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Page "Military of Bermuda" ¶ 8
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civil and airport
They also tended to identify more closely with a culture of protest and civil disobedience, frequently clashing with police at demonstrations against nuclear weapons, nuclear energy, and the construction of a new runway ( Startbahn West ) at Frankfurt airport.
In 1945, with the end of the war, the airport was opened to the civil aviation.
Seletar Airport is Singapore's first civil aviation airport and is primarily used for private aviation today.
* Herat International Airport ( 2600 m runway ) is the primary civil airport for the western portion of the country.
These joined two other air stations already operating on Bermuda, the pre-war civil airport on Darrell's Island, which had been taken over by the RAF, and the Fleet Air Arm's Royal Naval Air Station, HMS Malabar, on Boaz Island.
A civil airport, Białystok-Krywlany Airport, lies within the city limits, but does not provide regularly scheduled service.
With the coming of peace, the supposed RAF station became a civil airport, and the show continued much as before, written by and starring Horne and Murdoch, with Sam Costa and Maurice Denham.
Only limited geographical areas could be simulated in this manner, and for civil flight, simulators were usually limited to the immediate vicinity of an airport or airports.
Enschede has a combined regional civil airport, Enschede Airport, and Airbase Twenthe of the Royal Netherlands Air Force.
General DeWitt Spain Airport is a civil aviation airport just north of downtown Memphis.
Constructed of a large square of thick, reinforced concrete, most of the airfield is now a civil airport operated by Glenn County.
Brookville Reservoir is registered with the Federal Aviation Administration and the International Civil Aviation Organization as a civil airport assigned ICAO code K12I.
: For the civil use of this facility and airport information, see Sawyer International Airport
Clarksville's civil airport, Outlaw Field, is listed as AMSL by survey.
In late 1942, the new hard-surface airport at Lisbon permitted the use of civil registered Liberators to North and West Africa and Egypt.
The German government decided to turn the former airfield into a civil airport.
Vilnius International Airport () is the largest civil airport in Lithuania.
The Northern Alliance, involved in a civil war with the Taliban government, is later reported to have attacked Kabul's airport with helicopter gunships.
The Tamworth airport is one of the 10 busiest airports in Australia and is an important centre for flying training activities defence force graduates, but training of civil aviation students has declined dramatically in recent years.
Rakkestad has a civil airport, Rakkestad Airport, Aastorp.
In 2010 the conversion of the base to a civil airport started.
Pittsburgh International Airport, formerly Greater Pittsburgh Airport, Greater Pittsburgh International Airport and commonly referred to as Pittsburgh International, is a joint civil – military international airport located in the Pittsburgh suburb of Findlay Township, approximately west of downtown Pittsburgh at Exit 53 of I-376 and the Northern Terminus of PA Turnpike 576 ( Future I-576 ).
( The current primary civil airport for Nagoya is Chūbu Centrair International Airport in Tokoname.
Schönefeld was the major civil airport of East Germany ( GDR ), and the only airport serving East Berlin.

civil and flying
Any person who is seen as a threat to civil aviation is banned from flying.
* Supermarine Sea Eagle ( 1923 ) – civil amphibian flying boat
General aviation includes all non-scheduled civil flying, both private and commercial.
The player assumes the role of Ace Azzameen, the youngest of the Azzameen children, juggling military duty as a fighter pilot for the Rebel Alliance, and allegiance to his family, flying larger heavily-armed freighters for the family business, amid a bloody family feud and in the larger context of a galactic civil war.
Although the Law on the flag and coat of arms of San Marino from 2011 refers only to the " official flag " of the republic, a de facto civil flag, which omits the coat of arms, can sometimes be seen flying.
The history of civil aviation in Dubai started in July 1937 when an air agreement was signed for a flying boat base for the aircraft of Imperial Airways with rental of the base at about 440 Rupees per month – this included the guards ' wages.
Civil traffic began in 1922 when flights were conducted flying newspapers from Chester, and a regular civil air service started in 1933.
In response, German military flying became semi-clandestine, taking the form of civil ' clubs ' where students trained on gliders under the supervision of decommissioned World War I veterans.
On 1 January 1946, the Attlee government lifted wartime restrictions on civil flying in the United Kingdom.
Six air stations were taken over or established by the Air Board in 1920 – 21 for civil flying operations.
The CAF became responsible for all flying operations in Canada, including civil aviation.
In 1927 the management of aviation in Canada was reorganized so that the RCAF, now considered to be a military body, did not control civil flying.
The RCAF continued to support the CGAO until the Department of Transport assumed responsibility for supporting civil departments or until these departments instituted their own flying services.
During the 1920s and 1930s, flying boats were favoured for long-range civil aviation, because their operation did not rely on the existence of suitable airfields, which were not widespread at the time.
The term flag of convenience describes the business practice of registering a merchant ship in a sovereign state different from that of the ship's owners, and flying that state's civil ensign on the ship.
The land-based airfield was taken over by the Air Board in 1920 for civil flying operations, and later developed by the Canadian Air Force and the Royal Canadian Air Force.
While flying in his Curtiss JN-4 biplane he enters a green haze and emerges in the civil war-stricken land of Oz.
The new corporation constructs light aircraft at the Curtiss plant in Buffalo, New York ; heavy aircraft and flying boats at its Keystone Aircraft Corporation subsidiary in Bristol, Pennsylvania ; civil aircraft at its Curtiss-Roberston subsidiary in St. Louis, Missouri ; and Curtiss and Wright aircraft engines at the Wright factory in Paterson, New Jersey.
Instead he went to work in civil engineering of the Forth Bridge and later designed flying boats for the Gosport Aircraft Company.
During the late 1920s and early 1930s the aerodrome was also a checking-in point for the infamous ' Contact Races ' held in the Midlands, which were organised by and between various civil flying clubs in the area.
It was co-located with the civilian London Terminal Control Centre to provide a vital link between civil and military flying and airspace requirements.
It was to be the site for a flying school, where more than 1, 000 former RAF pilots would be retrained to fly civil aircraft.
The number of major accidents involving civil aircraft is quite low and it has been estimated that there is only about 1 accident resulting in human death in one billion ( 10 < sup > 9 </ sup >) flying hours.

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