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Introducing the StratoQuest Team

Lindy Leach
Vice President and Operations Director
Lindy has held numerous leadership positions that involve planning, coordinating, and conducting various types of training and operational activities. She transformed and built new military organizations and units, the last being the US Army Reserve's Military Intelligence Readiness Command. During her assignment at the United States Army Reserve Command (USARC), she represented approximately 4,000 enlisted soldiers to the Command. She was heavily involved with providing guidance and input on policy decisions. Her insight, knowledge, and experience helped resolve issues impacting thousands of soldiers. She served on a World Class Decision Making team, that developed a decision making model accepted as the standard decision method used by the USARC. Throughout her career, Lindy has successfully lead many individuals and teams with her personal management skills.
She is a member of the Military Intelligence Corps Association and on the Board of Directors for the Army Women's Foundation. She was selected to be the 2006 United States Parachute Association's (USPA) Style and Accuracy Team Manager and holds a USPA C parachuting license.

 

Yuvonda Wells
Business Developer
Yuvonda has experience in developing and implementing business strategies. She successfully owned her own business and has served as Vice President of Pricing and Acquisitions for an international logistics company. Her effective organization and communication skills led to her success in managing and implementing multi-national negotiations and contracts. She was responsible for securing the contract to provide fiber optic cables to Athens, Greece for the 2004 Olympics. Yuvonda also specializes in Human Resource Management. She has experience in creating and implementing new procedures for employee and contractor management. Her research skills help businesses and organizations make better decisions. In 2005, The Soroptimist International of the Americas awarded Yuvonda three Women's Opportunity Awards, “in support of her efforts and to enhance her career potential”.

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Dominic Del Rosso
NASA
Dominic Del Rosso is currently a Test Director for the Reduced Gravity Office, and a Systems Equipment Operator [SEO] for the High Altitude Research Program, both based at Ellington Field in Houston. He has logged over 16,000 reduced gravity parabolas on NASA's C-9 as well as many hours in full pressure suits at altitudes exceeding 60,000 with NASA's WB57F, and a several in T38N aircraft.
Formerly he was a project engineer with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Crew and Thermal Systems Division. Mr. Del Rosso's initial responsibilities for NASA included all human demonstration testing for space suited crew members as well as the management of the external maintenance for the Space Station. Taking a hands-on approach to testing and defining problems and solutions, he has acquired more than 400 pressurized hours in the U.S. space suits. Additionally, he has significant time in various pressure suits of other nations and subsystems. These hours have been in environments ranging from the laboratory, air bearing floors, reduced gravity aircraft, underwater, and thermal/vacuum chambers. Mr. Del Rosso has also served as the Subsystem Manager for the U.S. space suit, currently in operation, as well as work on advanced suits. He managed the effort to design and build the tooling and support equipment for the International Space Station as well. Briefly he supported the life support system group, as the lead for completing the work on the Space Station Oxygen Recharge Compressor Assembly.
Mr. Del Rosso graduated from the University at Buffalo with a BS in Aerospace Engineering. His course work included systems design as well as biomechanics. During an affiliation with the Center for Special Environments Research, he participated in several experiments, including the first saturation diving at the facility. While employed by Ocean Systems Engineering as a project engineer, Mr. Del Rosso performed duties, in addition to being a test subject, of equipment maintenance and backup medical support.
Upon Graduation he worked for Ocean Systems Engineering, specializing in robotic systems and bringing the sub sea experience base, of using divers in robot systems, to NASA.
Mr. Del Rosso is a former Assistant Fire Chief with the Seabrook Volunteer Fire Department and an Intermediate Emergency Medical Technician. He also served with the Harris County Sheriffs Department Aerial Law Enforcement Task Force as a helicopter rescue specialist and with the Texas Search and Rescue Technicians Group for swift water, high angle, underwater SAR, and general SAR duties. He's also a NAUI SCUBA Instructor with Instructor Trainer Designation, Texas State Firefighting Instructor Level II, CPR/AED/first aid instructor, and Emergency Response to Terrorism instructor.

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Wilfred J. A. Charette
High Altitude Low Opening (HALO)
Parachuting and Safety Expert

Wil Charette has extensive military experience in High Altitude Low Opening (HALO) parachuting and HALO safety. As a member of the Joint Army/United States Air Force HALO Test Team, he established much of the HALO training and operations doctrine still in use today. He was the first Non-Commissioned Officer in Charge (NCOIC) of the Special Forces Training Group HALO Committee, which included Fulton Recovery Systems (SKYHOOK) Operations. For his participation in the HALO Test Program and his subsequent use of HALO insertion techniques, he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross. He participated in the record breaking 43,500 foot jump to establish a world record “FAI Class G-II-C, group of nine with delayed fall”. Will is a Charter Member of the US Army Parachute Team, The Golden Knights. He authored the United States Parachute Association (USPA) Publication, “Jumping in the Troposphere”, and is a 1969 recipient of the USPA Gold expert parachutist badge awarded for 1,000 free fall parachute jumps.
After serving 11 years in the Army, Mr. Charette was recruited by the CIA where he served for 32 years domestically and overseas in various senior leadership positions. He earned a Master's Degree in National Security and Strategic Studies from the US Naval War College in Newport, RI. He is currently a part time Government and private sector consultant on Counterterrorism and Intelligence related initiatives, and serves as a Director on the Special Operations Memorial Foundation.

