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Page 20 - யங்ஸ்டவுன் அேக இருப்பு நிலையம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Dobbins partners with three AF units to fly in large-scale exercise > Youngstown Air Reserve Station > Article Display

459th ARW officer reflects on Desert Storm era > Youngstown Air Reserve Station > Article Display

JOINT BASE ANDREWS, Md. – Operation Desert Storm, January 17 1991 – February 28, 1991, was the first major foreign crisis for the United States after the end of the Cold War, and this year marks its 30th anniversary. The 459th Air Refueling Wing’s Lt. Col,

Lt Col Tyson John assumes command of the 910th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron > Youngstown Air Reserve Station > Article Display

By Airman 1st Class Chris Corso, 910th Airlift Wing Public Affairs / Published March 10, 2021 Lt. Col. Joseph Winchester, commander of the 910th Maintenance Group, and Lt. Col. Tyson John, commander of the 910th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron, stand during the singing of the national anthem during John’s assumption of command ceremony, March 6, 2021, at Youngstown Air Reserve Station, Ohio. With this ceremony, John became the commander of the squadron responsible for flightline equipment and on-board equipment maintenance for the 910th Airlift Wing’s C-130H Hercules aircraft. (U.S. Air Force photo/Airman 1st Class Chris Corso) Lt. Col. Tyson John, commander of the 910th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron, introduces himself during his assumption of command ceremony, March 6, 2021, at Youngstown Air Reserve Station, Ohio. With this ceremony, John became the commander of the squadron responsible for flightline equipment and on-board equipment maintenance for the 91

Deploy, sustain, employ and recover > Youngstown Air Reserve Station > Article Display

The 920th Rescue Wing tested its collaborative abilities to provide wing Airmen with a unique training exercise that challenged their capabilities to operate outside of their comfort zones here last month.Representatives from each unit within the wing,

Mosquito-control officials enlist the Air Force for an aerial assault on the insects near the Great Salt Lake

| Updated: 3:20 p.m. For the past several years, mosquito-control crews have used small planes to spray pesticides over vast stretches of wetlands west of Salt Lake City International Airport. The waters flowing off the mountains are impounded year-round in stagnant ponds and braided stream channels, creating ideal breeding habitat for the pesky blood suckers that spread disease and annoy people. The cost runs into hundreds of thousands of dollars a year, but officials have come across an outfit that will do the job for free: the U.S. Air Force. The military is happy to perform the spraying as a way to train pilots as they fine-tune their skills for flying close to the ground.

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