Wednesday, December 27, 2006

Medical flight from Morgantown crashes crashes in Pennsylvania; 2 dead

December 27, 2006
By Staff, wire reports
MORGANTOWN — Two women were killed Tuesday afternoon when a plane registered to a Morgantown business crashed in Pennsylvania.

The pilot of the twin-engine Cessna 414 was headed from Morgantown to Teterboro, N.J., a 43-minute flight. She reported ice accumulated on the plane before crashing at John Murtha Johnstown-Cambria County Airport, according to a Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman.

The victims’ names were not being released pending family notification. The plane was registered to Wharf Place LLC, which owns the new Waterfront Place Hotel in Morgantown. It took off about 3:20 p.m. According to flightaware.com, a Web site that tracks flights, the pilot was supposed to leave at 2:40 p.m., but was delayed. From there, the plane was slated to go to Oakland, Mich. Cambria County Coroner Dennis Kwiatkowski said the plane was a medical flight headed to New Jersey to pick up a patient. The passenger on the plane was a nurse.

Investigators said they don’t know what happened to the propeller-driven plane. “The plane was down and on fire right away,” said Deputy Chief Wes Meyers of the Richland (Pa.) Fire Department, just outside Johnstown. The National Transportation Safety Board will begin its full investigation this morning, said Chief Richard L. Barlett of the Richland Police Department.

William Willett, of Daisytown, Pa. was driving near the runway when he noticed the plane coming toward his car. “It was way too low, and it was kind of rocking,’’ Willett told The Tribune-Democrat of Johnstown. “It then veered up and turned wildly. ... I was still looking at it and I saw the plane go straight down.’’

http://wvgazette.com/section/Today/2006122619

Tuesday, December 26, 2006

Custody battle mother lies low

A former Australian soldier and a New Zealander have been arrested in Lebanon on accusations they're part of a mercenary squad that seized the two daughters of Canadian Melissa Hawach from her estranged Australian husband north of Beirut.

Police identified the captured Australian as Brian Desmond Corrigan, and the New Zealander as David Bruce Pemberton, an ex-special forces member alleged to be the team leader, it has been reported.

The duo were hauled from a plane at Beirut's international airport on Wednesday afternoon and could face up to 15 years' jail on charges of kidnapping minors. Another former Australian soldier, James Arak, and two more New Zealand mercenaries, Simon Dunn, 33, and Michael Douglas, 40, have fled the country. Hawach and her two daughters, Hannah, five, and Cedar, three, are also believed to be on the run but still in Lebanon.

Lebanese police claim all five men are ex-commandos who had staked out the girls' father, Joseph Hawach, for several days before launching the daring raid. Police say Pemberton arrived in Lebanon after receiving an email asking him to find and seize the girls for a fee. Corrigan arrived on December 9. He is believed to have checked in to the al-Rimal Hotel, in Jounieh, where Hawach was staying with his daughters. The other four arrived in Lebanon last Friday and stayed at the nearby Protodad Hotel. The alleged abduction took place on Wednesday. The girls were allegedly whisked away in a Chevrolet van.

Melissa Hawach had launched unprecedented legal action late last month against her in-laws and her ex-husband's extended family in a bid to force them to reveal her children's whereabouts.

Joseph Hawach, 31, has been charged with two counts of abduction under Canadian law, and international arrest and extradition warrants have been issued. He is alleged to have fled to Lebanon with his daughters at the height of the Hezbollah-Israel war in July and August.
The couple separated two years ago after marrying in Sydney in 1999. Melissa Hawach had since returned to Canada. Mrs Hawach, 32, is in hiding since taking her daughters - Hannah, 5, and Cedar, 3 - last Wednesday from al-Rimal Hotel, in Jounieh, Lebanon, where they had been staying with their father. She has been campaigning to get her daughters back since Mr Hawach, 31, took them from Canada on holiday to Australia and then, without permission, to Lebanon in July. Mr Hawach has been charged with abduction in Canada.

