Approximately 28% of Americans flew commercially in 1970.
In 2000, approximately 1.68 billion passengers flew on commercial airlines worldwide.
The first Hispanic male astronaut was Arnaldo Tamayo Mendez. Mr. Mendez was born in Cuba, and his mission was in 1980.
I have seen many people die from not wearing their seatbelts. I do not know the percentage though, but people do die from not wearing their seatbelts. I was driving home one night, and I witnissed a double collision car accident. Someone flew out of their window while the car was flipping and hit the highway. There were 3 other people in the same car as the man who flew out. He was the only one who wasn't wearing his seatbelt. The other 3 people climbed out of the car with minor injuries. The one who wasn't wearing his seatbelt died later that night. So to answer your question, yes. People die from not wearing their seatbelts almost everyday.
The Concorde flew faster than the speed of sound, the only commercial airliner (other than the Soviet Tu-144) that could. The Concorde's cruising speed was 2170 kilometres per hour (1,350 mph), which is Mach 2.04 at a cruising altitude of 56000 feet.
According to the International Air Transport Association (IATA) in 2010 we had 2,400 million persons flying in 36,800,000 flights around the globe. It gives us a total of 65 persons per flight and thus 6,575,343 persons flying per day. As every flight spends about 3 hours on air (the average), just now, when you are reading this post, there should be around 821,917 persons flying over the skies.
7. and one pidgeon
It was between the british and the Americans so both flags flew, but the Americans won so at the end theirs flew high P.S.~ There were different regiments in this war so I guess theirs flew too.
They flew in and bombed them
They flew the Sopwith Camels.
The DC-10 first flew in August 1970
Michael Collins stepped down in 1970
Voyager 2
About 1-2%.
Americans drove their airplanes; Britains flew US & British planes; The French surrendered; and Germans and Japanese flew their own planes.
The Jumbo Jet was the nickname given to the Boeing 747, which started development in the mid 1960's and first flew commercially with Pan Am in 1969
Mariner 2 spacecraft (USA) flew past in 1962. A "Venera" probe ( USSR) landed in 1970.
The Berlin Blockade is known as the period of time from June 24, 1948 to May 12, 1949 when the British and Americans flew supplies to the city of Berlin, which was blockaded by the Soviets. The actions carried out during this time are known as the Berlin Airlift.