Saturday, April 2, 2011

A HOLE IN ONE----AIRPLANE STYLE



QUOTE OF THE DAY

"It was surreal, when you're riding in a modern aircraft you're used to being enclosed and not having the window rolled down," he said.



(CNN) -- A Southwest Airlines flight landed safely at a military base in Yuma, Arizona, on Friday with what passengers described as a 3-foot hole in the fuselage of the Boeing 737.
"I heard a loud popping sound about three or four minutes before it blew open on us," passenger Greg Hansen told CNN.
"(Then) a big explosion happened. A big noise, and from there, you felt some of the air being sucked out. It happened right behind me, in the row behind me and it covers about two and a half rows," he said from seat 11C.
Hansen, 41, a regional sales manager for a biotech company, was flying home to Sacramento from a business trip. Some people panicked and screamed as the blue sky and sun began to shine through the cabin in mid-flight, he said.
"Most people were just white knuckles holding onto the arm rests. The pilots did a great job and were under control to get us to a manageable level," he said.
But just behind him, Hansen says he could see the jagged edge of the aircraft where the rivets used to be.
"You can see the insulation and wiring. The interior ceiling panel was bouncing up and down with the air," he said.
"It was surreal, when you're riding in a modern aircraft. You're used to being enclosed and not having the window rolled down," he said.
Hansen described the hole as being about 3 or 4 feet long and about a foot wide.
Hansen said that he and the rest of the passengers were still on board Southwest Flight 812, after making an emergency landing at Yuma Marine Corps Air Station/International Airport at 7:07 p.m. ET.
The FAA said the captain made a rapid controlled descent from 36,000 to about 11,000 feet after the cabin lost pressure. Investigators are en route to the base, the FAA said.
"We do not know the cause of the decompression," said Ian Gregor of the FAA.
Southwest said in a statement that the flight crew "discovered a hole in the top of the aircraft."
A new aircraft is en route to the base with maintenance, ground crew and customer service agents "to assess the damaged aircraft and support the 118 customers aboard."
Hansen said the incident took place about 35 minutes into the flight. He says that it took about 45 seconds or a minute before the oxygen masks came down after the hole blew open.
"The crew was pretty calm about it. They walked around and checked on everyone," he said. "But it wasn't like the movies where papers get sucked out of the hole, but you could feel it and hear the noise."
Hansen said that most of the passengers were complaining of a pain in their eardrums from a rapid descent.
Southwest Airlines said only one injury is being reported.
"There are no reported customer injuries," reads a statement released by the airline. "One of the flight attendants, however, received a minor injury upon descent

Thursday, March 31, 2011

BODY RECOVERY GETTING MORE COMPLICATED IN EVACUATION ZONE



Have you ever even seen  a disaster movie that comes close to this scenario?

"There also are concerns about the disposal of bodies, because Japanese tend to cremate their dead, and fires can spread radiation. The Health Ministry recommends that the bodies be cleaned and those with even small levels of radiation should be handled only by people wearing suits, gloves and masks." 

As if Japan needs another twist in this horror story.  If thousands of bodies have to be recovered in this manner because they are virtually glowing how long can we estimate that this might take?  Far too long from a decent, respectful viewpoint.  They might have to rethink the 'tendency' to cremate at this point. 

It begs the thought though, where do you bury a massive number of people that are contaminated with radiation?  This nightmare is far from over.


Radiation slows recovery of dead near Japan plant - Yahoo! News: "Efforts to recover the bodies from the 12-mile (20-kilometer) evacuation zone around the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant have been slowed by a wasteland of debris, but also by fears of radiation. Police in that prefecture dressed in full radiation suits retrieved 19 corpses from the rubble Wednesday, the police official said. Authorities declined to say how many bodies might still be buried in the evacuation zone, but local media have estimated hundreds remain. Each officer wears a radiation detector and must leave the area whenever an alarm goes off — a frequent occurrence that has often dragged the operation to a halt, the official said. 'We want to recover bodies quickly, but also must ensure the safety of police officers against nuclear radiation,' he said. Officers were forced to give up trying to recover one corpse Sunday after radiation on it triggered the alarm. There also are concerns about the disposal of bodies, because Japanese tend to cremate their dead, and fires can spread radiation. The Health Ministry recommends that the bodies be cleaned and those with even small levels of radiation should be handled only by people wearing suits, gloves and masks. Overall, including in regions further from the stricken plant, police have recovered more than 11,000 bodies, but estimate that at least 19,500 are dead."

