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The graphic (website) version of this newsletter can be accessed at:
http://pages.prodigy.net/rockaway/newsletter390.htm Quote of the Week: "It sounds like bombs are getting dropped. This is not what they promised. The planes are coming much closer than we were told they would." story about resident's complaint about Georgia's Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Airport after fifth runway opened --------------------------------------------------------------------- Aviation Conspiracy Newsletter #390.............................................. .................................August 20, 2006 Past newsletters can be accessed at: http://pages.prodigy.net/rockaway/ACNewsmenu.htm The PASSUR airport flight tracking system at many major U.S. airports http://www.passur.com/sites.htm (you must have Java installed to view it). If you want to get the newsletter sent to you every week, sign up to AviationWatch. Bill Mulcahy --------------------------------------------------------------------- "Snakes" Invade A Boeing 747!!! --------------------------------------------------------------------- As Bill Sees It: (Editorial) "Snakes On A Plane" Hot Horror Movie This Summer!!! At first I thought that the movie might have something to do with FAA, drunken pilots or maybe even exploding fuel tanks; but no, it's apparently really about snakes on a plane. As if flying in a metal box at thirty thousand feet with radical Moslems trying to blow you up wasn't bad enough, how about 500 deadly serpents slithering around the airplane cabin? Oh well, anything that keeps the public off these noisy, air polluting monsters is good us victims on the ground. Boeing Bidding On Border Security Contract!!! Stories this week told about how Boeing is bidding on a multi-billion dollar contract for "revamping" America's border security. No doubt this company will use all of its close ties to congress and the military to squeeze more taxpayer money into their coffers. I hope they can do better at border security than they do designing airplane fuel tanks; some of which have the bad habit of exploding. Tips For Avoiding Snakes On A Plane: When it comes to dealing with snakes on a plane, preparation is key. That's why we sought advice from David Cooper, living collections herpetologist at the N.C. Museum of Natural Sciences.Cooper cares for about 40 snakes, including venomous rattlesnakes and copperheads that are native to North Carolina. His first, best piece of advice on dealing with snakes in midair?" Don't panic." For those who need to know what to do instead, here are a few ideas: http://www.newsobserver.com/105/story/476216.html * To avoid inadvertently bringing a snake on a plane, check your luggage for serpents before boarding. This can be particularly important if your travels take you to a place such as Guam, which is infested with brown tree snakes. Cooper describes these snakes as "mildly venomous." * Since not everyone will follow the above rule, look around the plane before taking a seat. If you spot a snake, alert a flight attendant and calmly exit the aircraft.* If you find yourself on a plane filled with snake smugglers whose stowaways have escaped, remain calm. Cooper recommends lifting your feet and scrunching them on your seat. Keep still. Snakes see movement as a threat or a meal possibility. Killer Bees On Planes Too? "Snakes on a Plane" may be the hot horror movie of the summer, but bees on planes are creating the most buzz in some aviation circles. Africanized honey bees - the infamous "killer bees" - are increasingly making unscheduled layovers at airports across the Southwest. As pilot Brian Murphy prepared for a quick flight from Burbank's Bob Hope Airport to San Francisco in May, his ground crew alerted him to a problem on his Beechcraft King Air 200: A five-foot-wide blanket of bees was draped over the plane's left engine cover. And many bees were finding their way into an engine compartment and even into the cockpit. "I was just shocked," says the 36-year-old charter pilot, who raced to shut the cockpit's open vent windows. "Within just 20 minutes there were thousands of bees that had moved onto the exhaust area." He considered turning on the engines to shoo away the swarm but decided that that might make matters worse by agitating the bees. http://www.naplesnews.com/news/2006/...llife_problem/ Boeing Wants Billions For Border Security Surveillance: WASHINGTON - Boeing wants to guard the nation's borders for a couple of billion dollars. Boeing's St. Louis-based defense division has developed a plan combining radar and laser technology, sensors and cameras, unmanned aerial vehicles, other surveillance equipment and rapid communications tools to keep illegal immigrants, drug smugglers, potential terrorists and gun runners from entering the United States. It's done so at the behest of the Department of Homeland Security, which, seeking better ways to protect U.S. borders, a few months ago asked corporations with expertise in systems integration to supply ideas and technological know-how. That started a process that has received scant public attention partly because federal officials have been tight-lipped about it despite the intense public debate over immigration and the role of border security in the war on terror. The competition for the contract ends next month, when federal officials will choose Boeing or one of four rivals: Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, Northrop Grumman and Ericsson of Sweden. The firms have devised a variety of ways to combine technology existing or to be developed with the government's border patrol and infrastructure. http://www.grandforks.com/mld/grandf...s/15310983.htm FAA opens skydiving probe: CRESWELL - The Federal Aviation Administration has opened an investigation into city complaints that two companies here are landing skydivers on Creswell Airport property after receiving formal notice that they no longer have permission to do so. The city's complaint cites an FAA regulation allowing deployed parachutes over airports only if they are at least 2,000 feet above the airport's traffic pattern. FAA regional spokesman Allen Kennitzer confirmed the investigation this week but said the agency does not discuss details of open cases. He estimated that it will be at least mid-September before the FAA completes the probe and decides whether to sanction Eugene Skydivers or Wright Brothers Skydiving. http://www.registerguard.com/news/20...ion=cityregion @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ Important Aviation News Stories This Week |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Boeing Boondoggle | Larry Dighera | Military Aviation | 77 | September 15th 04 02:39 AM |