Live Breaking News & Updates on ப்ரைமரீ விமானம் பயிற்சி
Stay updated with breaking news from ப்ரைமரீ விமானம் பயிற்சி. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
I’m David L. Coddon, and here’s your guide to all things essential in San Diego’s arts and culture this week. Among the films to be screened during the first-ever San Diego International ShortsFest is “The Roads Most Traveled,” an emotionally involving 24-minute retrospective of the work of photojournalist Don Bartletti. Bartletti spent 40 years in a distinguished career that took him from the Vista Press, to the bygone Oceanside Blade-Tribune, to the then-San Diego Union and eventually to the Los Angeles Times, where he would win a Pulitzer Prize for his photojournalism in 2003. Advertisement The focus of “The Roads Most Traveled,” directed by Palomar College’s Bill Wisneski, is Bartletti’s visual documentation of the migration of Central Americans to the U.S. This includes a harrowing and heartbreaking experience riding atop freight cars bound for El Norte with his camera and little else, “an assignment,” Bartletti says ....
Print When the title character of Richard Farrell’s debut novel, “The Falling Woman,” survives a plane crash, she lands on an epiphany. Farrell knows how that feels. The epiphany part, anyway. In the case of the fictional Erin Geraghty, the change of heart comes when the plane that is supposed to take her from Washington, D.C., to San Francisco explodes in midair. Everyone on the plane dies except for Erin, who uses her second chance to rethink her whole life. In the case of the man who created Erin, the miracle also happened in midair. In 1992, the Massachusetts native had begun Primary Flight Training at the U.S. Navy’s flight school in Pensacola, Fla., making good on his childhood dream of becoming a pilot. But after he had an epileptic seizure during training, Farrell was told he would never be able to fly again. ....
Eric Shindelbower/Boeing This month, the Navy announced a new warrant officer program to train sailors to fly Boeing s MQ-25 Stingray, which is slated to enter the fleet as a refueling aircraft in 2024. The program seeks younger candidates without the prerequisites of long service and rank, suggesting the Navy is making a long-term investment in the MQ-25. In a little-noted press release on December 9, the Navy announced a new Warrant Officer program. The program will train some 450 Aerial Vehicle Operators, or AVOs, under the new 737X designation. These warrant officers will fly Boeing s MQ-25 Stingray, which is slated to enter the fleet as a refueling aircraft in 2024. The Stingray is a aerial refueling drone that entered the fleet last year. ....
Share This: In a little-noted press release on December 9, the Navy announced a new Warrant Officer program. The program will train some 450 Aerial Vehicle Operators, or AVOs, under the new 737X designation. These warrant officers will fly Boeing’s MQ-25 Stingray, which is slated to enter the fleet as a refueling aircraft in 2024. The Stingray is a aerial refueling drone that entered the fleet last year. The Navy has opened this program to currently enlisted members and “Street to Fleet” applicants. This program will be in addition to the Navy’s long-standing Chief Warrant Officer Program. The latter is limited to qualified senior enlisted personnel who have served at least 12 years and are chief petty officers (E-7 through E-9), and E-6 personnel who are eligible for E-7. ....