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Ted Strong
President, Strong Enterprises, Orlando Florida
Ted Strong founded Strong Enterprises in 1960. Strong Enterprises designs, develops, tests, and manufactures all types of parachute equipment. Strong Enterprises has designed round parachute systems, ranging from 4 inches to 64 feet in diameter and ram-air canopies from 6 sq. feet to 1,200-sq. feet in size, for payloads ranging from 10 pounds to 2,300 pounds. Some of Ted’s products include spin chutes for aircraft recovery, drogue chutes for drone remote controlled aircraft, drag chutes and cargo canopies for a variety of payloads. Currently, Ted is working on a manned parachute delivery system for All Terrain Vehicles (ATV) and has over one hundred and fifty drops with driver/riders on board from aircraft exit to landing. Highest altitude has been 25,000 feet. In 1983, Ted came up with the Tandem Jumping concept (two people sharing the same main and reserve parachute) and holds a US patent on a tandem system. Ted received the PIA Don Beck Achievement Award in 1989 for designs or improvements in the parachute industry that have withstood the test of time.

Ted’s FAA ratings include: private pilot license, hot air balloon commercial license, Master Parachute Rigger Certificate and is a past Designated Parachute Rigger Examiner. He is a member of United States Parachute Association (USPA) and has A, B, C, and D license. He received the USPA Gold Wings for 1,000 free falls. Ted is still an active jumper and makes about 80 jumps a year.

Ted is a member of: USPA, SAFE (Survival And Flight Equipment), AIAA (American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics). PIA (Parachute Industry Association

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David B. Gillis,
M.D. PhD, M.P.H Aerospace Medicine Physician
David Gillis is an assistant professor of clinical preventive medicine (aerospace) with the University of Texas Medical Branch, assigned, under the NASA Bioastronautics contract, to support Shuttle and International Space Station, currently in Advanced Projects, Space Medicine Group, Wiley Life Sciences in Houston, Texas. He graduated from Davidson College with a BS in physics before completing his MD and medical school at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. After a Navy internship, he became a Navy flight surgeon and served as an operational flight surgeon with Marine helicopter squadrons in Vietnam and the Gulf War, as well as with Navy jet attack, mine countermeasures and maritime patrol squadrons during active duty and active reserves assignments. He served a tour as Chief, Bioengineering, Aviation Medicine Division, at the US Army Aeromedical Research Unit from 1967-1969. Dr. Gillis was the Senior Medical Officer and Battle Group Surgeon for the Commander, Carrier Group 7, aboard the nuclear powered aircraft carrier, JOHN C. STENNIS (CVN 74) and served as Group Surgeon, 1st Force Service Support Group, 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, during the Iraq War, until retiring from the Navy in 2003.

Interspersed with his military service, he completed a PhD in physiology at the University of California San Francisco where he also completed a residency in anesthesiology and served as Clinical Assistant Professor in Anesthesiology. Dr. Gillis practiced anesthesiology in Berkeley, CA for twenty years before leaving his practice to return to active duty and complete an MPH at Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health. Dr. Gillis then completed the aerospace medicine residency program in the US Navy, serving as Chief Resident in 1998-1999 and as a member of the US Navy Aerospace Medicine Residency Advisory Committee. He has completed the US Navy Recognition and Treatment of Diving Casualties Course at Panama City, FL, the NAMI Hyperbaric Medicine Course at Pensacola, FL, the Radiation Health Course at Groton, CN, the Naval Postgraduate School Aviation Safety Officer Course at Monterrey, CA, and the FAA Aviation Medical Examiner Course at Oklahoma City, CA, among others. Dr. Gillis is a highly decorated, retired US Naval officer. His personal and unit awards include five Air Medals, two Meritorious Service Medals, and two Presidential Unit Citations.

Dr. Gillis, in 2002 developed a medical model incorporating elements of operational risk management, probabilistic risk assessment and a measure of effectiveness of medical outcomes and medical resources in constrained environments. These concepts were employed in planning and employing US Marine combat field medical support in the Iraq War and contributed to a historically low died of wounds percentage. This model is currently in use at the Johnson Space Center to assessment crew performance and long time health risks during space missions. He has numerous published medical articles and presentations on subjects including high altitude medicine, responses and acclimatization to high altitude, environmental emergencies on the space Shuttle, and medical risk characterization and assessment in manned space flight.

Dr. Gillis is a private pilot with instrument rating. His high altitude experience includes successful ascents of Mt. Whitney (twice), Mt. Rainier, Mt. Baker, Mt. Olympus and, in Africa, Mt. Kilimanjaro. He is a certified open water scuba diver with several hundred dives, and has one tandem parachute jump. His current humanitarian projects include school and women’s health clinic construction in Vietnam, with his daughter, Megan, who along with three other adult children, Lisa, Glenn and Kristin, and their spouses and children, are his principal loves in life.

