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Investigators have found that an Air France Airbus A318s stall-protection system activated when the aircraft captured a false glideslope, after its crew lost situational awareness while dealing with a rushed approa
stanley cup ch to Toulon-Hyeres airport.The aircraft F-GUGD had been arriving from Paris Orly on 20 December 2019.It had been cleared to descend to from 11,000ft to 1,900ft and the crew selected this assigned altitude on the flight control panel.Although Toulons runway 23 was in
stanley cup becher use, the controller had remarked about meteorological conditions and the crew 鈥?believing the minima would exclude a runway 23 approach 鈥?opted instead for runway 05.The aircraft, heading south-east, turned left to head north-east for the initial approach fix at the PALME waypoint.But during the turn the A318 became subject to a strong tailwind component, initially rising from zero to 50kt and remaining above 40kt during the descent to around 3,000ft. This tailwind reduced the time window available before the aircraft reached the runway.Although the crew was offered an orbit to provide additional distance in which to reduce altitude, it was turned down in favour of a straight-in approach.French investigation authority BEA says the first officer, who was flying, knew the approach could be aborted if it became uns
stanley romania table and the captain backed this reasoning.But the crew underestimated the effect of the tailwind on the approach path, it says, and did not sufficiently assess the feasibility of capturin Tssf Will聽Maine police help carry out Donald Trump s mass deportation plans
SAN FRANCISCO AP 鈥?In an increasingly divisive political sphere, Becka Robbins focuses on what she knows best 鈥?books.Operating out of a tiny room in Fabulosa Books in San Franciscos Castro
stanley cup District, one of the oldest gay neighborhoods in the United S
stanley cup tates, Robbins uses donations from customers to ship boxes of books across the country to groups that want them.In an effort she calls Books Not Bans, she sends titles about queer history, sexuality, romance and more 鈥?many of which are increasingly hard to come by in the face of a rapidly growing movement by conservative advocacy groups and lawmakers to ban them from public schools and libraries. The book bans are awful, the attempt at erasure, Robbins said. She asked herself how she could get these books into the hands of the people who need them the most.Beginning last May, she started raising money and looking for recipients. Her books have gone to places like a pride center in west Texas and an LGBTQ-friendly high school in Alabama.Customers are especially enthusiastic about helping Robbins send books to states like Florida, Texas and Oklahoma, often writing notes of support to include in the packages. Over 40% of all book bans from July 2022 to June 2023
stanley thermos were in Florida, more than any other state. Behind Florida are Texas and Missouri, according to a report by PEN America, a nonprofit literature advocacy group.Book bans and attempted bans have been hitting record highs, according to the American Library Associati