraphy and assorted medicinal devices. The Electricity Sparks Invention gallery, for example, displays perpetual motion machines, a telephone used in the first transatlantic call and experimental light bulbs used in Thomas Edison’s laboratory in Menlo Park, New Jersey.

Computer History Museum

Apple I prototype

Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak introduced a prototype Apple 1 at the Homebrew Computer Club in 1976. Price: $666.66. Included: blank printed circuit board, parts kit and a 16-page manual. Not included: power supply, keyboard, storage system or display.© Mark Richards, courtesy of the Computer History Museum.

From its Mountain View, California home in Silicon Valley, the Computer History Museum uses artifacts that reach back to the abacus to tell the story of computing and its impact on society. Among the collection’s more than 1000 items are inventions that include the first disk drive, the first microprocessor, the first video games, the first computer mouse, the prototype for the original Apple iPod and one of the Google’s first servers. Not everything is run by micro-processors: also on display is the large punch card tabulator Herman Hollerith invented in 1890 that made it possible to shave seven years off the ten it took back then to tally the results of the U.S. census.

Corning Museum of Glass

Corning brought high tech into American kitchens with temperature-tolerant borosilicate glass – PYREX – in 1915 and Corning Ware in 1959.Corning Museum of Glass

 

The Corning Museum of Glass, in Corning, NY exhibits objects from glass history reaching back more than 3500 years. Also on display are a variety of Corning’s high tech, glass-based inventions such as the glass “envelope” that made Edison’s light bulbs possible in 1879, unbreakable Pyrex dishware introduced in 1915 and, from 1970, the optical fiber that essentially threw the “on” switch for the modern telecommunications revolution.

 

Heinz History Center


A moveable model of George Ferris’ wheel at the Heinz History Center

The Heinz History Center’s long-term exhibition, Pittsburgh: A Tradition of Innovation, celebrates home-grown inventions that include Jonas Salk’s invention of the Polio vaccine, the Big Mac, the world’s first Jeep (built in nearby Butler) and the first Ice Capades. Displays include an original transmitter from the world’s first commercial radio station, KDKA, and a model of the local iron foundry that built the world’s largest cannon. Also on display: a movable model of the giant wheel designed by Pittsburgh bridge engineer, George Ferris for the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago. The Ferris Wheel was almost 50 feet tall and rotated on a 71-ton, made-in-Pittsburgh axle.

Please check back for a look at even more museums that highlight inventions and innovations.
And please share your tips on museums with exhibits that highlight some great ideas.

Earth Hour at the airport

This Saturday, March 26, 2011, lights will go out in homes, buildings, towns and cities around the world as part of a coordinated effort to raise public awareness of climate change and the need for energy conservation.

Several airports are joining the effort.

 

At LAX, the 100-foot-tall LAX Gateway pylons that illuminate the entrance to Los Angeles International Airport (LAX), will light solid green for one hour before Earth Hour. During Earth Hour, from 8:30 to 9:30 p.m., the pylons will be turned off and then resume their color-changing display at 9:30 p.m.

Toronto Pearson International Airport will also be marking Earth Hour this year by reducing lighting in terminals, parking garages and support buildings, turning off or reducing HVAC systems, turning off high-speed moving walkways in Terminal 1 and taking other energy-saving measures.

Singapore’s Changi Airport will switch off all decorative lights, dim non-critical operational lights in much of the airport.and give out battery-less flashlights to travelers who take a simple energy quiz.

London Luton Airport will be switching off lights in many parts of the airport, including its illuminated logo on the front of the terminal building.

And at the Budapest airport they’ll switch off the entire airstrip for Earth Hour. According to Earth Hour organizers, “We have been assured that airport staff are well prepared for the temporary black-out, which will take place under strict national and international control to ensure the utmost passenger and aviation safety.”

Let’s hope so!

Reagan Airport: self-service landings?

Even more alarming than the video of Snoop Dogg and my furry friend Rico
is the audio of two American Airline pilots chatting with each other about the fact that there was apparently no one home in the air traffic control tower at Reagan Washington National Airport early Wednesday morning.

Here’s the audio from Liveatc.net that the Washington Post put on its website this afternoon.


 

And here’s more information about what officials say did – and did not happen.

Sort of scary….

Do you remember your first airplane ride?

Julie McKinney -famiily and friends at Orlando Airport

I had way too much fun gathering stories, drawings and photos for this story about first flights that appeared on msnbc.com today.  I know there are lots more great stories – and first flight souvenirs – out there, so after you read these stories, please send along your own.


Do you remember your first airplane ride?

Julie McKinney does. No doubt other passengers on that flight do too.

It was 1992 and she was “that” kid: the excited 5-year old on her first airplane ride and headed to Disney World. “I was the one singing ‘M-I-C-K-E-Y-M-O-U-S-E’ the entire flight from Pittsburgh to Orlando,” said McKinney.

Now 23, McKinney remembers other passengers singing along. “The singing continued until the end of the flight and I don’t remember anyone getting upset. I think of this now every time I fly and can’t imagine how I’d react to a singing child sitting in front of me.”