Monday, December 25, 2006

Shot DJ dies after 2-wk. fight

BY GREG WILSON
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

DJ Carl Blaze

The hip-hop deejay shot 13 times after arguing with thugs in Inwood died yesterday, officials said. DJ Carl Blaze, 30, whose real name was Carlos Rivera, fought for his life for more than two weeks at Harlem Hospital, but was pronounced dead at 3:52 p.m.

Blaze's weekend broadcasts aired on WWPR-FM Power 105.1 and reached more than 2 million listeners, the station said. "Power 105 and Clear Channel New York are deeply saddened at the loss of Carl Blaze," said station spokeswoman Josefa Paganuzzi. "Our thoughts and prayers go out to his family." The station held a tribute for Blaze last night.
The deejay had two children, ages 1 and 7, with his wife, Yvonne. Blaze was rushed to the hospital Dec. 7 after being riddled with bullets in the hallway of a building at 578 Academy St. His $20,000 diamond necklace had been stolen.

The shooting came hours after he deejayed a party at the X-Bar on Cedar Ave. in University Heights in the Bronx. Police said Blaze was jumped after he left a woman's apartment in the Academy St. building. He argued with his attackers for at least 15 minutes before shots were fired, suggesting he may have known the gunmen, a police source said. Cops said yesterday they had no strong leads and were unsure if robbery was the motive behind the shooting, given that Blaze's watch, ring and cash were left behind, sources said.

On the Soup Line, Endive and Octopus

By KIM SEVERSON
EVEN at the soup kitchen, everyone’s a critic.

The multicourse lunch that Michael Ennes cooked in the basement of Broadway Presbyterian Church last week started with a light soup of savoy and napa cabbages. The endive salad was dressed with basil vinaigrette. For the main course, Mr. Ennes simmered New Jersey bison in wine and stock flavored with fennel and thickened with olive oil roux.

But some diners thought the bison was a little tough, and the menu discordant.

“He’s good, but sometimes I think the experimentation gets in the way of good taste,” said Jose Terrero, 54. Last year, Mr. Terrero made a series of what he called inappropriate financial decisions, including not paying his rent. He now sleeps at a shelter. He has eaten at several New York City soup kitchens, and highly recommends Mr. Ennes’s food.

Mr. Ennes, a former English major who reads Thomas Paine and wears a black and white neckerchief with a turquoise clasp, might be the best soup kitchen chef in New York City. On Thanksgiving, when most of the cooks at the city’s other 470-some soup kitchens simply roasted turkey, he prepared “turkey four ways,” including one with mango-ginger glaze and tropical fruit stuffing.

There will be no canned green beans or bologna sandwiches. Mr. Ennes insists on homemade stocks, oils without trans fats, organic peanut butter and local produce when he can get it. (That’s not to say he won’t stretch a meal with some frozen turkey patties or use a little powdered soup base in a pinch.) Despite the care he puts into his cooking, he doesn’t mind a little criticism.

“They’re still customers, whether they’re paying $100 a plate or nothing,” Mr. Ennes said. “One thing we do here is listen to people and let them complain. Where else can a homeless person get someone to listen to them?” Mr. Ennes, 55, cooks about 500 meals a week for people who come to the church on the corner of Broadway and 114th Street in search of a free breakfast or lunch. At night, a handful of women in need of shelter sleep upstairs. He feeds them, too.

The people who eat at Broadway Community Inc., the social service organization that employs Mr. Ennes and rents space in the church, are only a small slice of the 260,000 New Yorkers who every week visit some emergency feeding program. About 40 percent of the people who eat at Mr. Ennes’s table live in a shelter or take cover in the parks or the subways. The rest have a temporary home of some sort, on a friend’s couch or the roof of a building where they know the super. Some don’t earn enough to cover rent.

Mr. Ennes relies on the Food Bank for New York City, donations and grants, but he also employs the creativity of a desperate cook. When he’s out of wine, he uses fruit juice or borrows communion wine from the understanding pastor at the church upstairs. (He has to make sure all the alcohol is cooked off; many of his clients are trying to recover from alcoholism.)

