Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Pittsburgh Institute of Aeronautics (PIA) is a private trade school focused on aviation-related programs with its main location in West Mifflin, Pennsylvania.The institution's headquarters is at the Allegheny County Airport and it has three branch campuses.
"Bettis: the field that brought airmail to Pittsburgh", Clairton, Pennsylvania: The Progress, July 1976 OCLC 19586192 Richard David Wissolik; David Wilmes et al. "A place in the sky: a pictorial and spoken history of the Arnold Palmer Regional Airport and aviation in western Pennsylvania" Latrobe, Pennsylvania: The Saint Vincent College Center ...
The airport is popular among business travelers [citation needed], being closer to downtown than Pittsburgh International Airport. It is much closer to the densely populated South Hills, Monroeville area and Monongahela Valley. The airport is home to Pittsburgh Institute of Aeronautics (PIA), a large aircraft maintenance school.
Pennsylvania Institute of Technology: Upper Providence township: Delaware: private secular Special Focus Two-Year: Health Professions 449 1953 Pittsburgh Institute of Aeronautics: West Mifflin borough: Allegheny: private secular Special Focus Two-Year: Technical Professions 285 1929 Pittsburgh Institute of Mortuary Science: Pittsburgh city ...
Indian Institute of Space Science and Technology; Institut aérotechnique; Institute of Space, its Applications and Technologies; Research Institute of Computer Science and Random Systems; Institut polytechnique des sciences avancées; International Council of the Aeronautical Sciences
Pennsylvania Institute of Health and Technology: 101: Pittsburgh Institute of Mortuary Science: 209: Rosedale Technical Institute: 328: Penn Commercial Business and Technical School-Wash: 285: Duff's Business Institute: Newport Business Institute Lower Burrell: New Castle School of Trades: Laurel Business Institute Uniontown: 185: Kaplan Career ...
He worked at several aircraft companies before becoming an instructor at the Pittsburgh Institute of Aeronautics, where he designed his first airplane, [1] the Ka-1 Crusader as a prototype for a training plane that he wanted to commercially produce in Lehighton, Pennsylvania.
Ball was a member of the Aero Club of Pittsburgh joining in 1919 and was elected President for 30 years. [51] In 1965 the Pittsburgh Institute of Aeronautics and their mechanics' school dedicated its $80,000 Clifford Ball Academic Building and Ball was honored as Pittsburgh's "Grand old man of aviation." [51]