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Clayton Lay Thomas, M.D. M.P.H.
High Altitude Physician
Clayton Thomas, M.D. M.P.H. is certified as a specialist in preventive medicine in the subspecialty of aerospace medicine by the American Board of Medical Specialists. For thirty years, he served in various capacities at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, ending as the visiting Scientist in the Department of Population Sciences and International Health. He is a Navy veteran, having trained as a flight surgeon and then instructing at the School of Aviation Medicine at Pensacola. Clayton is President of Balloon School of Mass. He is a FAA designated Lighter-than-Air pilot examiner and holds certifications in Com LTA (both hot air and gas), Com. Rotorcraft, helicopter, and Private Pilot SEL.
He has edited nine editions of TABER's Cyclopedia Medical Dictionary; published by F.A. Davis Co. Philadelphia. His article, “Parachuting and Skydiving” was published in the 1965 Journal of the American Medical Association.
Clayton has been part of the US Olympic Medical Team during several Olympiads. He flew a hot air balloon at the Lake Placid Winter Olympics and the Calgary Winter Olympics. As the balloonmeister, he supervised forty balloons at Lake Placid's Opening Ceremonies.

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Andy Elson
Aeronautical Engineer/Balloonist
Andy, from Wells, Somerset, England is an aeronautical engineer. He is also pilot and project director of QinetiQ 1, the project name for his and Colin Prescot's attempt to set a new manned balloon high altitude world record. He is responsible for the design and build of their balloon.
Andy was an apprentice at the Rolls Royce Technical College in Filton, Bristol and then went on to study Aeronautical Engineering. During the 1980s he became an enthusiastic balloonist. After competing at world-class level, he began to research and develop the survival systems required for high-altitude flights. In 1991, he piloted the world's first hot air balloon flight over Mount Everest.
Andy set a new all-time flight duration record in 1998, and promptly broke it the next year on his Cable & Wireless flight with Colin Prescot, which lasted 17 days, 18 hours and 25 minutes. For this they were each presented with the Royal Aero Club Gold Medal, awarded just 40 times in the last 100 years.
Since 1999, Andy has worked with American adventurer Steve Fossett on his solo attempts to fly a balloon around the world, designing and building the Solo Spirit gondola and advising Fossett during his flight from eastern Australia to Brazil.

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Colin Prescot
Balloonist/Adventurer
Colin, from Stockbridge, Hampshire, England is Managing Director of Flying Pictures Ltd, the world's largest operator of hot air balloons and leader of aerial film production and facilities. He will co-pilot QinetiQ 1 and relay pictures of the flight back to earth.
Colin began ballooning at the age of 25 and continued his interest in hot air balloons by founding Flying Pictures, which counts Sylvester Stallone's 'Cliffhanger' and the last 8 James Bond films among its credits. Over the years Colin has managed to combine his background in advertising with his hobby, operating many of the commercial advertising balloons seen in the summer skies and at balloon festivals around the world.
In 1981 Colin made the first ever hot-air balloon flight through a whole night, and later set the record for longest balloon flight in the British Isles, which still stands.

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Bernadette Therese Dionne
Air Traffic Controller Advisor
Bernadette was hired by the FAA after serving ten years in the Navy as an Air Traffic Controller. She is currently controlling at Razorback Terminal Radar Approach Control and Tower in Fort Smith, Arkansas. Prior to Fort Smith, Bernadette worked for the FAA at St Louis Automated Flight Service Station. She has worked in a variety of air traffic facilities, offering an aray of services to the flying public and military pilots. One facility was an island off the southern California coast. It was utilized by the fleet for both daytime tower and radar approach operations, but was "transformed" into a non-repositioning carrier at night. They helped train new pilots before they were sent to sea trials.

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Dick Blosser
Director of Communications
Dick Blosser has been the Chief of Communications for several aviation record making projects. These projects include J. Renee’s "Around The World" balloon project in 2000, Global Hilton Project from 1997 to 1998, The Earthwinds "Around the World" project from 1992 to 1995, Voyager non-refueled around-the-world flight in 1986. He also provided Ground Tracking, Position Reporting and Search and Rescue for Kevin Uliassi's solo balloon round-the-world attempt in 2000.

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J. B. Siegfried
Training Advisor
J.B. served as a parachuting training coach and safety advisor to the 82nd Airborne Freefall Activity, Fort Bragg, NC. He has many years of experience in establishing safe drop zone operations and procedures. In 1995, J.B. was a team member for Cheryl Stearns' record 352 parachute jumps in a twenty-four hour period. At the age of 54, J.B. made his first parachute jump and had over 2,500 jumps when he retired from the sport. A World War II veteran, he landed on Normandy D+8 and fought in five campaigns, ending up in Czechoslovakia. He then performed communications technician duties in Greece, Paris, and Budapest. He did one tour of duty in Vietnam and retired from the Army in 1969. After leaving the military, J.B. worked 17 years for a local telephone company.

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