"They were more equipped to handle those situations," Carnes said. A combination of Army and Air Force crews tackled these tasks, with the Army relying on its skills in mobilization and insertion, and Airmen relying on training for specialized airborne and scuba operations. Initially, the Air Force was not the service of choice for such missions, Carnes said. Air Force officially opens a permanent exhibit devoted to combat search and rescue operations Saturday, exploring the premium the Air Force and its partners placed on the lives of soldiers and Marines.įound in the museum's second building, the exhibit shows how the Air Force became the primary service for search and rescue missions in the Vietnam War era, a pride of place that continues to this day, said museum research curator Bryan Carnes. *Update: 4 years later and I have not been back to this restaurant.Jun. As for the food, I generally get the lo mein, chow mei fun, or sweet and sour chicken, which are about on-par with any other dingy strip-mall Chinese food joint Their eggrolls are sub-par, and their shrimp toast is horrible (I cannot even describe the level of greasy, soggy grossness.) If this were not the only chinese takeout on this side of town, I would never go back. They will repeat your order back correctly, but will send you home with the wrong food, so check your order before you take it with you. It does not state on their menu or on any signage in store that the minimum to use a card is $10, yet if your order is less than $10, they will pressure you into buying more than you intended so they don't have to pay the merchant fee for the card transaction. The staff are incredibly short with you, rude, and they will fight you on honoring the coupons on their own menu. What really tanks this review is the horrible customer service. The food itself is ok, not fabulous, not terrible.
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