American eagle academy: American Eagle Academy

Опубликовано: February 18, 2023 в 6:42 am

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American Eagle Academy | Tamarac FL Child Care Facility

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About the Provider

Description:

Welcome to American Eagle Academy, we offer  developmentally appropriate programs and specialized curriculum for children from Infants to VPK and after care! Here we know that the love of learning begins at a very early age. That is why our hands-on, enriched curriculum allows children to explore, create and develop the skills they need for academic success. We focus in providing a safe, healthy,and supportive environment. Our qualified and experienced staff teach all children the necessary skills to develop and learn to their full potential. All in a very spacious and state-of-the-art preschool center that even has a pool! (Following CDC guidelines with reduced capacity during COVID-19 pandemic.)

Additional Information:

For more information please email us at aeagleacademy14@gmail. com! Our website is currently under construction. Please visti us in instagram: (aeatamarac) /and facebook.

American Eagle Academy Photos: (Click to enlarge)

Program and Licensing Details

  • License Number:
    C17BO0239
  • Capacity:
    201
  • Age Range:
    6 weeks to 12 years
  • Enrolled in Subsidized Child Care Program:
    Yes
  • Languages Supported:
    English, Spanish
  • Type of Care:
    VPK Provider; After School;Before School;Drop In;Food Served;Full Day;Half Day
  • Transportation:
    Field Trips
  • Schools Served:
    Excelsior Charter, Challenger, Banyan, Tamarac, Discovery
  • Current License Expiration Date:
    Mar 31, 2023
  • District Office:
    Judicial Circuit 17
    115.S. Andrews Avenue Room 119
    Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33301
  • District Office Phone:
    (954) 357-4800 (Note: This is not the facility phone number.)

Location Map

Inspection/Report History

Stepping Stones Academy – Rosenberg TX Licensed Center – Child Care Program

Where possible, ChildcareCenter provides inspection reports as a service to families. This information is deemed reliable,
but is not guaranteed. We encourage families to contact the daycare provider directly with any questions or concerns,
as the provider may have already addressed some or all issues. Reports can also be verified with your local daycare licensing office.

Report Date
2022-02-28
2022-02-11
2022-02-01
2021-07-07
2021-02-23
2020-10-15
2020-06-26
2020-03-13
2020-02-13
2019-12-27
2019-06-05
2019-02-22
2018-10-18
2018-07-11
2018-06-11

If you are a provider and you believe any information is incorrect, please contact us. We will research your concern and make corrections accordingly.

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Providers in ZIP Code 33321

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MIRACLE GYMNASTICS

SOARING EAGLES ACADEMY

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SOUTH FLORIDA MONTESSORI ACADEMY

TEMPLE BETH TORAH SHA’ARAY TZEDEK

AMERICAN EAGLE ACADEMY II, Child Care Facility

AMERICAN EAGLE ACADEMY II

Program Type:
Child Care Facility
Capacity:
108

General Information

AMERICAN EAGLE ACADEMY II is a child care facility in Fort Lauderdale, Broward County, Florida that welcomes your child and family. Sensitive, loving interactions with teachers are the active ingredients of high quality early care and learning programs. Children benefit socially, intellectually and physically from participation in quality group care experiences, with proven results that last into their school years. Quality child care/day care programs also involve parents—regularly telling you about your child’s daily activities, and sharing information about child development topics and activity ideas to enjoy at home.

Accreditations


No records

Educational Programs


Subsidized Child Care

Hours of Operations


Monday

7AM – 6:30PM

Tuesday

7AM – 6:30PM

Wednesday

7AM – 6:30PM

Thursday

7AM – 6:30PM

Friday

7AM – 6:30PM

Saturday

Closed

Sunday

Closed

License Information


License number: C17BO0726

Expiration date: Jun 30, 2020

Staff Roster


No results

Schools in the area

PRESCHOOL VENTURES OF OAKLAND PARK INC DBA CHARLEE PRESCHOOL & CHILDCARE OAKLAND PARK

4525 NW 31st Ave, Oakland Park, FL 33309

(954) 485-0800

View Details

AFTER SCHOOL PROGRAMS AT ORIOLE ELEMENTARY

3081 NW 39th St, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33309

(754) 322-7550

View Details

CREATIVE SOLUTION CHILD CARE SERVICES

4645 SR 7, Lauderdale Lakes, FL 33319

(954) 735-6295

View Details

3601 W Commercial Blvd, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33309

(954) 535-5660

  • To enhance this description, add pictures, see the programs’ dashboard, or claim this program, click below.

