Kobe Taught Kawhi & Kyrie his best SIGNATURE MOVES
Topic Tackle- Kobe Taught Kawhi & Kyrie his SIGNATURE MOVES at Mamba Sports Academy during the Mamba Sports Pro Invitational
More on Mamba Sports Academy:
Kobe is Literally Making Disciples with His Mamba Sports Academy.
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Air crash Investigation: Philippine Airlines 434
Air crash Investigation: Philippine Airlines 434
It was early morning at Pasay. A Boeing 747 was preparing for its regular passenger's flight. The flight was destined for Narita International Airport, Tokyo, Japan with the intermediate stopover at Mactan–Cebu International Airport, Cebu, Philippines.
The flight departed from Manila at 5:35 and landed at Cebu at 6:50 without any notable events.
There were 26 passengers, who got off the plane, while 256 more passengers and 20 cabin crew boarded the flight.
From here, there were 273 passengers and 20 crew members.
The aircraft was a Boeing 747-283BM. It made its first flight on February 17, 1979, and was delivered to Scandinavian Airlines on March 2, 1979. In between the timeframe of June 3, 1983 and March 30, 1992, it flew with Nigeria Airways, Lionair (Luxembourg), and Aerolineas Argentinas. On April 1, 1992, the plane was delivered to Philippine Airlines.
8:38
Flight 434 departed for its destination Tokyo, Japan.
9:00 am
The aircraft was flying at an altitude of 33,000 ft near Okinawa.
The bomb exploded...........
The aircraft banked hard to the right, but the autopilot corrected it quickly.
The explosion blew a hole in the floor and immediately killed a passenger named Haruki Ikegami, who was a Japanese industrial sewing machine maker returning from his business trip.
The bomb also injured additional ten passengers around it.
The explosion destroyed the control cables which controlled the plane's right aileron and the steering controls of both the pilots.
The captain asked the Engineer to check the severity of the blast and declared a Mayday and requested to land at Naha Airport Okinawa.
However, there was another problem. Japanese air traffic controllers were not able to understand the request from the captain. The ATC then asked for help from the American air traffic controllers from a U.S. military base located on Okinawa.
The American ATC directed one of their aircraft towards Philippine airlines 434 to visually check for damage and to verify that the landing gear was in place.
The autopilot was controlling the plane. To land, the crew should disengage it. They might lose control of the aircraft if they disengaged the autopilot but they had no option. The captain instructed the copilot to hold his controls. Then he disconnected the autopilot. Fortunately, the aircraft did not bank but neither it responded to steering inputs from either controller.
The crew was struggling to use the ailerons, which could allow the aircraft to roll. The last option they had was to use the throttles to steer the plane. By using the asymmetric thrust to control the plane, they were able to do so. They also dumped the fuel to lessen the pressure on the landing gear.
At 12:45, the crew was able to land the aircraft at Naha Airport.
Everyone on the plane breathed a sigh of relief. At first, passengers were disembarked followed by crew and the pilots.
Investigation
The passengers boarded the aircraft. Among them was a Pakistani terrorist named Ramzi Yousef. The loose Security made it easier for him to slip through the security check. He brought nitroglycerin hidden in a bottle of contact lens solution. Wires were hidden inside his shoes. To use as a timer, he had a Casio watch.
After the aircraft took off from Manila, he went into the restroom and assembled the bomb.
Then he changed his seat to 26K. He hid the explosive device below the seat where a lifejacket was stored.
The plane landed in Cebu. Yousef disembarked and more passengers bound for Japan boarded.
From here, in-seat number 26k was a 24-year-old Japanese businessman Haruki Ikegami.
The bomb exploded when the plane was flying at 32,000 feet.
The crew was awarded by President Fidel Ramos for their quick thinking and for saving the lives of passengers aboard Flight 434.
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Woman punches flight attendant and knocks out her teeth
Woman punches flight attendant and knocks out her teeth
A woman who allegedly punched a Southwest Airlines flight attendant knocking her teeth out has been arrested and charged with felony battery.
