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ANOTHER TRIBUTE

By General Aviation News Staff · January 5, 2007 ·

On July 26, 2003, the town of Barry’s Bay, Ontario, (pop. 1,100) honored its most famous resident, Janusz “Zura” Zurakowski, the first test pilot to fly the Arrow, by dedicating a park and future museum to him. The arrow-shaped park, located across from the town’s railroad station, contains a large-scale replica of the Avro Arrow […]

Wiley Post Spirit Award presented to international aviator for first time

By General Aviation News Staff · January 5, 2007 ·

This month the Wiley Post Commission will present Jon Johanson with the Wiley Post Spirit Award. Johanson, a nurse and midwife from Australia, is the first international award recipient. His accomplishments include being the first person to fly solo over the South Pole in a single-engine aircraft and the first person to circumnavigate the world […]

‘Diamond Lil’ undergoes extreme makeover: Reconfiguation may bring name change

By General Aviation News Staff · January 5, 2007 ·

The Commemorative Air Force’s “Diamond Lil” may be no more. The B-24, the oldest in existence, is in the midst of a restoration that will return it to its original B-24A status. Based at the B-29/B-24 Squadron at the CAF’s Midland, Texas, headquarters, “Diamond Lil,” was put in the paint scheme and markings of the […]

Toxo: Soaring into the second century of flight

By General Aviation News Staff · January 5, 2007 ·

It was a decade ago that Composite Aeronautic Group of Spain was founded with one goal in mine: design and produce a Light Sport Aircraft that would bring together the simplicity and low cost of an LSA with the performance and utility of a more complex and expensive airplane. The Toxo is the culmination of […]

Go online to speed up the process

By General Aviation News Staff · January 5, 2007 ·

The FAA is expected to launch MedXPress, an online system that will allow pilots to electronically complete their applicant information on FAA Form 8500-8 before going to their AME’s office, sometime soon. Yet another effort to speed up the medical process, the system is designed to be as user friendly as possible. While initially slated […]

The FAA and LASIK surgery: Approval comes with many warnings

By General Aviation News Staff · January 5, 2007 ·

About 55% of the civilian pilots in the United States require some sort of vision correction to meet the FAA’s requirements for medical certification, according to the FAA. While glasses are the most common choice, a growing number of pilots are choosing laser refractive, or LASIK, surgery. The procedure alters the curvature of the cornea […]

Margery Taylor Ware, former WASP, dies

By General Aviation News Staff · January 5, 2007 ·

Margery Taylor Ware, who flew as a WASP during World War II, died Nov. 22 of renal failure at the age of 91. Ever a fighter, she stood up against sex discrimination, bigotry, poverty and violence all of her long life. Her father, an Episcopal minister, told her that to whom much is given, much […]

World War II bomber pilot Col Hector Santa Ana dies

By General Aviation News Staff · January 5, 2007 ·

Air Force Lt. Col. Hector Santa Ana flew 35 missions during a 17-week blitz over Germany during World War II and 127 Berlin Air Lift missions. He also taught hundreds of Air Force pilots to fly before his retirement. A long-time resident of Millersville, Maryland, he died Dec. 9 of pneumonia at Dover, Delaware. Santa […]

Lockheed graduates TSS specialists

By General Aviation News Staff · January 5, 2007 ·

Forty-six Flight Service Specialists recently graduated from Lockheed Martin’s Flight Service Academy in Prescott Valley, Ariz., including John Lockheed, great-grandson of company founder Allan Loughead. Each of the 46 will be assigned to a Flight Service Station operated by Lockheed Martin. Students at the Flight Service Academy undergo 10 weeks of stringent academic classes, according […]

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