American Eagle Broken Claw / History / Nezavisimaya Gazeta

Footage of shamefully abandoned and burned down American helicopters once went around the world.
Photo from Soldier of Fortune magazine

Thirty years ago, in May 1980, then US President and Supreme Commander Jimmy Carter declared national mourning for the eight dead American servicemen. The fact is not very common. After all, the war in Vietnam had already ended five years ago, and before the other one, in Iraq, there were still eleven long years. The guys, for whom there was a nationwide mourning, died in the fighting. But in actions of a special kind – in a special operation on the territory of a sovereign state.

Khomeini vs Carter

In February 1979, power in Iran passed into the hands of the clergy, headed by Ayatollah Khomeini, who proclaimed the creation of an “Islamic republic.” After the overthrow of the Shah’s regime, relations between Tehran and Washington sharply deteriorated. ..

November 4, 1979 a group of Iranian students – adherents of the spiritual leader of the Iranian revolution, Ayatollah Khomeini, supported by the Iranian government, seized the American embassy in the Iranian capital. 53 embassy employees were held hostage.

This was done under the pretext that the embassy had become a “nest of espionage” against Iran and the Islamic Revolution. Which, by the way, was confirmed by later published documents captured in the American diplomatic mission. The students demanded from America the extradition of the former Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi (the monarch left the country with his family) and the return of the stolen wealth placed in the banks of the West.

According to some reports, the current head of state, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, was among those who held the American embassy. Shortly after the Islamic Revolution, he volunteered for the IRGC, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. (During the years of the Iran-Iraq war, Ahmadinejad was personally involved in reconnaissance and sabotage operations in Iraq. )

Then, in 1980, the US State Department’s threats to Iran did not help. And the United States decided to release the hostages using the American special forces group Delta Force, or in everyday life – just Delta. In addition to rescuing American agents and diplomats detained at the US embassy in Tehran, it was important to restore Washington’s tarnished image.

On March 22, 1980, President Jimmy Carter approved a special operation codenamed “Eagle Claw”. “To fulfill it,” Zbigniew Brzezinski testified, “we enlisted the generous cooperation of one friendly country and, without its knowledge, we ensured the cooperation of some countries in this region.”

The executors were the now-famous Delta Commando Detachment, led by Vietnam War veteran Colonel Charles Beckwith, and the 160 Special Helicopter Unit (Night Hunters), then created in strict secrecy, under the command of Air Force Colonel Dan Kyle. Special Force 160, formed from experienced volunteer pilots, was equipped with the latest Little Bird helicopters – ultra-fast, maneuverable and quiet. The commander of the Nightstalkers, Brigadier General Hannis, said that “the best of the best are gathered here, able to act flawlessly to the limit of what is possible.”

According to the plan, Hercules C-130 military transport aircraft, escorted by Sea Stallion (Sea Stallion) helicopters, were supposed to deliver a commando detachment to the night refueling area in the Deshte-Kevir (Desert-1) desert. After refueling, the helicopters are to transfer the Delta team to the Desert 2 holding area near the abandoned salt mines 50 miles from Tehran. After waiting a day in shelters, the next night, the fighters of the Delta group, dressed in civilian clothes, were supposed to make a throw to Tehran in cars that would be provided by American agents that had been previously abandoned in Iran. Upon reaching the embassy, ​​the commandos destroy the guards and free the hostages. The evacuation of commandos and hostages was planned to be carried out using RH-53D helicopters, which should land on the territory of the embassy or at the nearest stadium. Fire support from the air was provided by three AC-130 aircraft armed with rapid-fire cannons.

Helicopters then evacuate commandos and hostages to the abandoned Manzariyeh airfield, 50 miles south of Tehran. This airfield by that time should be captured and held by another detachment of rangers. C-141 military transport planes land there, which take all participants in the operation to a secret air base in Egypt under the cover of US Navy carrier-based fighters.

The Eagle Claw operation plan, declassified only a few years ago, was complicated by its duration (two nights), multi-stage nature (because of Tehran’s remoteness from maritime borders) and the need to operate in a large city. Therefore, the participants of the raid trained all winter 1980 years. The exercises and training took place in a desert area in the state of Utah, where the natural conditions and landscape are similar to the Deshte-Kevir desert. The participants were advised by specialists from West German intelligence, the Israeli Mossad and the British SAS (Special Air Service).

EVIL ROCK

In mid-April, Colonel Beckwith, widely known in narrow professional circles as “Attack Charlie” since the Vietnam War, and Colonel Kyle reported their readiness to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Jones. But as it became known later, the leaders of the operation did not report “upstairs” that the March control exercises showed “a complete lack of professional training in the helicopter unit.” In the final night exercise, the helicopters landed a mile apart. Be that as it may, US President Jimmy Carter received Beckwith and Kyle at the White House, solemnly promising them that each participant would be awarded the country’s highest award – the Congressional Medal of Honor.

