ATLANTA -- Four Georgia-based jet pilots who buzzed Charlottes professional football stadium are restricted from flight duty while the incident is reviewed, U.S. Air Force officials said.The Carolina Panthers were practicing on Monday when the A-10 Warthog attack jets swooped low, alarming some inside and outside the stadium.Its unclear whether the pilots of the A-10C Thunderbolt IIs, based at Moody Air Force Base in south Georgia, find themselves in a danger zone because of their actions.As professional airmen we take aviation safety very seriously, Air Force Col. Thomas Kunkel said in a statement to The Associated Press.The team was most certainly caught off-guard, as players wondered what was happening, Carolina Panthers Coach Ron Rivera said. But it was pretty awesome to see, he added.Workers in nearby office buildings criticized the flyby on social media, assuming the pilots were mavericks.However, it turns out the pilots had requested permission for a flyover from the tower.Specifically, the Federal Aviation Administration is looking into reports that the pilots made a low-altitude pass over Bank of America Stadium after air traffic controllers approved the pilots request to fly over the National Football League venue, the FAA said in a statement Thursday.The statements released by the Air Force and FAA include no indications that the pattern was full or that a negative to the pilots request was in order. But that doesnt mean no rules were broken in this particular engagement.As we look into the circumstances of this incident we are working with the FAA to ensure both civil and military aviation instructions were complied with, Kunkel said.Some Air Force pilots do flyovers at NFL games, but the Charlotte team had no knowledge of any practice flyovers, Panthers spokesman Steven Drummond said.While much of the social media reaction saw the flyover as a circus-stunt, the team didnt appear to label the pilots as jesters.I like the fact that they waved at us as they went over, Rivera said.The pilots from the Georgia base were conducting routine navigation training from Charlotte to Moody and were not participating in the Air Forces partnership with the NFL to provide flyovers, Kunkels statement said.The planes had taken off from Charlotte Douglas International Airport moments before flying over the stadium, Air Force officials said. They are part of the 74th Fighter Squadron at Moody Air Force Base, which is near Valdosta, Georgia.The aircraft are used to support troops on the ground, and are sometimes known by their nickname Warthogs, according to descriptions from Moody.Their maneuverability and capability for short takeoffs and landings help them operate near front lines in battle. The planes can carry a variety of bombs, missiles, rockets and guns to defeat a wide variety of targets on the ground, including tanks, officials said.---Reed reported from Charlotte, North Carolina.Fake Vans For Sale . Wall made the comment in a speech to a Regina business crowd that included Lesnar. The U.S. wrestler and retired mixed martial artist says he was visiting his brothers farm in Saskatchewan and decided he wanted to hear what the premier had to say. Fake Vans 2020 . 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Fake Vans From China . -- If Henry Burris has his way, he will be the starting quarterback to lead the Hamilton Tiger-Cats back to the Grey Cup next year.SAN FRANCISCO -- The Mercury News of San Jose, California, apologized Friday for an insensitive headline about U.S. swimmer Simone Manuel.The 20-year-old Stanford University student became the first African-American woman to win a gold medal in an individual swimming event when she tied for first with Penny Oleksiak of Canada in the 100-meter freestyle Thursday night.After the race, the San Francisco Bay Area newspaper omitted Manuels name in a headline reading Olympics: Michael Phelps shares historic night with African-American.The Mercury News, which covered Manuels collegiate career at nearby Stanford, tweeted an apology, saying the headline was insensitive.It was posted on the newspapers website about 9:45 p.m. and quickly removed and replaced with one carrying Manuels name with Phelps. The headline was not printed in the newspaper.Readers took to social media sites almost as soon as the offensive headline was posted to coomplain about the gaffe.ddddddddddddThis is a terrible headline, Mercury News sports columnist Tim Kawakami posted on Twitter while the headline was still live. Its my paper. I might get in trouble for saying it, but its a terrible headline.Executive Editor Neil Chase said no one will be fired because it appears there were no bad intentions in writing the headline.Instead, Chase said there will be a tough conversation to determine exactly how the headline came to be written and published without any staffer raising concern. He said a couple different people saw it before it was posted.We made a mistake, he said.---This story has been corrected to say no one will be fired over the headline instead of no one disciplined, and to fix the spelling of the columnists name to Kawakami instead of Kawakwami. ' ' '