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Police: Pennsylvania man killed misbehaving puppy before Steelers game
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After 30 years at the helm of Akron Children's, Considine still looks to future
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Cat-loving chihuahua suckles seven abandoned kittens
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Sunday Notebook
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Browns sick after sick loss in Detroit
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No. 1 Akron to play Stanford next
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Seven players added to Tribe’s 40-man roster
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Post-game defensive quotes
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Kent State defeats Rochester College, 63-44
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Gameblog: Cavs vs. Philadelphia 76ers
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OSU – Michigan college football rivals meet in Baghdad
Varsity Letters:
Four area football teams play tonight
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The Onion, By Any Other Name…
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Will Health Care Reform Pass?
Akron Law Café:
Health Care Financing Reform: (70) Savings in Medicare Advantage
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Vintage Chic
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TIME TO GET YOUR COLLECTOR CARS WINTERIZED
Let's Talk Real Estate:
Faye Dunaway to be Evicted?
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Monique asks how to get tickets for the Polar Express.
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Steely Dan Plays "The Royal Scam" at E.J. Thomas Hall
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Personal Rant – You are All Wrong About Jobs, or the Lack of Jobs, Being the Reason People Do Not Live in NEO
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Nintendo's Mario endures even as games come and go
No injuries reported; focus is on structural problem
By Paul Alexander
Associated Press
Published on Saturday, Jul 26, 2008
MANILA, PHILIPPINES: The 346 passengers were cruising at 29,000 feet Friday when an explosive bang shook the Qantas jumbo jet. The plane descended rapidly. Oxygen masks dropped from the ceiling as debris flew through the cabin from a hole that had suddenly appeared in the floor.
It wasn't until they were safely on the ground after an emergency landing that they realized how lucky they had been: A hole the size of a small car had been ripped into the Boeing 747-400's metal skin and penetrated the fuselage.
The eerie scene aboard Flight QF 30, captured on a passenger's cell phone video-camera, showed a tense quiet punctuated only by a baby's cries as passengers sat with oxygen masks on their faces. The jerky footage showed a woman holding tightly to the seat in front of her as rapidly approaching land appeared through a window. Loud applause and relieved laughter went up as the plane touched down.
There were no injuries and only a few cases of nausea, airline officials said. An official of the U.S. Transportation Security Administration said initial reports indicated no link to terrorism.
Investigators appeared to be focusing on a structural problem.
''From the pictures that we've seen out of Manila during the course of the day, it would seem that one of the panels to the outer skin of the aircraft has literally come away from the rest of the fuselage,'' said Chris Yates, an aviation expert at Jane's Aviation.
''As a consequence of this, the aircraft experienced rapid decompression.''
While it is not uncommon for metal panels to be lost from aircraft in flight, he said, ''it's relatively rare that when a bit falls off the airplane, it causes the sort of instance that we saw in relation to Qantas. In other words, that it causes the aircraft cabin to depressurize.''
Yates said investigators will examine closely the fracture points that showed up on the skin of the aircraft to determine whether metal fatigue or manufacturing defect caused the panel to peel away.
The passengers, on a flight from London to Melbourne, had just been served a meal after a stopover in Hong Kong when they described hearing a loud bang, then their ears popping as air rushed out the hole. The pilots put the plane into a quick descent to 10,000 feet, where the atmosphere is still thin but breathable.
Manila airport authority, quoting pilot John Francis Bartels, said the plane suffered an ''explosive decompression.''
''One hour into the flight there was a big bang, then the plane started going down,'' said Australian passenger Marina Scaffidi, 39. ''There was wind swirling around the plane and some condensation.''
She said a hole extended from the cargo hold into the passenger cabin.
After the pilots' initial rapid descent, ''the plane kept going down, not too fast, but it was descending,'' Scaffidi said, adding the staff informed passengers they were diverting to Manila. TV screens on the backs of the seats allowed them to track their route to the Philippine capital.
''No one was very hysterical,'' she said.
Fellow passenger June Kane agreed, telling Australia's ABC radio: ''It was absolutely terrifying, but I have to say, everyone was very calm.''
Amazingly calm, in fact.
Video footage showed people looking almost as if nothing was wrong as they glanced from side to side, their nearly untouched meals still in front of them. Members of the cabin crew continued to work, smiling as they walked down the aisles to reassure nervous passengers.
After the plane touched down safely amid applause, one of the pilots could be heard saying over the intercom: ''Fire vehicles and emergency vehicles are going to take a look at us.''
What they found was a stunning sight. A 9-foot-wide hole gaped at the joint where the front of the right wing attaches to the plane.
Boeing spokeswoman Liz Verdier said it was too soon to say what caused the hole, but the company was providing technical assistance as part of an investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board.
MANILA, PHILIPPINES: The 346 passengers were cruising at 29,000 feet Friday when an explosive bang shook the Qantas jumbo jet. The plane descended rapidly. Oxygen masks dropped from the ceiling as debris flew through the cabin from a hole that had suddenly appeared in the floor.
Get the full article here.
