The News Review:
- Plane Makes Emergency Landing In Elementary Schoolyard
- Jack Hunter’s memory lives on at the Blue Max Inn
- Aviation Community to Team Up with Wounded Veterans Participating …
Plane Makes Emergency Landing In Elementary Schoolyard
AHN
Saying they have no time to land in the airport the 28-year-old flight instructor and 23-year-old student decided to land in the school near 107th Avenue and Camelback Road. The plane almost hit the school’s computer lab and playground upon landing. Air Safety Flight Academy in Glendale was leasing the plane from Christiansen Aviation Inc. based in Tulsa klahoma. The plane’s safety record from the National Transportation Safety Board indicated it was involved in a runway accident in Florida in 1998. Copyright © 2003 – 2009 AHN – All rights reserved. Redistribution republication.
Related from Golf-monster: Single-engine plan makes emergency landing on Plano golf course
Jack Hunter’s memory lives on at the Blue Max Inn
Cecil Whig
“Jack Hunter was one of the past owners of the Blue Max” she said referring to the well-known bed and breakfast with double wraparound porches and views of downtown Chesapeake City. “ne of our rooms is named the Hunter Room. ”Mullen said the Hunter Room is still one of the inn’s most requested aside from the Honeymoon Suite.
Aviation Community to Team Up with Wounded Veterans Participating …
PR Newswire (press release)
5: Blog it chicklet ends here –> Aviation Community to Team Up with Wounded Veterans Participating in the Boston Marathon. This year Achilles International has teamed up with the business aviation community who will help facilitate this special event in their ongoing effort to give back to the community. n Saturday April 18th the athletes along with their companions and physical therapists will be transported via private jet from Walter Reed Medical Center in Washington DC to Boston by volunteers from the Veterans Airlift Command. The Veterans Airlift Command provides free air transportation to wounded warriors veterans and their families for medical and other compassionate purposes through a national network of volunteer aircraft owners and pilots. The same volunteer pilots will fly the athletes back to Washington DC following the marathon. Both the athletes and the volunteer pilots and crew (from Peregrine Jet) will be available to speak to the media upon their arrival at Logan International Airport to discuss this event.