Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Iceman (film)" ¶ 11
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

co-pilot and Charlie
His friend and co-pilot is Charles C. Charles, aka Hotshot Charlie ( William Tracy ), while the romantic interest is provided by the attractive blonde Burma ( Sandra Spence ).

co-pilot and him
Beamer reported that one passenger was killed and, later, that a flight attendant had told him the pilot and co-pilot had been forced from the cockpit and may have been wounded.
He is aided by Benjamin Franklin Walking Eagle, a Native American who is Tom's co-pilot, best friend, and an expert computer technician, and Anita Thorwald, a former rival of Tom's who now works with him as a technician and whose right leg has been rebuilt to contain a miniature computer.
Tintin's old nemesis and the mastermind of the plot in the book is the evil Rastapopoulos, who Frey argues is an example of anti-Semitic caricature, though other writers argue against this, pointing out that Rastapopoulos is not Jewish ( his drugged ramblings about the past of his family mentioning Erzurum and his surname make him likely a Turk of Greek ethnicity ), and surrounds himself with explicitly German-looking characters: Kurt, the submarine commander of The Red Sea Sharks, Doctor Krollspell, whom Hergé himself referred to as a former concentration camp official and Hans Boehm, the sinister-looking navigator and co-pilot, both from Flight 714.
Borden, a commercial-airline navigator who later became a co-pilot, lived across the hall from Bob Newhart's Bob Hartley character, would frequently pop into the Hartley's apartment to borrow things, mooch a meal, or have the Hartleys take care of his son when he had custody of him.
On 15 November 1924, he disappeared while flying over the English Channel, along with his co-pilot, Mechanical Corporal José Correia, due to fog and his shortening eyesight ( which never kept him from flying ).

co-pilot and out
However, it has been argued that anti-Semitic themes continued, especially in the depiction of Tintin's enemy Rastapopoulos in the post-war Flight 714, though other writers argue against this, pointing out the way that Rastapopoulos surrounds himself with explicitly German-looking characters: Kurt, the submarine ( or u-boat ) commander of The Red Sea Sharks ; Doctor Krollspell, whom Hergé himself referred to as a former concentration camp official, and Hans Boehm, the sinister-looking navigator and co-pilot, both from Flight 714.
Captain James Thain, the pilot, had flown the " Elizabethan " class Airspeed Ambassador ( registration G-ALZU ) out to Belgrade, but handed the controls to his co-pilot, Captain Kenneth Rayment, for the return journey.
He then forced 34-year old co-pilot out, remaining in the cockpit with captain, who managed to notify ATC about the hijacking.
The aircraft's pilot and co-pilot refuse to meet their demands and use sharp maneuvers to spoil the hijackers ' aim and force them out of the cockpit, and several people are injured in a clash between the hijackers and the other people on the plane.
* Writer Hugo Frey argues that Rastapopoulos ' appearance was an example of post-war anti-Semitism on Hergé's part, though other writers argue against this, pointing out that Rastapopoulos is not Jewish and surrounds himself with explicitly German-looking characters: Kurt, the submarine commander of The Red Sea Sharks ; Doctor Krollspell, whom Hergé himself referred to as a former concentration camp official ; and Hans Boehm, the sinister-looking navigator and co-pilot, both from Flight 714.
Disguised as an airplane co-pilot, Hatta sneaked out of the country to ask for assistance.
After a violent struggle, every aircrew member, except for the pilot and co-pilot, is killed when the airman ejects from the bomber, blowing the other crew members out to their deaths.
To allow easier exit when the pilot and co-pilot were to parachute out, the canopy
These were offered on a first-come / first-serve basis, and a pilot gave out " co-pilot licenses " at the end of the journey.
Amy's cat co-pilot Luca ( Kari Wahlgren ) takes control and knocks Timmer ( Steve Kramer ) out of his mech.

