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1000 results for “Cockpit”
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Regierungsflieger muss wegen Dämpfen in Leipzig notfallmäßig landen
Dämpfe im Cockpit Regierungsflieger verfehlt Köln 22.07.2025 – 02:19 UhrLesedauer: 1 Min. Einsatzkräfte und -fahrzeuge stehen an ei…
#Leipzig #Deutschland #Deutsch #DE #Schlagzeilen #Headlines #Nachrichten #News #Europe #Europa #EU #100137924 #100151112 #BUNDESWEHR #Cockpit #Dampf #Einsatzkraft #Feuerwehr #Germany #Köln #leipzig #LeipzigerVolkszeitung #Luftwaffe #Regierungsmaschine #Sachsen
https://www.europesays.com/de/283998/ -
Echoes in the Cockpit: Decades Later, Top Gun Stars Navigate Shifting Screens
What are the Top Gun 1986 stars doing today? Learn about the career paths of Tom Cruise, Val Kilmer, and the rest of the original cast in May 2026.
#topgun, #tomcruise, #valkilmer, #80smovies, #celebritynews
https://newsletter.tf/top-gun-1986-cast-career-updates-2026/
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Ein erfolgreicher Hasennachmittag.
Spannungsanzeige im Cockpit läuft endlich.
Unerwarteterweise sogar im Fenix A320. Die Anzeige dürfte eigentlich nur im generischen A320, im A320 von FBW und im A330 funktionieren.
Dank eines kleinen AddOns (Fenix Quartz) hab ich aber auch im Fenix die tatsächlichen Daten verfügbar. 😊😊
Ein Hase strahlt über beide Ohren.
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🚨 MG Cyberster Electric Sportscar Launched in India!
💰 Starts at ₹72.49 Lakh
⚡ 510 PS | 725 Nm | 580 km Range
🏎️ 0-100 in just 3.2s
🚪 Scissor doors + triple-screen cockpit#MGCyberster #ElectricRoadster #EVIndia #NewCars2025 #ElectricCars #Automobile #EVs #Cars #SportsCar #MG #Cyberster #Tesla
https://gaddiguru.com/mg-cyberster-electric-sportscar-launch-india/
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Ab sofort können DNS-Einträge im Ops One Cockpit aktiviert und deaktiviert werden 👏🏻:
Neu können DNS-Einträge in unserem Cockpit (cockpit.opsone.ch) nicht nur erstellt, bearbeitet und wieder gelöscht, sondern auch deaktiviert werden.
Die Optionserweiterung erfolgte auf Kundenwunsch. Falls auch du eine gute Idee hast, darfst du uns jederzeit gerne kontaktieren. Verbesserungsvorschläge nehmen wir immer gerne entgegen!
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Ab sofort können DNS-Einträge im Ops One Cockpit aktiviert und deaktiviert werden 👏🏻:
Neu können DNS-Einträge in unserem Cockpit (cockpit.opsone.ch) nicht nur erstellt, bearbeitet und wieder gelöscht, sondern auch deaktiviert werden.
Die Optionserweiterung erfolgte auf Kundenwunsch. Falls auch du eine gute Idee hast, darfst du uns jederzeit gerne kontaktieren. Verbesserungsvorschläge nehmen wir immer gerne entgegen!
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Ab sofort können DNS-Einträge im Ops One Cockpit aktiviert und deaktiviert werden 👏🏻:
Neu können DNS-Einträge in unserem Cockpit (cockpit.opsone.ch) nicht nur erstellt, bearbeitet und wieder gelöscht, sondern auch deaktiviert werden.
Die Optionserweiterung erfolgte auf Kundenwunsch. Falls auch du eine gute Idee hast, darfst du uns jederzeit gerne kontaktieren. Verbesserungsvorschläge nehmen wir immer gerne entgegen!
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@jlendino
I had to find the name of the space game. It was #CosmicConflict (1978). Looking back, it's incredibly basic. But at the time, as a kid, I honestly felt like I was in the cockpit of a space fighter. The HUD was just like what #Luke saw in the attack on the #DeathStar in #StarWars. -
27 Eurowings-Flüge und 14 Lufthansa-Flüge wegen Streik annuliert
Am 13. April fallen schon zum dritten Mal in diesem Jahr Flüge am Flughafen Düsseldorf wegen Streiks aus.…
#Duesseldorf #Deutschland #Deutsch #DE #Schlagzeilen #Headlines #Nachrichten #News #Europe #Europa #EU #Düsseldorf #Abflüge #annulliert #Cockpit #Eurowings #Flüge #Flughafen #Fluglinien #Germany #Lufthansa #Nordrhein-Westfalen #Pilotengewerkschaft #Streik
https://www.europesays.com/de/940551/ -
Emergency Declaration (K-movie) review
I’ve always had a soft spot for plague dramas. (Okay, I admit it, more of an obsession.) The tension, the race against time, and the high stakes when humanity battles an invisible enemy, zombies … you get it.