The operation began on April 24, 1980. Previously, the S-130 squadron was deployed to Egypt under the pretext of participating in joint exercises. Then they flew to the island of Masirah (Oman). After refueling, the Hercules squadron crossed the Gulf of Oman in the dark. At the same time, eight Sea Stallions took off from the deck of the Nimitz aircraft carrier in the Gulf of Oman. Although, in principle, two RH-53D helicopters, designed for 50 people, were enough to carry out the operation. But taking into account the unhappy conclusion mentioned above about the low proficiency of helicopter pilots, Colonel Beckwith decided to play it safe as much as 4 times. And how he looked into the water (Gulf). One “stallion” fell into the water near the deck of the “Nimitz”, the second lost its bearings and returned to the aircraft carrier. The third helicopter retired due to a hydraulic failure.

One way or another, on April 24, six American C-130 transport planes and eight helicopters with 90 special forces on board crossed the state border of Iran, thereby violating its sovereignty, and headed for Tehran. (Special agents were sent there in advance to collect intelligence). From the south, the invading air force was covered by a large number of other aircraft, including electronic countermeasures. They circled over the Persian Gulf and the Arabian Sea.

But after a six-hour flight about 400 kilometers from the Iranian capital over the Deshte-Kevir desert, planes and helicopters were caught in a sandstorm. The commander of the leading vehicle reported that it was necessary to return immediately.

Another pilot said he couldn’t take the controls. “Attacking Charlie”, aka Colonel Beckwith, yelled at his subordinates, calling them “cowards” and “goats.”

According to the plan of the operation, refueling on the ground of the remaining five “stallions” was provided, which were supposed to transfer the Delta troops from “Pustinya-1” to “Pustinya-2”. But it was smooth on paper, that is, on the map: the CIA made a clear mistake when choosing the Desert-1 site. She was next to an active highway. It is not surprising that soon the participants in the operation saw the lights of car headlights. The commandos thought they were Iranian soldiers. However, it was a regular bus with forty passengers. The Americans stopped him and, at gunpoint, forced the Iranians to lie face down in the sand.

Already from that moment it was clear: the factors of secrecy and surprise were lost. Washington was asked what to do with the Iranians? Without further ado, they decided to load everyone into the Hercules and take them out of Iran.

CATASTROPHIC FAILURE

But all calculations were broken by the last accident. After refueling, one of the helicopters, taking off in a cloud of dust, crashed into the Hercules, an air tanker. There was a powerful explosion. Both cars caught fire. All fuel for the operation burned out. Ammunition was torn and even dry rations sealed in tins. The panic began. A nearby group of commandos thought it was an Iranian attack. They opened fire indiscriminately. In the confusion, the helicopter pilots abandoned their cars and began to scatter wherever their eyes looked. Secret documents, maps, ciphers, tables, the latest equipment, thousands of dollars and rials remained in the cabins. (Secret documents found the next day by the Iranians enabled them to arrest agents operating in the country, while the surviving helicopters were handed over to the Iranian Air Force.)

In this situation, Colonels Beckwith and Kyle had no choice but to give the order to get out of the damned desert: “Let’s drop everything, load on the Hercules and get off!”. The brave colonels did not even guess to destroy the remaining helicopters. When the group took off into the air, five “stallions” and eight “birds” remained standing on the ground. Operation Eagle Claw cost America $150 million and eight GI dead.

As usual, not only in the American army, it was necessary to find “switchmen”. Those who were no longer alive were declared as such, adding here the discord with technology. Air Force officials said that what happened was the result of the cancellation of the draft, which led … to a decrease in the qualifications of pilots and technicians. After analyzing the reasons for the failure of Operation Eagle Claw, a joint special operations command was formed and reorganizations were carried out in the military department.

SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS ≈ TODAY’S LESSON

On October 5, 1981, special unit 160 “Night hunters” was officially formed from helicopter pilots – participants in the operation. It took part in all reconnaissance and sabotage operations of the Pentagon. Grenada, Zambia, Panama, the Persian Gulf … It was the Hunters that sank the Iranian tanker Ajr in the Persian Gulf in the fall of 1987. After the start of the well-known events in Yugoslavia (March 1999), they were transferred to Macedonia by order of President Clinton.

And what happened to the hostages accused of espionage? They were held at the American embassy in Tehran for 444 days, until January 20, 1981. It is symbolic that this was the last day of the presidential term of Carter, who lost the election to Ronald Reagan. They were released after a series of diplomatic negotiations, and specifically – after the US agreed to make certain concessions (for example, unfreezing Iranian accounts in American banks).

Every April, several thousand Iranians gather in the desert where US military helicopters have crashed. Actions in the desert, where American helicopters crashed, were held under the slogan “Death to America.” A statement released by the organizers said: “Divine providence has always protected the Iranian people. We will insist on our right to develop nuclear technology, because victory is always with those who are patient.” And Iranian parliamentarians have repeatedly advised Washington not to repeat its mistakes. “The United States should be reminded what happened on April 25, 1980 years” – these are the words of the speaker of the Iranian parliament Gholam Ali Hadad-Adel.

