Wood and brass greeted us and we settled into our seats on the starboard side just under the wing's trailing edge. |
|
The wing commander is responsible for all of his or her wing's squadrons in the recovery and individual and unit training phases. |
|
Another jagged block had hooked an engine, tearing it from the wing, rupturing the wing's fuel tank and spinning the entire plane around. |
|
The wing's main support was an amazingly elongated fourth digit in the hand. |
|
The nebuly fess reflects the wing's interlocking of personnel and mission. |
|
If the metric does not meet standards, it might indicate a problem with training, or it might signal a significant problem that will affect the wing's performance. |
|
The only break in the smoothness of the wing's design was the fragmented stump at the back, which may have been a tailfin before the plane crashed. |
|
Like the colonialists of yore, they have their own agenda, an agenda that might fit a little too snugly into the right wing's overall vision for the country. |
|
The art of banter, which is both a workplace and television writer's art, the true insider's patois, may be at the heart of The West Wing's success. |
|
He contacted Aerospace Ground Equipment and informed them of the problem, leading to a one-time inspection of all O-ring seals installed on the wing's fuel bowsers. |
|
Dowding, to highlight the problem of the Big Wing's performance, submitted a report compiled by Park to the Air Ministry on 15 November. |
|