So, when I came across this movie—a plane-bound thriller where a terrorist spreads a deadly virus among passengers on a flight to Honolulu—I was immediately hooked. A virus on a plane? I couldn’t press play quickly enough.
The premise drew me in quickly: A contagion threatening lives at 30,000 feet—edge-of-your-seat drama guaranteed. Viruses, airborne chaos, people trapped in a confined space—what could go wrong?
Well, plenty, but I’ll get into that later.
Cast and characters
- Song Kang-ho as In-ho, detective
- Lee Byung-hun as Jae-hyuk, passenger
- Jeon Do-yeon as Sook-hee, minister
- Kim Nam-gil as Hyun-soo, pilot
My initial feelings
I hit play with excitement. The setup was intriguing enough, and I was ready for a wild ride. The early scenes didn’t disappoint either. The tension builds quickly as the characters realize something sinister is afoot. You can’t help but feel the urgency of the situation. I was invested, eagerly anticipating where this story was headed.
The more I watched, the more logical problems began to pile up, and I ended up scratching my head more often. The film asks you to suspend disbelief quite a bit.
The good
Let’s talk about what worked, though. The acting, for one. The cast delivered solid performances, and the action sequences were intense and well-executed. Lee Byun Hun, in particular, stole the show. There’s a standout moment where his character charges into the cockpit, takes control of the plunging plane, and narrowly averts a disastrous crash. It’s a nail-biting scene, filled with tension and adrenaline.
The bad
But here’s where things go south. The villains, for example, are one-dimensional at best. We never get a clear understanding of why the terrorist unleashes the virus.
His motivations remain a mystery, and he feels like a classic mustache-twirling villain with no depth. It’s a missed opportunity, really. I wanted more complexity, more reason to care about or hate him. Instead, he’s just evil for evil’s sake.
Then there’s the film’s over-the-top jingoism. The story leans heavily into a “South Korea against the world” narrative, portraying the country as one denied of help by the US and Japan at every turn.
It’s a bit much, sometimes.
The logical flaws (Oh boy)
Now for my biggest gripe: the plot holes and logical inconsistencies. There were several moments that made me go, “Wait, what?” The film throws common sense out the window on more than one occasion:
- Why is a street cop attending high-level government health crisis meetings? Do they have no other experts available?
- How does a crime scene investigator declare a corpse “positive for the virus” when the virus is completely unknown? What kind of magical testing agent is this?
- And the kicker: why is a cop able to waltz into a virus containment unit and inject himself with a deadly pathogen? Who’s allowing this?!
A movie reviewer once said that the pandemic has turned everyone into amateur virus experts, and I have to agree. Even before COVID-19, I would have questioned these absurd plot points, but now they’re even harder to swallow.
The plot felt contrived, and I found myself pulled out of the story whenever these illogical moments surfaced—which, unfortunately, happened a lot.
Plot points I loved
But credit where it’s due: when the film delivered, it really delivered. That aforementioned scene where Lee Byun Hun steers the plane away from certain doom? That was gold. It’s a high-octane moment that genuinely had me on the edge of my seat. I do have to ask, though—why wasn’t autopilot on? Isn’t that standard for commercial flights?
Thoughts on the ending
The film’s conclusion wrapped things up in a pretty predictable but satisfactory manner. It’s the kind of “everyone’s happy in the end” scenario that felt a bit too neat, given the chaos leading up to it. Was it contrived? Absolutely. But sometimes you just have to roll with it.
Would I watch it again?
If I can turn off my brain and just enjoy the action, I’d probably give this movie another go. It’s one of those films that can be entertaining in the right mindset, provided you don’t dig too deep into the logic of it all. So, yes, I’d watch it again, but only if I’m in the mood for mindless fun.
Final thoughts
This movie is a mixed bag. It has its moments—great action, solid performances, and a tense atmosphere—but it’s weighed down by plot holes and underdeveloped villains. If you’re a fan of pandemic thrillers and can overlook some major logical leaps, you might enjoy it. But if you’re someone who craves airtight plots and believable character motivations, this might leave you frustrated.
