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It first flew in September 1965 and was certified two years later. The project was ultimately unsuccessful. Sources disagree on the total production, some saying 36 units, others 32, 29 or 27. What is certain is that each plane was a financial loss for the company.
Patrick Rooney may refer to: J. Patrick Rooney (1927–2008), American executive and activist; Patrick Rooney (squash player) (born 1997), English squash player;
Rooney was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to Patrick Rooney Sr., into the wealthy and well-connected Rooney family, which is the majority owner of the Pittsburgh Steelers football team, and includes Dan Rooney, the former United States Ambassador to Ireland, who is Rooney's uncle, and Tom Rooney, a United States Congressman from Florida's 17th congressional district, who is Rooney's brother.
On 14 August 1969, nine-year-old Patrick Rooney, the first child killed in the Troubles, was killed in the tower during the 1969 riots, when the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) fired a Browning machine gun from a Shorland armoured car into the flats. [6] The RUC claimed that it was coming under sniper attack from the tower at the time. Rooney's ...
Patrick Rooney Sr., the son of late Pittsburgh Steelers owner Art Rooney Sr., former Palm Beach Kennel Club CEO and a long-time Palm Beach County resident, died Sunday.He was 84. One of five sons ...
John Patrick Rooney (December 13, 1927 – September 15, 2008) was the chairman and founder of the Fairness Foundation, whose goal is to help low-income Americans with education and health care. He is the father of Medical Savings Accounts , now known as Health Savings Accounts .
The projected (in green) and actual (in red) ground track of N47BA from departure in Orlando to Dallas and to crash site in South Dakota. On October 25, 1999, a Learjet 35, registration N47BA, [7] operated by Sunjet Aviation of Sanford, Florida, departed Orlando Sanford International Airport (IATA: SFB, ICAO: KSFB) at 13:19 UTC (09:19 EDT) on a two-day, five-flight trip.
Memorial plaque for Patrick Rooney and Hugh McCabe at Divis Tower. In response to the RUC coming under fire at Divis Street, three Shorland armoured cars were called to the scene. The Shorlands were immediately attacked with gunfire, an explosive device and petrol bombs. The RUC believed that the shots had come from the Divis complex. [28]