MONTABAUR, Germany (AP) — Andreas Lubitz first took to the skies as a teenage glider pilot flying from an idyllic grass runway in the hills of western Germany, and never showed any sign he was anything but thrilled to have landed a job with Germanwings, according to those who taught him the trade. Members of the hometown flight club in Montabaur, where he renewed his glider license only last fall, told The Associated Press on Thursday the 28-year-old appeared to be happy with the job he had at the airline, a low-cost carrier in the Lufthansa Group. Club chairman Klaus Radke said he rejected Marseille prosecutors' conclusion that Lubitz put the Germanwings flight intentionally into a descent and dove it into the French Alps when the pilot had left the cockpit. Police kept the media away from the door of the single-family two-story home in a prosperous new subdivision on the edge of Montabaur, a town about 60 kilometers (nearly 40 miles) northwest of Frankfurt surrounded by wooded hills. According to the airline, he trained in Bremen before starting to fly for Germanwings in September 2013.