Named "Captain K."; belonged to the first
female group, which was not accepted from the
NASA; later working for the U.S. Department of
Agriculture as pilot. By 1951, she held a Commercial Pilots license with
Airplane Single and Multi-Engine Land ratings, Instrument ratings, and was a
certified Flight Instructor, Flight Instrument Instructor and Ground
Instructor. In 1946, she joined the staff of the Johnstonian Sun newspaper in
Selma, North Carolina, writing the weekly aviation column "Air Currents," later
moving it to the Raleigh News and Observer where it ran from 1953 to 1960. She
was was enshrined in the Georgia Aviation Hall of Fame on April 26, 2003. In
2007 she received a Dotorate of science (honoris causa) from the University of
Wisconsin, Oshkosh.