"Now and then my wife pulls
off meetings at our home. The other day I strayed in to find
some twenty-nine women pilots in possession, all members of the
Ninety-Nine Club. (By the way, if you want to make the feathers
fly just call 'em Lady Birds).
A while ago some of the husbands
of members of this Ninety-Nine Club got together to see what
could be done about it. Our intention was not so much to combat
its activities as to establish a machinery for masculine self-protection.
Out of that meeting emerged the
Forty-Nine Point Five Club (49.5) - reckoned arithmetically as
fifty per cent of our better halves. The prime movers were Herb
Thaden, Bill Marsalis, and myself. Their wives, Louise and Frances,
recently distinguished themselves by staying aloft in a plane
eight days, breaking the women's endurance record, not to mention
the official time of Creation. With their better halves aloft
in their flying boudoir, Herb and Bill endured on the ground.
Herb, I believe, playing nursemaid to two-year-old Herb. Jr.,
and Bill learning lots about what a can opener can do in the
kitchen.
Well, right up at the top of
our new organization's program is the 49.5 endurance prize for
1933. The handsome trophy .. the design contemplates crossed
silver safety pins mounted on a cut-glass milk bottle
will
go to the licensed pilot who stays at home the longest time.
We hope the presentations will be featured at next year's National
Air Races at Cleveland. The plan is to have it handed out by
Jim Haizlip, even though he is eligible, because his wife Mae,
just set a new woman's speed record with 255 miles an hour."