co-pilot and aircraft
The aircraft again took off, flown by the co-pilot Jürgen Vietor, this time headed for Mogadishu, Somalia.
On 1 May 2003, President George W. Bush flew in the co-pilot seat of a Sea Control Squadron THIRTY-FIVE ( VS-35 ) S-3B Viking from Naval Air Station North Island, California to the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln off the California coast, where Bush delivered his " Mission Accomplished " speech.
After the co-pilot calls V < sub > 1 </ sub >, he / she will call V < sub > r </ sub > or " rotate ," marking speed at which to rotate the aircraft.
He was an aviator of exceptional breadth of experience, from his quest to become the first person to achieve a solo balloon flight around the world ( finally succeeding on his sixth attempt, in 2002, becoming the first person to complete an uninterrupted and unrefueled solo circumnavigation of the world in any kind of aircraft ) to setting, with co-pilot Terry Delore, 10 of the 21 Glider Open records, including the first 2, 000 km Out-and-Return, the first 1, 500 km Triangle and the longest Straight Distance flights.
The first of these " Discovery " class aircraft entered commercial service in a 47-seat, mixed-class configuration in April 1953, and the first production aircraft ( G-AMAV ) went on to win the transport class of the 1953 London to Christchurch, New Zealand, air race, with BEA MD Peter Masefield as team manager and co-pilot.
To facilitate the further training of a number of newly-qualified co-pilots, SFOs were instructed to occupy only the third flight deck seat of the Trident and to act in the capacity known as " P3 ", involving operating the aircraft ’ s systems and assisting the captain ( known as " P1 " on the BEA Trident fleet ) and the co-pilot ( known as " P2 ") who between them handled the aircraft.
The investigation pointed to a number of probable causes, including a non-crew pilot in the cockpit, whose presence diverted the attention of the pilot and who interfered with the operation of the aircraft, and a lack of teamwork between the pilot and co-pilot.
In the world's air forces, modern navigators are frequently tasked with weapon systems employment and co-pilot type duties depending on the type, model and series of aircraft.
Flight attendants were able to alert the cockpit crew using intercom, allowing the pilot, co-pilot and flight engineer to escape through an overhead hatch in the cockpit, effectively grounding the aircraft.
She worked mainly on orbiter displays and controls before being assigned as a flight engineer in 1980 and co-pilot on NASA administrative aircraft.
He then attended flight training at Williams Air Force Base, Arizona, and subsequently spent 5 years as a KC-135 co-pilot, aircraft commander, and instructor pilot at Wurtsmith Air Force Base, Michigan.
* February 28 – In a single flight, U. S. Army Air Forces Captain Robert E. Thacker ( pilot ) and Lieutenant John M. Ard ( co-pilot ) in the North American P-82B Twin Mustang fighter Betty Jo make both the longest nonstop flight without aerial refueling by a fighter aircraft, about 4, 968 statute miles ( 7, 994 km ) from Hickam Field in the Territory of Hawaii to La Guardia Field in New York City, and the fastest flight between Hawaii and New York City up to that time, 14 hours 31 minutes 50 seconds at an average speed of 342 mph ( 550 km / hr ).
The hijacker is overpowered and the aircraft lands safely in Boston, Massachusetts, although the co-pilot is killed in the struggle.
The only survivors were the pilot and co-pilot who managed to escape before the aircraft sank in the coastal waters.
Dunbar is a private pilot with over 200 hours in single engine land aircraft, has logged more than 700 hours flying time in T-38 jets as a back-seater, and has over 100 hours as co-pilot in a Cessna Citation jet.
The causes have been identified as the co-pilot failing to reply to the command ' throttles back ', thus resulting in the pilot having to control the throttles himself, resulting in a brief loss of control of the aircraft, causing it to rise.
A commercial pilot license ( CPL ), is a qualification that permits the holder to act as the pilot in command of a single pilot aircraft, or as co-pilot of a multi-pilot aircraft and be paid for his / her work.
NFOs are not pilots ( Naval Aviators ), but they may perform many " co-pilot " functions, depending on the type of aircraft.
Such a collection motivates a group of thieves led by co-pilot Bob Chambers ( Robert Foxworth ) to hijack the aircraft in the hopes of landing it on an abandoned airfield on St. George Island.
* 6 August-On the first anniversary of the Hiroshima bombing, Captain Bob Lewis, the co-pilot of the Enola Gay, the aircraft which dropped the bomb, arrives at Shannon Airport, completing his first flight as a civil aviation pilot.
Using the emergency oxygen system, the captain began his emergency descent from FL250 under radar guidance from Hanover air traffic control ( ATC ), while the co-pilot depressurised the aircraft and attempted to open a side window to clear the smoke.
The RWR usually has a visual display somewhere prominent in the cockpit ( in some modern aircraft, in multiple locations in the cockpit ) and also generates audible tones which feed into the pilot's ( and perhaps RIO / co-pilot / GIB's in a multi-seat aircraft ) headset.

co-pilot and through
A person who joins the scheme as a passenger will not see a return until they advance through the crew and co-pilot tiers and exit the scheme as a captain.
However, the glider still impacted at considerable speed against an earth bank near to the bridge, the resulting impact throwing both pilot and co-pilot through the windscreen and knocking them unconscious and stunning the passengers.

co-pilot and sky
" Then, on June 5, 1948, he was flying as co-pilot with Maj. Daniel Forbes when the airplane departed from controlled flight and broke apart in the sky northwest of the base.

0.438 seconds.