Ultimately, it’s an enjoyable enough ride as long as you leave logic at the door.
Final rating: 3 out of 5
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Emergency Declaration (K-movie) review
I’ve always had a soft spot for plague dramas. (Okay, I admit it, more of an obsession.) The tension, the race against time, and the high stakes when humanity battles an invisible enemy, zombies … you get it.
So, when I came across this movie—a plane-bound thriller where a terrorist spreads a deadly virus among passengers on a flight to Honolulu—I was immediately hooked. A virus on a plane? I couldn’t press play quickly enough.
The premise drew me in quickly: A contagion threatening lives at 30,000 feet—edge-of-your-seat drama guaranteed. Viruses, airborne chaos, people trapped in a confined space—what could go wrong?
Well, plenty, but I’ll get into that later.
Cast and characters
- Song Kang-ho as In-ho, detective
- Lee Byung-hun as Jae-hyuk, passenger
- Jeon Do-yeon as Sook-hee, minister
- Kim Nam-gil as Hyun-soo, pilot
My initial feelings
I hit play with excitement. The setup was intriguing enough, and I was ready for a wild ride. The early scenes didn’t disappoint either. The tension builds quickly as the characters realize something sinister is afoot. You can’t help but feel the urgency of the situation. I was invested, eagerly anticipating where this story was headed.
The more I watched, the more logical problems began to pile up, and I ended up scratching my head more often. The film asks you to suspend disbelief quite a bit.
The good
Let’s talk about what worked, though. The acting, for one. The cast delivered solid performances, and the action sequences were intense and well-executed. Lee Byun Hun, in particular, stole the show. There’s a standout moment where his character charges into the cockpit, takes control of the plunging plane, and narrowly averts a disastrous crash. It’s a nail-biting scene, filled with tension and adrenaline.
The bad
But here’s where things go south. The villains, for example, are one-dimensional at best. We never get a clear understanding of why the terrorist unleashes the virus.
His motivations remain a mystery, and he feels like a classic mustache-twirling villain with no depth. It’s a missed opportunity, really. I wanted more complexity, more reason to care about or hate him. Instead, he’s just evil for evil’s sake.
Then there’s the film’s over-the-top jingoism. The story leans heavily into a “South Korea against the world” narrative, portraying the country as one denied of help by the US and Japan at every turn.
It’s a bit much, sometimes.
The logical flaws (Oh boy)
Now for my biggest gripe: the plot holes and logical inconsistencies. There were several moments that made me go, “Wait, what?” The film throws common sense out the window on more than one occasion:
- Why is a street cop attending high-level government health crisis meetings? Do they have no other experts available?
- How does a crime scene investigator declare a corpse “positive for the virus” when the virus is completely unknown? What kind of magical testing agent is this?
- And the kicker: why is a cop able to waltz into a virus containment unit and inject himself with a deadly pathogen? Who’s allowing this?!
A movie reviewer once said that the pandemic has turned everyone into amateur virus experts, and I have to agree. Even before COVID-19, I would have questioned these absurd plot points, but now they’re even harder to swallow.
The plot felt contrived, and I found myself pulled out of the story whenever these illogical moments surfaced—which, unfortunately, happened a lot.
Plot points I loved
But credit where it’s due: when the film delivered, it really delivered. That aforementioned scene where Lee Byun Hun steers the plane away from certain doom? That was gold. It’s a high-octane moment that genuinely had me on the edge of my seat. I do have to ask, though—why wasn’t autopilot on? Isn’t that standard for commercial flights?
Thoughts on the ending
The film’s conclusion wrapped things up in a pretty predictable but satisfactory manner. It’s the kind of “everyone’s happy in the end” scenario that felt a bit too neat, given the chaos leading up to it. Was it contrived? Absolutely. But sometimes you just have to roll with it.
Would I watch it again?
If I can turn off my brain and just enjoy the action, I’d probably give this movie another go. It’s one of those films that can be entertaining in the right mindset, provided you don’t dig too deep into the logic of it all. So, yes, I’d watch it again, but only if I’m in the mood for mindless fun.
Final thoughts
This movie is a mixed bag. It has its moments—great action, solid performances, and a tense atmosphere—but it’s weighed down by plot holes and underdeveloped villains. If you’re a fan of pandemic thrillers and can overlook some major logical leaps, you might enjoy it. But if you’re someone who craves airtight plots and believable character motivations, this might leave you frustrated.
