Ad
related to: air force biography templateresumegenius.com has been visited by 10K+ users in the past month
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
This template is used to identify a biographical stub related to the United States Air Force. It uses {{ asbox }}, which is a meta-template designed to ease the process of creating and maintaining stub templates.
Daniel Caine – Air Force major and F-16 fighter pilot whose mission (along with three other pilots, including USAF Major Heather Penney, Captain Brandon Rasmussen and Lieutenant General Marc Sasseville) on 9/11 was to find United Flight 93 and destroy it however they could, including ramming the aircraft.
Deborah Roche Lee James (born November 25, 1958) served as the 23rd Secretary of the Air Force. She is the second woman, after Sheila Widnall, to ever hold this position. James was confirmed as 23rd Secretary of the Air Force on December 13, 2013, and started her tenure on December 20, 2013. [2]
Lieutenant General Robert J. "Bob" Elder Jr. (born October 15, 1952) [1] is the former Commander, 8th Air Force; [2] Commander, Barksdale Air Force Base, Louisiana; and Commander, Joint Functional Component Command for Space and Global Strike, U.S. Strategic Command, Offutt AFB, Nebraska.
Rushworth (2nd from left) with fellow X-15 pilots. Robert Aitken "Bob" Rushworth (October 9, 1924 – March 18, 1993 [1]) was a United States Air Force major general, World War II, Korean War and Vietnam War pilot, mechanical and aeronautical engineer, test pilot and astronaut.
Carns was born in Junction City, Kansas. [2] After graduating from St. John's College High School, Washington, D.C. in 1955, he went to the United States Air Force Academy and graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in 1959.
She attended Undergraduate Pilot Training at Reese Air Force Base (now the Reese Technology Center) and graduated in 1989. She is also a graduate of the U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School and is a command pilot with more than 4,200 hours in more than 30 aircraft, including the C-32A, C-17A , C-141B , and KC-135R .
Albert G Boyd (November 22, 1906 [1] – September 18, 1976) was a pioneering test pilot for the United States Air Force (USAF). During his 30-year career, he logged more than 23,000 hours of flight time in 723 military aircraft (though this number of the total number flown includes variants and sub variants of some types, and is not 723 distinct types).