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Be sure to bookmark us and visit each day to see free aviation video news stories that cover airline news, civil aviation, military and space flight. And be certain to tell your friends and co-workers!
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The Soviet-era Tupolev Tu-154 airliner is said by Russian Emergencies Ministry to have had 170 people on board: 160 passengers and 10 flight crew.
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The Soviet-era Tupolev Tu-154 airliner is said by Russian Emergencies Ministry to have had 170 people on board: 160 passengers and 10 flight crew.
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British authorities have arrested 21 suspects in an alleged terrorist plot attempting to carry liquid explosives aboard airline flights in carry-on bags. The flights were reportedly from London Heathrow to California, New York and Washington in the United States and involved US air carriers United Airlines, Continental and American Airlines.
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A TWA Boeing B-747 jetliner exploded shortly after take-off from New York's Kennedy airport, killing all 230 people on board. A look back the tragedy and controversy surrounding this aviation disaster from July 17, 1996.
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The Space Shuttle Discovery and its crew are home after a 13-day, five
million-mile journey in space. The mission, STS-121, succeeded in
testing shuttle safety improvements, repairing a rail car on the
International Space Station and producing never-before-seen,
high-resolution images of the shuttle during and after its July 4th
launch.
This space video news item includes voice over.
Discovery's Commander Steve Lindsey, Pilot Mark Kelly and mission
specialists Mike Fossum, Piers Sellers, Lisa Nowak and Stephanie
Wilson landed Monday at NASA's Kennedy Space Center, Fla., at 9:14
a.m. EDT, July 17, 2006.
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Video has just been released of a crash between two Northwest Airlines aircraft on May 10, 2005. One plane was an Airbus A-319 and the other accident aircraft a McDonnell Douglas DC-9-51. The planes crashed near gate G10 at Minneapolis St. Paul International Airport (MSP).
NTSB Preliminary Report
On May 10, 2005, at 1930 central daylight time, a McDonnell Douglas DC-9-51, N763NC, collided with an Airbus A-319-114, N368NB, during taxi resulting in substantial damage to both airplanes near gate G10, at Minneapolis/St. Paul International Airport (MSP), Minneapolis, Minnesota. Both airplanes were operated by Northwest Airlines Inc. (NWA) under Title 14 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 121 as scheduled-domestic passenger flights 1495 (N763NC) and 1849 (N368NB).
Visual meteorological conditions prevailed at the time the accident. Both airplanes were evacuated after the collision. N763NC's captain received serious injuries, the first officer received minor injuries, and a flight attendant received minor injuries. One flight attendant aboard N368NB received minor injuries. One ramp service agent received minor injuries. N763NC departed Port Columbus International Airport (CMH), Columbus, Ohio, at 1826 eastern daylight time and with a scheduled destination to MSP.
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The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) is now officially known as the Lightning II. At a ceremony held July 7, 2006, in Fort Worth, Texas, defense officials and representatives of builder Lockheed Martin unveiled the first F-35 5th generation stealth fighter.
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The U.S. State Department says that on the afternoon of July 4 (ET), the U.S. detected multiple missile launches from North Korea, including the Taepo Dong 2. The United States strongly condemned these missile launches and North Korea's unwillingness to heed calls for restraint from the international community.
In a written statement, the State Department said "This provocative act violates a standing moratorium on missile tests to which the North had previously committed. Regardless of whether the series of launches occurred as North Korea planned, they nevertheless demonstrate North Korea's intent to intimidate other states by developing missiles of increasingly longer ranges. We urge the North to refrain from further provocative acts, including further ballistic missile launches."
Several published reports indicate that the long range Taepo Dong 2 missile exploded some 35 seconds into its flight. |
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