Ultimately, it’s an enjoyable enough ride as long as you leave logic at the door.
Final rating: 3 out of 5
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Emergency Declaration (K-movie) review
I’ve always had a soft spot for plague dramas. (Okay, I admit it, more of an obsession.) The tension, the race against time, and the high stakes when humanity battles an invisible enemy, zombies … you get it.
So, when I came across this movie—a plane-bound thriller where a terrorist spreads a deadly virus among passengers on a flight to Honolulu—I was immediately hooked. A virus on a plane? I couldn’t press play quickly enough.
The premise drew me in quickly: A contagion threatening lives at 30,000 feet—edge-of-your-seat drama guaranteed. Viruses, airborne chaos, people trapped in a confined space—what could go wrong?
Well, plenty, but I’ll get into that later.
Cast and characters
- Song Kang-ho as In-ho, detective
- Lee Byung-hun as Jae-hyuk, passenger
- Jeon Do-yeon as Sook-hee, minister
- Kim Nam-gil as Hyun-soo, pilot
My initial feelings
I hit play with excitement. The setup was intriguing enough, and I was ready for a wild ride. The early scenes didn’t disappoint either. The tension builds quickly as the characters realize something sinister is afoot. You can’t help but feel the urgency of the situation. I was invested, eagerly anticipating where this story was headed.
The more I watched, the more logical problems began to pile up, and I ended up scratching my head more often. The film asks you to suspend disbelief quite a bit.
The good
Let’s talk about what worked, though. The acting, for one. The cast delivered solid performances, and the action sequences were intense and well-executed. Lee Byun Hun, in particular, stole the show. There’s a standout moment where his character charges into the cockpit, takes control of the plunging plane, and narrowly averts a disastrous crash. It’s a nail-biting scene, filled with tension and adrenaline.
The bad
But here’s where things go south. The villains, for example, are one-dimensional at best. We never get a clear understanding of why the terrorist unleashes the virus.
His motivations remain a mystery, and he feels like a classic mustache-twirling villain with no depth. It’s a missed opportunity, really. I wanted more complexity, more reason to care about or hate him. Instead, he’s just evil for evil’s sake.
Then there’s the film’s over-the-top jingoism. The story leans heavily into a “South Korea against the world” narrative, portraying the country as one denied of help by the US and Japan at every turn.
It’s a bit much, sometimes.
The logical flaws (Oh boy)
Now for my biggest gripe: the plot holes and logical inconsistencies. There were several moments that made me go, “Wait, what?” The film throws common sense out the window on more than one occasion:
- Why is a street cop attending high-level government health crisis meetings? Do they have no other experts available?
- How does a crime scene investigator declare a corpse “positive for the virus” when the virus is completely unknown? What kind of magical testing agent is this?
- And the kicker: why is a cop able to waltz into a virus containment unit and inject himself with a deadly pathogen? Who’s allowing this?!
A movie reviewer once said that the pandemic has turned everyone into amateur virus experts, and I have to agree. Even before COVID-19, I would have questioned these absurd plot points, but now they’re even harder to swallow.
The plot felt contrived, and I found myself pulled out of the story whenever these illogical moments surfaced—which, unfortunately, happened a lot.
Plot points I loved
But credit where it’s due: when the film delivered, it really delivered. That aforementioned scene where Lee Byun Hun steers the plane away from certain doom? That was gold. It’s a high-octane moment that genuinely had me on the edge of my seat. I do have to ask, though—why wasn’t autopilot on? Isn’t that standard for commercial flights?
Thoughts on the ending
The film’s conclusion wrapped things up in a pretty predictable but satisfactory manner. It’s the kind of “everyone’s happy in the end” scenario that felt a bit too neat, given the chaos leading up to it. Was it contrived? Absolutely. But sometimes you just have to roll with it.
Would I watch it again?
If I can turn off my brain and just enjoy the action, I’d probably give this movie another go. It’s one of those films that can be entertaining in the right mindset, provided you don’t dig too deep into the logic of it all. So, yes, I’d watch it again, but only if I’m in the mood for mindless fun.
Final thoughts
This movie is a mixed bag. It has its moments—great action, solid performances, and a tense atmosphere—but it’s weighed down by plot holes and underdeveloped villains. If you’re a fan of pandemic thrillers and can overlook some major logical leaps, you might enjoy it. But if you’re someone who craves airtight plots and believable character motivations, this might leave you frustrated.