If successful, Operation Eagle Claw, according to experts, could cause a large number of civilian casualties and lead to a serious complication of the international situation. As for the current situation in relations between Tehran and Washington, how can one not remember that overseas operations against Iran are not ruled out. Against the backdrop of events in neighboring Iraq and Afghanistan, this could lead to a military fire not only in the region┘

Filmmakers from the “Mikhalkov list” refuse to work in the Oscar Committee under the auspices of the Golden Eagle Academy under the auspices of one of the film academies of Russia: films from Russia for this award should be submitted by an independent organization, and the list of honored directors and producers proposed by Mikhalkov can only be an organizing committee.

The situation with the Russian Oscar Committee continues to evolve: another proposal to reform this organization was put forward by Oscar winner Vladimir Menshov, Oscar nominees Sergei Bodrov, Konstantin Bronzit, Petr Todorovsky and Pavel Chukhrai, and Russians – members of the American Film Academy – Marina Goldovskaya, Rustam Ibragimbekov and Andrei Konchalovsky.

In an open letter published in the newspaper Izvestiya , they note that they “do not object to the proposal of the Russian Academy of Film Arts” Golden Eagle “to create a new commission for the nomination from Russia to the Oscars. ” The authors of the letter also support the proposed candidates.

“However, we believe that the Golden Eagle Film Academy does not fully represent the cinematographic community in Russia.

None of us is ready to become a member of the Oscar committee that exists at the Golden Eagle Academy and was created by the decision of its presidium,” the letter says.

Open letter

We, the Oscar nominees and winners who signed here, and the current members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, would like to make the following statement.

Recall that last week the National Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences of Russia (it presents the film award “Golden Eagle”) proposed to change the procedure for the formation of the Oscar committee. It should include only directors and producers whose films were nominated for an Oscar for the best foreign language film, received this award, or were laureates of class A film festivals. In total, 29 people were proposed for the new committee. However, Alexander Sokurov has already refused to participate, calling what is happening “Moscow showdowns”, in which he “does not participate”.

At the beginning of October, Kinosoyuz also came up with its own version of the reform: all public organizations of Russian filmmakers – film academies, awards, unions, as well as guilds of individual film professions – should be represented in the new Oscar committee. In fact, the proposal of the Golden Eagle Academy can be considered its response to the Kinosoyuz initiative.

The open letter, signed by the Russian Oscar winners, does not specify how the new committee will be formed, but does state one condition.

“Oscar nomination committee cannot be dependent on any public organization, be it an academy or a professional union,” say the authors of the message.

The director Andrei Zvyagintsev, who was included in the list, declared the same immediately after the appearance of the “Mikhalkov list”.

“I would consider the possibility of my participation in this, but if there is one important factor – this commission should have the status of a public organization, not an official one. It should be a representation made up of individual individuals, film professionals, whose only selection criteria should be their absolute authority. Official structures should not be related to this commission,” Zvyagintsev said in an interview with a Park Kultury correspondent.

“In order to avoid further conflicts and disputes on formal grounds,” as the letter says, the “list” drawn up by the academy should be turned into an organizing committee that will “formulate the principles of activity” and determine the composition of the new Russian Oscar committee.

In addition, the Ministry of Culture, represented by Minister Alexander Avdeev, promised to assist in the work of the new committee.

The letter was not signed only by two Russian filmmakers directly related to the Oscars. One of them is the animator Alexander Petrov, who received an award in 2000 for the animated film The Old Man and the Sea, who decided to distance himself from the current situation. The second is Nikita Mikhalkov, who said in an interview with Izvestia that those who are dissatisfied with the “objectivity of the criteria” object to the proposals of the Golden Eagle Academy.

“They want to drag theirs through. They want power.

The reaction that followed just tells us that it is not the true desire to transform the Oscar committee that is leading them, but the continuation of a senseless squabble with unfair and baseless accusations,” he said.

Mikhalkov assigned colleagues to the Oscars

The Russian Film Academy and Nikita Mikhalkov announced a new principle for the formation of the Russian Oscar…

October 14 22:52

Recall that the need to reform the Russian Oscar Committee, which nominates a domestic film for the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film, was raised by the film community after the scandal that accompanied the nomination of Mikhalkov’s film Burnt by the Sun 2: The Citadel. Then the chairman of the committee, Vladimir Menshov, refused to sign the final protocol, believing that the choice by the members of the commission was not made according to cinematic criteria. Nevertheless, the American Film Academy included The Citadel in the long list of contenders for the award; the shortlist will be announced on 24 January 2012 and the awards ceremony will take place on 26 February.