Be careful when you question a miracle. You just might get yourself excommunicated. That’s the difficult position that bloggers find themselves in as they ponder the aftermath of the remarkable crash-landing of US Airways flight 1549, in which no one was killed.
Winds were gusting up to 37 mph in Denver on the day that the Continental plane crashed in Denver and aviation safety experts say that could be one factor leading to the crash, according to a new report.
Anyway you cut it, air travel is going to become a very unpleasant experience after the Labor Day holiday. Airlines are about to experience the industry’s first major contraction — ever. Here’s how to survive it.
A twin-engined Cessna Citation I crashed into a house Sunday in Farnborough, about 15 miles southeast of London, killing all five people aboard the plane.