Ultimately, it’s an enjoyable enough ride as long as you leave logic at the door.
Final rating: 3 out of 5
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Emergency Declaration (K-movie) review
I’ve always had a soft spot for plague dramas. (Okay, I admit it, more of an obsession.) The tension, the race against time, and the high stakes when humanity battles an invisible enemy, zombies … you get it.
So, when I came across this movie—a plane-bound thriller where a terrorist spreads a deadly virus among passengers on a flight to Honolulu—I was immediately hooked. A virus on a plane? I couldn’t press play quickly enough.
The premise drew me in quickly: A contagion threatening lives at 30,000 feet—edge-of-your-seat drama guaranteed. Viruses, airborne chaos, people trapped in a confined space—what could go wrong?
Well, plenty, but I’ll get into that later.
Cast and characters
- Song Kang-ho as In-ho, detective
- Lee Byung-hun as Jae-hyuk, passenger
- Jeon Do-yeon as Sook-hee, minister
- Kim Nam-gil as Hyun-soo, pilot
My initial feelings
I hit play with excitement. The setup was intriguing enough, and I was ready for a wild ride. The early scenes didn’t disappoint either. The tension builds quickly as the characters realize something sinister is afoot. You can’t help but feel the urgency of the situation. I was invested, eagerly anticipating where this story was headed.
The more I watched, the more logical problems began to pile up, and I ended up scratching my head more often. The film asks you to suspend disbelief quite a bit.
The good
Let’s talk about what worked, though. The acting, for one. The cast delivered solid performances, and the action sequences were intense and well-executed. Lee Byun Hun, in particular, stole the show. There’s a standout moment where his character charges into the cockpit, takes control of the plunging plane, and narrowly averts a disastrous crash. It’s a nail-biting scene, filled with tension and adrenaline.
The bad
But here’s where things go south. The villains, for example, are one-dimensional at best. We never get a clear understanding of why the terrorist unleashes the virus.
His motivations remain a mystery, and he feels like a classic mustache-twirling villain with no depth. It’s a missed opportunity, really. I wanted more complexity, more reason to care about or hate him. Instead, he’s just evil for evil’s sake.
Then there’s the film’s over-the-top jingoism. The story leans heavily into a “South Korea against the world” narrative, portraying the country as one denied of help by the US and Japan at every turn.
It’s a bit much, sometimes.
The logical flaws (Oh boy)
Now for my biggest gripe: the plot holes and logical inconsistencies. There were several moments that made me go, “Wait, what?” The film throws common sense out the window on more than one occasion:
- Why is a street cop attending high-level government health crisis meetings? Do they have no other experts available?
- How does a crime scene investigator declare a corpse “positive for the virus” when the virus is completely unknown? What kind of magical testing agent is this?
- And the kicker: why is a cop able to waltz into a virus containment unit and inject himself with a deadly pathogen? Who’s allowing this?!
A movie reviewer once said that the pandemic has turned everyone into amateur virus experts, and I have to agree. Even before COVID-19, I would have questioned these absurd plot points, but now they’re even harder to swallow.
The plot felt contrived, and I found myself pulled out of the story whenever these illogical moments surfaced—which, unfortunately, happened a lot.
Plot points I loved
But credit where it’s due: when the film delivered, it really delivered. That aforementioned scene where Lee Byun Hun steers the plane away from certain doom? That was gold. It’s a high-octane moment that genuinely had me on the edge of my seat. I do have to ask, though—why wasn’t autopilot on? Isn’t that standard for commercial flights?
Thoughts on the ending
The film’s conclusion wrapped things up in a pretty predictable but satisfactory manner. It’s the kind of “everyone’s happy in the end” scenario that felt a bit too neat, given the chaos leading up to it. Was it contrived? Absolutely. But sometimes you just have to roll with it.
Would I watch it again?
If I can turn off my brain and just enjoy the action, I’d probably give this movie another go. It’s one of those films that can be entertaining in the right mindset, provided you don’t dig too deep into the logic of it all. So, yes, I’d watch it again, but only if I’m in the mood for mindless fun.
Final thoughts
This movie is a mixed bag. It has its moments—great action, solid performances, and a tense atmosphere—but it’s weighed down by plot holes and underdeveloped villains. If you’re a fan of pandemic thrillers and can overlook some major logical leaps, you might enjoy it. But if you’re someone who craves airtight plots and believable character motivations, this might leave you frustrated.
