Ted Stevens dies in plane crash

spike

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DILLINGHAM, Alaska – An amphibious plane carrying former Sen. Ted Stevens crashed into a remote mountainside during a fishing trip, killing the state's most beloved political figure and four others and stranding the survivors on a rocky, brush-covered slope overnight.

Three teenagers and their parents, including the former head of NASA, were on the plane when it plowed into the mountain Monday afternoon with so much force that it left a 300-foot gash on the slope, federal investigators said.

A doctor and two EMTs hiked to the scene Monday evening and tended to the survivors' broken bones, cuts and bruises during a cold and frightening night on the mountain with the pungent odor of fuel wafting through the air.

A 13-year-old boy survived but had to spend the night near his dead father and the senator. A mother and her 16-year-old daughter died. Former NASA chief Sean O'Keefe survived along with his teenage son.

The 86-year-old Stevens' death stunned lawmakers and residents alike because of his pre-eminence in Alaska history: A decorated World War II pilot who survived a deadly 1978 plane crash, he was the longest-serving GOP senator in history and became the patron saint of Alaska politics as he brought billions of federal dollars home.

One failed effort — the infamous "Bridge to Nowhere" — became part of his national legacy, as did corruption convictions that helped foil his 2008 campaign after 40 years in office. The case was later tossed out.

"He is one of the real giants," said Paul Brown, a consultant who was having lunch at an outdoor cafe in Anchorage. "He dedicated his life to this state."

Investigators with the NTSB arrived Tuesday at the crash site outside Dillingham, located on Bristol Bay about 325 miles southwest of Anchorage. The cause was not immediately known, but weather is one area investigators will examine.

The flights at Dillingham are often perilous through the mountains, even in good weather. NTSB chairwoman Deborah Hersman said weather conditions at the time of the accident included light rain, clouds and gusty winds.

Hersman said the group had eaten lunch at a lodge and boarded a 1957 red-and-white float plane between 3 p.m. and 3:15 p.m. local time for a trip to a salmon fishing camp. The FAA had previously said the plane took off between 1 p.m. and 2 p.m.

Lodge operators called the fish camp at 6 p.m. to inquire when the party would be returning for dinner, but were told that they never showed up. Civilian aircraft were dispatched, and pilots quickly spotted the wreckage a few miles from the lodge, Hersman said.

The doctor and EMTs were flown to the area and hiked to the wreckage as fog and rain blanketed the area and nightfall set in, making it impossible for rescue officials to reach the scene until daybreak.

Pilot Tom Tucker helped shuttle the medical personnel to the scene.

He said the survivors were all in relative good condition. It was rainy and cold, and he believes their heavy duty fishing waders protected them when they went into shock.

"We covered them up with blankets and made them as comfortable as we could," he said.

He said there was no rhyme or reason to how some survived the crash. The pilot was killed, but a passenger in the co-pilot's seat survived. "The front of the aircraft was gone," he said. "He was just sitting in the chair."

They made a tarp tent over the missing cockpit to keep him dry.

The Federal Aviation Administration said the DeHavilland DHC-3T was registered to Anchorage-based General Communications Inc., a phone and Internet company.

Four survivors were taken to Providence Hospital in Anchorage with "varying degrees of injuries," Alaska State Troopers said. Former NASA spokesman Glenn Mahone said O'Keefe, 54, and his son had broken bones and other injuries.

Sean O'Keefe was listed in critical condition late Tuesday afternoon, while son Kevin was listed in serious condition and sleeping. "There's no way he can talk in his condition," Providence Hospital spokesman John Hogue said of the younger O'Keefe.

The other survivors were William "Willy" Phillips Jr., 13; and Jim Morhard, of Alexandria, Va.

The victims were identified as Stevens; pilot Theron "Terry" Smith, 62, of Eagle River; William "Bill" Phillips Sr.; Dana Tindall, 48, an executive with GCI; and her 16-year-old daughter Corey Tindall.

Stevens and O'Keefe were fishing companions and longtime Washington colleagues who worked together on the Senate Appropriations Committee that the Republican lawmaker led for several years. Stevens became a protege to the younger O'Keefe and they remained close friends over the years. Morhard and the elder Phillips also worked with Stevens in Washington.

Plane crashes in Alaska are somewhat common because of the treacherous weather and mountainous terrain. Many parts of the state are not accessible by roads, forcing people to travel by air to reach their destinations.

Stevens was one of two survivors in a 1978 plane crash at Anchorage International Airport that killed his wife, Ann, and several others.

In a similar accident by another GCI-owned plane, an amphibious, float-equipped DeHavilland plane flipped after landing on Lake Nerka in 2002. The pilot drowned and a passenger was injured. The plane was landing on the lake in front of the lodge when the accident occurred.

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http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_alaska_plane_crash
 
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actually, that's fairly accurate

as any quick derivation of Gauss' Law can tell you, the current density cross section of a wire carrying an electrical signal most closely resembles a tube. All of the charge carriers are on the outer surface, with the center being somewhat 'hollow' in terms of current density.

and, when dealing with a fused silica fiber with a doped silica jacket, communications lasers coupled into the fiber correctly for total internal reflection, the easiest way to visualize it is to think of light bouncing down the inside of a hollow tube, reflected off of the inner surface of the tube. granted, the reason for the reflection is that doping the silica increases its refractive index slightly, from something like 1.452 to 1.456 or something along those lines, providing TIR at very high angles of incidence.

Tubes are a much more apt description of the internet than a dump truck. The internet is nothing like a dump truck.
 
So you can’t just go dumping things on it.
They have to be made to fit down the tubes.
 
So you can’t just go dumping things on it.
They have to be made to fit down the tubes.

well, yeah. you need a modulator to take the big thing you want to dump and make it fit into the tubes (converting it into binary electrical or optical signals).
 
That was probably a pathetic rightist. Leftists like Levi but most rightists don't think Sarah is qualified.

But hey, you found a Facebook comment. Good work.
 
You should have seen some of the comments by pathetic rightist members right here when Ted Kennedy died.

You might have seen some hypocrisy.
 
You should have seen some of the comments by pathetic rightist members right here when Ted Kennedy died.

You might have seen some hypocrisy.

Not quite the same thing.

This guy was wishing death upon Palin, a living person.

IF there were any comments made by "rightist members right here" they were made after Ted was already dead.

future spike said:
Yes it is the same, and stuff

No, it is not.

Palin = alive when comment was made

Kennedy = already dead (like Mary Jo)
 
This guy was wishing death upon Palin, a living person.

IF there were any comments made by "rightist members right here" they were made after Ted was already dead.

Interesting. You find it completely acceptable to be glad someone died and unacceptable to wish someone dead?

Where does Winky suggesting assassination of the president fall in there?
 
Ted Stevens sucked into the tubes.

Right at the top of the list of things
that would improve America overnight.

That's where.
 
Did that guy actually name a guy? I think not.

Unless your racism leads you to believe it was a certain halfrican.
 
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