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

SOME CLEAN HUMOR



Alas, where  has all our innocence  gone?
While I sat in the reception  area
of my doctor's office, a woman rolled an elderly man in a wheelchair into the  room.  As she went 
to the  receptionist's desk, the man sat there, alone
and silent. Just as I was thinking I  should make
small talk with him, a little  boy slipped off
his mother's lap and  walked over to
the wheelchair.  Placing his hand on the 
man's, he said, I know how you feel.  My
mom makes  me ride in the stroller  too..

*****

As I was  nursing
my baby, my cousin's  six-year-old daughter, Krissy, came into the  room. 
Never having seen anyone breast  feed before, she was intrigued and full of  all kinds of questions about what I was doing.
After mulling over my answers, she  remarked,
'My mom has some of those, but I  don't think she knows how to use them..' 

*****
Out  bicycling
one day with my  eight-year-old granddaughter, Carolyn, I got a little
wistful. 'In ten years,' I said,  'you'll want
to  be with your friends  and you won't go
walking, biking, and swimming with me like you do now.  Carolyn shrugged.  'In ten years you'll  be too old to do all those things anyway.'
******Working as a  pediatric
nurse, I had the difficult assignment of giving immunization shots to children..  One day, I entered the  examining room to give four-year-old Lizzie her  needle. 'No, no, no!' she  screamed.  'Lizzie,' scolded her mother,  'that's
not polite behavior.'  With that,  the girl yelled even  louder, 'No, thank  you!  No, thank  you!

******
On the way back from a  Cub Scout meeting, my grandson innocently  said to my son, 'Dad, I know babies come from  mommies' tummies, but
how do they get there in the first place?'  After my
son hemmed  and hawed awhile, my grandson finally spoke up in disgust, 'You don't have to  make up something, Dad.  It's okay if  you don't
know the  answer.'
*****Just  before I was deployed to  Iraq ,

I sat  my eight-year-old son down and
broke the  news to him.  'I'm going to be away
for a long time,' I told him.  'I'm  going to Iraq ..' 
'Why?'  he asked. 'Don't you know there's a war  going on over  there?'
*****
Paul  Newman
founded the Hole in the Wall Gang Camp  for 
children stricken with cancer, AIDS, and blood
diseases. One afternoon, he and his wife,
Joanne Woodward, stopped by to have lunch with the kids.  A counselor at a  nearby table, suspecting the young  patients wouldn't know Newman was a famous movie star, explained, That's the man who made this camp possible. Maybe you've seen his picture  on his salad dressing bottle?'  Blank stares.
'Well, you've probably seen his face on
his lemonade carton.'  An eight-year-old girl
perked  up.  'How long was he missing?'

Monday, March 28, 2011

Canada's Best Sports Secret

Anette Norberg's Rink Steals The Show

It would seem that this story is being buried like a curling rock. If you were looking for the story yesterday or today the news of it is as scarce as the old adage says ' hen's teeth'! 
At the very least a' Bravo' and 'Jolly Good Show' for Amber and her crew should have beeen splashed all over every newspaper in the land. I managed to finally dig this up in the Toronto Sun and the picture in the National Post. It's amazing how fast fans cool off in the face of defeat.  The media whips up the fan base to a frenzy and then if they don't produce they aren't even worth yesterday's headline.
It was a good and enjoyable ride Amber! 

Canada's Holland loses to Swedes Curling Sports Toronto Sun

Sunday, March 27, 2011

THE READING WAS A MISTAKE??? WHO IS GOING TO BELIEVE THAT?

 Officials quickly backed off from the reading of 10,000,000 times normal levels of radiation taken yesterday.  The readings were supposedly done by nuclear scientists who you would think have read a gauge or two. 
Who took the readings, the janitor?  To say now that it is ONLY 100,000 time normal levels less than 24 hours later is such an absurd 'mistake'.  Perhaps it was 100,000 times all along but to avert a panic they would announce a very quick revision from 10,000,000 times from 100,000 times normal.                                                      
Oh, that is so much better now........    

TOKYO – Emergency workers struggling to pump contaminated water from Japan's stricken nuclear complex fled from one of the troubled reactors Sunday after reporting a huge increase in radioactivity — a spike that officials later apologetically said was inaccurate.
The apology came after employees fled the complexes Unit 2 reactor when a reading showed radiation levels had reached 10 million times higher than normal in the reactor's cooling system. Officials said they were so high that the worker taking the measurements had withdrawn before taking a second reading.