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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> Nov. 14, 2013: A passenger fell out of this Piper PA 46
aircraft, which is shown at the Kendall-Tamiami Executive Airport in Miami.WSVNMIAMI
Rescue crews searched an area southeast of Miami after a pilot
reported to the Federal Aviation Administration that a passenger fell out
of his small plane into the ocean Thursday.FAA spokeswoman Kathleen Bergen
says the call came at 1:30 p.m. Thursday from the pilot of
a Piper PA 46 aircraft. The plane was flying at about 2,000
feet when the call came in, she said.Coast Guard and Miami-Dade Fire
Rescue air and water units were searching an area about eight miles
southeast of Tamiami Executive Airport, south of Miami, where the plane
safely landed. It wasn't immediately clear where the flight originated or
how many people were on board.According to a recording on the website
LiveATC.Net, the unidentified pilot calmly radioed "mayday, mayday, mayday,"
and told an air traffic controller a door was ajar."I have a
door ajar and a passenger that fell down. I'm six miles from
Tamiami," the pilot says."You said you've got a passenger that fell out
of your plane?" the air traffic controller responds."That's correct, sir,"
the pilot responded. "He opened the back door and he just fell
out the plane."LiveATC.Net provides live air traffic-control broadcasts
from control towers and radar facilities around the world.Both the Coast
Guard and fire rescue officials said they hadn't confirmed whether the pilot's
ort.The U.S. military looking to both help an ally
and show its commitment to remaining the leading power in the Pacific
amid the rise of China has been extremely fast
in responding to the disaster.About a half dozen countries
including Japan, Indonesia, and Singapore have offered military assistance
to Manila, and many more have sent supplies. Chinese troops, however, have
been prominently absent, in large part because of a territorial spat between
the two nations.According to Lt. Col. Rodney Legowski, the first U.S. Marines
arrived in the Philippines in response to the disaster within six hours,
and began flying supplies to affected areas less than 18 hours after
that. By Friday, there were 400 Marines in the country.The USS George
Washington aircraft carrier and its battle group are also in place off
the hard-hit islands of Leyte and Samar. So far, the U.S. military
has moved 174,000 kilograms (190 tons) of supplies and flown nearly 200
sorties."Having the U.S. military here is a game changer," said Col. Miguel
Okol, a spokesman for the Philippine air force. "For countries that we
don't have these kinds of relationships with, it can take a while
to get help. But with the U.S., it's immediate."With roughly 600,000 people
displaced by the typhoon and millions still in need of aid, the
Marines said in a statement Thursday that about 900 more Marines based
on Okinawa, Japan, were to arrive early next week aboard two U.S.
Na
A US Airways Express flight from Philadelphia to Long Island was canceled
Wednesday night after passengers rallied behind a blind man who was removed
from the flight after his service dog became restless.Albert Rizzi said
the argument began when a crew member told him to put his
service dog under the seat in front of him as they waited
for the US Airways Express flight to leave Philadelphia International Airport
for the airport in Ronkonkoma, N.Y.Rizzi, who is legally blind, told MyFoxTwinCities.com
that the flight attendant became aggressive after noticing his service dog,
Doxy, laying in the aisle.He said the dog became restless after 45
minutes on the tarmac."The flight attendant comes over and says, 'I need
you to get that dog stowed again,'" Rizzi told the station. "She
comes back and gets in my face again. 'I told you that
dog needs to be under a seat or we are not taking
off.'"Flight attendants described the dog as agitated and expressed concern
that Rizzi was not controlling it, airline spokeswoman Liz Landau told The
Associated Press.Rizzi became verbally abusive, and the crew decided to
remove him, Landau said. That decision caused some of the other 33
travelers to become upset, she said, and the flight was canceled. US
Airways then arranged for a bus to drive passengers to Long Island."My
comfort level with my blindness was totally rocked," Rizzi said. "I felt
like a useless, unappreciated loser." One passenger told MyFoxTwin
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