The bread basket that sits on each table is filled with rolls that were baked at Le Bernardin the day before but never served. Le Bernardin is among nearly 150 high-end restaurants that regularly donate through City Harvest, a nonprofit that for 25 years has been “rescuing” extra food. The list of donors, which includes corporations, farms and grocery stores, totals more than 2,000. Without City Harvest, Mr. Ennes would be hard-pressed to present the menus he does.

Though the quality of the ingredients is often impeccable, he doesn’t always know what he’s going to get or what form it’s going to take. Last week brought a large plastic sack of asparagus, both white stalks and pencil-thin green ones. They were beautiful, except all the tips had been snapped off. Before that, there was a shipment of pineapple slices, each with a star punched out of the middle, and several foil trays filled with braised baby octopus. He disguised some of the octopus in a soup and used the rest in a salad for the women’s shelter.

Surprise contributions come from other sources, too. Mr. Ennes teaches cooking, nutrition and food service skills to homeless people, who in turn help prepare meals. In November, a student brought a leg of venison from his family in Georgia. Mr. Ennes used it for stock, which became the base for an Andalusian oxtail and lentil stew.

Before the stew was served, Mr. Ennes delivered a short food and nutrition lecture to a crowded dining room. “We’re dealing with the regions of Spain today,” he said in a booming voice better suited to a different stretch of Broadway. “The stew has no potatoes. It’s served with rice and peas instead. That’s what makes it Andalusian.” People dozed or babbled. Some couldn’t understand a word of English. Those who did, though, were amused.

“He should have his own show,” said Duwon Bryant, who drops into the center to shower, check e-mail and get a good meal before he heads back outside to find a place to sleep. No other soup kitchen has Broadway Community’s mix of excellent cooking and supportive attitude, he said.

“I’ve been to them all and this is like gourmet,” Mr. Bryant said. “Other places will give you slop and say it’s better than nothing.” Some people said they prefer the food at a soul food soup kitchen in Harlem. Others like a slightly tonier East Side soup kitchen that has an automatic dishwasher and can use real plates. (Mr. Ennes hates serving his food on plastic-foam plates, but he says a dishwasher and the plumbing for it would cost about $10,000.) But as with any restaurant whose focus is on refined ambiance, a seat at the East Side place comes at a cost.

“They don’t let everybody in, so you wait on line and then you get turned away if they don’t like how you look,” said Patrick Garrelle, 44. “Their door policy is almost like a nightclub with a rope.” At Broadway Community, everyone gets to eat. There is no humiliating food line to stand in. Volunteers set each of Mr. Ennes’s courses in front of the diners.

“When you force people to queue up for food, you encourage pushiness and aggressiveness and hardness,” he said. “Sitting at a table and being served encourages community.”

At one time, Mr. Ennes dreamed of being a starred chef. He was raised on the Upper West Side, and initially made money building restaurants. He turned to the kitchen, cooking in South Beach and the Florida Keys in the 1980s. In 1990, he opened a restaurant on Second Avenue and First Street in Manhattan called Orféo, hoping to attract the attention of food critics. It never did, and the restaurant closed after four years.

Things changed for Mr. Ennes on 9/11. His consulting job with a restaurant downtown vanished, and, like many others, he decided to make good on a longstanding intention to do more volunteer work. So he walked across the street from his apartment to volunteer at Broadway Community. In no time, he was the head chef, making $30,000 a year plus health benefits.

He no longer dreams of feeding stars or getting one. “I could have spent my life pampering the rich, which is a fine art,” he said. “But I think I’ve found where I belong.”


details here :)

Bus Passengers Get $50 in Holiday Cash from Anonymous Rider

SPOKANE, Washington: A woman hopped aboard buses, greeted passengers with "Merry Christmas" and handed each an envelope containing a card and a $50 bill before stepping off and repeating the process on another bus.

She did it so quickly that descriptions of the woman varied among surprised Spokane Transit Authority passengers on several routes Thursday, The Spokesman-Review newspaper reported Friday.

