The aviation world is mourning Bette Nash, a D.C.-based flight attendant who died earlier this month after spending nearly seven decades serving passengers in the skies — and making history ...
In seven decades of transformation in the airline industry, commercial air travel has swapped glamour for efficiency, expanded technology, shrunk legroom and banished smoking. Security is tighter ...
"Bette was a legend at American and throughout the industry, inspiring generations of flight attendants," American wrote on Facebook. "Fly high, Bette. We’ll miss you." According to the ...
When Bette Nash started working as a flight attendant in 1957, it was the golden age of air travel. Tickets from New York to Washington, D.C. cost just $12 (around $134 today), and travelers didn ...
Bette Nash, the world’s longest-serving flight attendant, has died. She was 88 years old. "We mourn the passing of Bette Nash, who spent nearly seven decades warmly caring for our customers in ...
NEW YORK — Bette Nash, recognized as the world's longest-serving flight attendant, has died. She was 88. American Airlines, Nash's employer, announced her death on social media Saturday.
Bette Nash, holder of the Guinness World Record for longest-serving flight attendant, has died at the age of 88, according to statements from American Airlines and the Association of Professional ...