Ultimately, it’s an enjoyable enough ride as long as you leave logic at the door.
Final rating: 3 out of 5
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La Macronie exemplaire, forcément exemplaire.
Christophe #Béchu, notre ministre de la Transition Écologique (lol), pris la main dans le cockpit par le média indépendant LaTopette 49.
À au moins 6 reprises ces 4 derniers mois, il a affrété en catimini des avions basés à Toulouse pour l'emmener de son fief d'Angers à Paris.
Soit : Toulouse/Angers puis Angers/Paris et enfin retour de l'avion privé à Toulouse : Paris/Toulouse.Chapeau l'artiste !
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Set (mindset) and Setting (your environment) plus Support (who is minding your mental, physical and possibly spiritual safety) are essential parts of working with #psychedelic medicines including #plantmedicines — Taking mushrooms and entering the cockpit of an airplane two days later is not about #psychedelics and their use as medicines. Resist the narrative that psychedelics are going to kill us all lest we ban them.
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The third John Smith aircraft was the aforementioned De Havilland Mosquito. Very successful raffles were run over the weekend where the prize was to sit in the cockpit during an engine run. While I was buying tickets for one of these raffles Al Marshall, the head of the restoration project, happened to walk in and see me - that night he took me aside and invited me for a closer look on Sunday... #Omaka #ClassicFighters2023 #avgeek #warbirds #airshow
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The third John Smith aircraft was the aforementioned De Havilland Mosquito. Very successful raffles were run over the weekend where the prize was to sit in the cockpit during an engine run. While I was buying tickets for one of these raffles Al Marshall, the head of the restoration project, happened to walk in and see me - that night he took me aside and invited me for a closer look on Sunday... #Omaka #ClassicFighters2023 #avgeek #warbirds #airshow
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The third John Smith aircraft was the aforementioned De Havilland Mosquito. Very successful raffles were run over the weekend where the prize was to sit in the cockpit during an engine run. While I was buying tickets for one of these raffles Al Marshall, the head of the restoration project, happened to walk in and see me - that night he took me aside and invited me for a closer look on Sunday... #Omaka #ClassicFighters2023 #avgeek #warbirds #airshow
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The third John Smith aircraft was the aforementioned De Havilland Mosquito. Very successful raffles were run over the weekend where the prize was to sit in the cockpit during an engine run. While I was buying tickets for one of these raffles Al Marshall, the head of the restoration project, happened to walk in and see me - that night he took me aside and invited me for a closer look on Sunday... #Omaka #ClassicFighters2023 #avgeek #warbirds #airshow
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The third John Smith aircraft was the aforementioned De Havilland Mosquito. Very successful raffles were run over the weekend where the prize was to sit in the cockpit during an engine run. While I was buying tickets for one of these raffles Al Marshall, the head of the restoration project, happened to walk in and see me - that night he took me aside and invited me for a closer look on Sunday... #Omaka #ClassicFighters2023 #avgeek #warbirds #airshow
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The two-day strike, called by the Union Cockpit (VC) representing pilots, began Monday morning involving Lufthansa, Lufthansa Cargo, Lufthansa Cityline, and Eur... https://news.osna.fm/?p=41626 | #news #amid #disputes #labor #lufthansa
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The two-day strike, called by the Union Cockpit (VC) representing pilots, began Monday morning involving Lufthansa, Lufthansa Cargo, Lufthansa Cityline, and Eur... https://news.osna.fm/?p=41626 | #news #amid #disputes #labor #lufthansa
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The two-day strike, called by the Union Cockpit (VC) representing pilots, began Monday morning involving Lufthansa, Lufthansa Cargo, Lufthansa Cityline, and Eur... https://news.osna.fm/?p=41626 | #news #amid #disputes #labor #lufthansa
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The two-day strike, called by the Union Cockpit (VC) representing pilots, began Monday morning involving Lufthansa, Lufthansa Cargo, Lufthansa Cityline, and Eur... https://news.osna.fm/?p=41626 | #news #amid #disputes #labor #lufthansa
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The Cockpit Union has called for a strike targeting the flight crew of the Lufthansa Group. According to the trade union, the strike will affect Deutsche Luftha... https://news.osna.fm/?p=41482 | #news #contract #disputes #lufthansa #monday
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The Cockpit Union has called for a strike targeting the flight crew of the Lufthansa Group. According to the trade union, the strike will affect Deutsche Luftha... https://news.osna.fm/?p=41482 | #news #contract #disputes #lufthansa #monday