Roller coasters, dolphins and cotton balls

Whether it was 50 years ago or just last week, your first airplane ride, like your first kiss, can leave a lasting impression and have an impact on what sort of traveler you become.

Jeff Pecor was also Disney World-bound on his first airplane ride, at age 8, in the early 1980s. Now on staff at Yapta, an airfare and hotel price tracking site, Pecor remembers it being “so cool that they served food and they gave you plastic pilot wings. And everyone was so nice.”

Unforgettable as well: “That first roller-coaster feeling that hits your stomach when the plane sometimes drops suddenly during turbulence. That sensation still gets me today, but it’s altogether different when you’re not expecting the plane to do that.”

Raymond Kollau, who today tracks airline news for airlinetrends.com, first boarded a plane when he was 16, in the summer of 1986. “From the air, the waves in the Mediterranean looked like dolphins,” said Kollau, “And I remember telling my sister she couldn’t walk in the aisle because it would make the plane lean forwards or backwards.”

First Flight

Snow Wonderland

To Boston-based artist Annie Silverman, the world outside the airplane window on her first flight, in 1957, looked like a “snow wonderland.” She even documented the scene in an autobiography she wrote and illustrated in her 4th grade class that year. “It was Christmas vacation and we were all dressed up,” said Silverman, “I remember that the clouds looked like giant cotton balls, the sky was so blue and there was the constant hum of the motor.”
Gum balls, not cotton balls welcomed Thomas Sawyer on his first flight. Sawyer, the bladder cancer survivor recently in the news for his experience with a botched airport pat-down, took his first flight as a young newlywed with his wife, Sherry. At the end of that flight, he realized he’d been sitting on a wad of gum. “The very good looking stewardess attempted to remove it and my wife finally said to her, ‘I think I will take care of that, thank-you.’ She obviously didn’t want this young lady touching my butt. We have laughed about it for 41 years,” said Sawyer.

 

There was probably no laughing when Orville and Wilbur Wright made those historic first, heavier-than-air powered flights on December 17, 1903. The weather and the wind were bad that day and, according to Peter Jakab, Associate Director of Curatorial Affairs at the National and Space Museum, “Years later Orville said that had they known then what they learned later, they would never have made that test flight under those conditions.”

 

Still, in preparing for that first flight Orville wrote in his diary, “…Isn’t it astonishing that all these secrets have been preserved for so many years just so we can discover them!!”

Baby’s first flight

 

Cathy Raines first discovered flying on January 10th, 1955, when she was just nine weeks old. She’s flown to 45 countries since then. And while she doesn’t remember that first flight, she’s proud to have the Sky Cradle Club certificate issued that day by the American Airlines crew. “There’s a drawing of a baby in a diaper astride a jet plane and it’s signed by two stewardesses, the captain and others,” said Raines.

 

Although Delta Air Lines recently brought back the tradition of handing out plastic wings to kids and polite adults, most airlines did away with tangible souvenirs such as First Flight certificates and wings as a cost-saving step after 9/11.

Mary Winking at John Wayne Airport - 1985

That disappoints American Airlines flight attendant Mary Winking, who has fond memories of her first flight when she was nine years old. “The flight attendants were very attentive and let me help hand out the honey roasted peanuts. I got my first pair of wings that day and still have them with other keepsakes from that first trip to California.”

 

“I still wish we had the stick-on wings to give out to children and/or a certificate to present to them like we used to,” says Kelly Vrajitoru, also an American Airlines flight attendant. She remembers that on her first flight, at five years old, she held tight to her mother’s hand “feeling my stomach lift as we took off.”

 

Today, Vrajitoru tries to pay extra attention to first-time flyers, especially kids. “I always offer to have a parent take a picture of their kid with the Captain before take-off or on landing, or to have them sit in the cockpit to take a closer look at all the gears and instruments. I know it makes a special and lasting impression.”

 

The passenger of the future

Jacob Whitecotton, now four years old, got some of that special attention when he took his first flight from Oklahoma to Orlando at age three. For the flight, Jake dressed up in a white shirt, a tie and the kid-sized American Airlines pilot cap his mom bought for him at an airport gift shop.  “It was a blast. He was going through the airport pulling a little rolling suitcase and he looked just like a tiny pilot,” said Jake’s mom, Andrea Whitecotton.

 

Once on the plane, Jacob got the royal treatment. A flight attendant produced a set of wings from a secret stash he’d squirreled away. Flight attendants and other travelers took pictures. One passenger gave Jake a disposable camera so he could document his flight.

 

What does Jake remember?  “I got to go in the cockpit and they let me drive the plane.”

 

What do you remember about your first flight? Please share your memories below.

[This story first appeared on msnbc.com]

 


  • Subscribe to Posts Via Email or RSS

    Subscribe Via Email
    Subscribe Via RSS
  • My USAToday Airport Guides


    • See all airport guides »

  • Posts by Category

  • Browse posts on the site by category:

  • See all categories »