"She kind of kept her head down. I don't remember ever seeing this lady before," said bus driver Max Clemons. "I had a young man in the back of the bus. He looked like he was going to start crying. He said in broken English, 'She don't know how much this will mean to me at Christmas,'" Clemons said.

Transit authority spokesman Dan Kolbet said efforts to identify the gift-giver were unsuccessful. Her generosity didn't appear to be part of a marketing gimmick, he said.

The woman gave envelopes to about 20 passengers, he said. Each was sealed with a sticker that said: "To a friend from a friend." The woman, accompanied by one or two young boys, pulled the envelopes out of a cloth satchel. The buses were pulling away from stops before riders even knew what happened. "There was a lot of excitement. People were making calls on their cell phones," said driver Terry Dobson, who had two of his trips visited by the mystery woman. "The people on those buses really needed the money."

Hours after the impromptu gift-giving, Dobson was still giddy.

"It was just a neat thing," he said. "It makes you tingle all over."

4 killed in xmas plane crash

A surgery resident at CAMC was killed with her parents and sister in a South Carolina plane crash on Friday, according to a close friend of her family. Lauren Armistead, 27, a North Carolina native and graduate of West Virginia University’s medical school, was aboard the plane with her father, Ray Armistead, who was the pilot; mother, Patty; and sister, Kristen, said Penn Markham of Charleston, whose family knew the Armisteads for several years. Armistead family relatives have told Markham’s family that there’s no doubt about the identity of the four people killed, said Markham. Kristen Armistead’s wallet has been found in the wreckage, and her car remains parked at the airport from which the plan debarked, he said.

Authorities have not publicly confirmed the identities of the four people found on board, but Charleston County Coroner Rae Wooten told the Charlotte, N.C., television station WCNC-TV that she suspected the victims probably are the Armisteads.

The twin-engine Cessna 340A was registered in Ray Armistead’s name, said Laura Brown, a spokeswoman with the Federal Aviation Administration. It went down in the Stono River while attempting to land at the Johns Island Executive Airport, southwest of Charleston, S.C., on Friday afternoon, she said. Airport controllers lost contact with the plane about 1:45 p.m., Brown said. Witnesses saw it plunge into the river about that time, said Charles Francis, a spokesman for the Charleston County Sheriff’s Office.

“We’re all really shook up by this,” said Markham, whose brother, Peter, was dating Lauren Armistead. The two met while attending WVU, he said. “She was a very adventurous person, she loved the outdoors and was really a world traveler,” he said. The family often got together for vacations at out-of-the-way places, he said.

Ray Armistead was a New Bern, N.C., orthopedic surgeon and Kristen Armistead a graduate student in Charlotte. Lauren Armistead had planned to practice reconstructive surgery once she finished her CAMC residency, Markham said. The National Transportation Safety Board will investigate the crash once the plane’s wreckage is recovered, said a spokesman for the agency.
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Six hours after recovery efforts began, the three remaining victims on board the cessna 340 A were pulled from the wreckage. Dr. Ray Armistead of New Bern, NC, his wife, patty and their two daughters, 27 year old lauren and 25 year old kristin were on board. One autopsy showed the cause of death was blunt force head and neck trauma. The Armistead family left New Bern Friday, planning to spend Christmas on Kiawah Island. "It's important that we document evidence that might tell us about the crash...and so on, so that takes time," says Charleston County Coroner Rae Wooten.

The plane was submerged in about 20 feet of water when investigators found it. Their biggest concern as they went to remove it was the aircraft's condition and whether or not it might break into more pieces as it was pulled out. Overnight it shifted onto its backside and the tail actually broke off, but remained attached by its wiring. "I know weather was here at the time, but that doesn't matter. I still have to examine the aircraft and look at the past maintenance, pilot experience and so forth and so on," says Eric Alleyne of NTSB.

NTSB will now transport the plane to Atlanta for a full investigation. Coast Guard officials estimate the aircraft was carrying about 130 gallons of fuel. They contained a small leak and don't anticipate any environmental damage.

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