Vyvianna Quinonez, 28, allegedly grew irate when she was told to buckle her seatbelt during a flight from Sacramento to San Diego on Sunday and punched the flight attendant in the face, KTXL reported.
Quinonez was escorted off the flight by Port of San Diego Harbor police as the flight attendant, who was not named, was pictured with a bloodied face and wheeled off the flight in a wheelchair.
The flight attendant lost two teeth and suffered other injuries to her face and was taken to Scripps Memorial Hospital, KFMB-TV reported. She was later released from the hospital and Southwest flew a friend to San Diego to be with her.
Cops charged Quinonez with felony battery causing serious bodily injury and she was released on a $35,000 bail, KFMB reporter Abbie Alford posted on Facebook.
Quinonez, from the Sacramento suburb of Antelope, claimed to Alford that she acted in self defense and wouldn't say anything more without her lawyer present.
Taro Arai, the owner of Sacramento restaurant Mikuni, said he saw the two shoving each other before Quinonez threw the punch.
'In the beginning, they were not arguing. They were just like 'do this, don't do that, don't do this, don't do that.' Then even the flight attendant said, 'Don't touch me,' Arai told KTXL.
He told Good Day Sacramento that the flight attendant was 'bleeding everywhere in the back.'
'This lady who hit her went back to her seat, wore a mask — nothing happened seems like. I'm like huh, woah, I mean, she was so strong she could knock me out,' he said.
Southwest spokesman Chris Mainz said Quinonez ignored the flight crew's reminders of wearing a seatbelt and putting her tray table away.
'The passenger repeatedly ignored standard inflight instructions and became verbally and physically abusive upon landing,' he said.
The incident marked an escalation in unruly behavior by airline passengers and led the president of the flight attendants' union to ask for more federal air marshals on planes in a letter.
'Unfortunately, this is just one of many occurrences,' said the union president, Lyn Montgomery.
She said there were 477 incidents of 'misconduct' by passengers on Southwest planes between April 8 and May 15.
The Federal Aviation Administration said Monday that airlines have reported 2,500 incidents of unruly passengers this year, including 1,900 cases in which passengers refused to wear face masks, which are required by federal rule.
The FAA provided those numbers as it announced it was seeking civil penalties totaling $54,500 against five passengers for behavior ranging from refusing to wear a mask to assaulting flight attendants.
'I've been in the industry since 1992, and this is the worst ever,' Montgomery said in an interview. 'People seem to be more angry. When they´re asked to do something, compliance seems to be more difficult.'
Southwest and most airlines train flight attendants to de-escalate tense situations with unhappy travelers. Montgomery said those tactics are growing less effective and a small number of passengers are becoming bolder in challenging the authority of crew members.
Montgomery, the president of Local 556 of the Transport Workers Union, wrote about the weekend attack in a letter to Southwest CEO Gary Kelly.
Montgomery asked Kelly to lobby federal officials for more air marshals on flights and to ban passengers who violate rules instead of putting them on another flight.
She said flight attendants are concerned about Southwest's plan to resume selling alcohol on board planes. Many recent cases that have caught FAA´s attention involving passengers who were drinking.
Southwest Airlines said Wednesday that bookings are improving and leisure-travel fares for June are approaching pre-pandemic levels, further signs that the airline industry is recovering from a deep slump.
The Dallas-based airline said the average April flight was 79% full, and it expects June flights to be 85% full. Southwest said it has sold 55% of the seats it expects to fill in June and 35% for July, which it called "fairly typical" booking patterns.
Southwest said in a regulatory filing that demand is still being driven mostly by leisure travelers. It said bookings by business travelers are ticking modestly higher but remain down about 80% from 2019 levels.
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Drunken Walmart 'shoplifter' gets knocked down by customer
Drunken Walmart 'shoplifter' gets knocked down by customer
A drunken Walmart shoplifter in Washington State who allegedly hit a parked car before entering the store was caught on video getting knocked to the ground after another customer confronted him.
The wild video footage starts as an employee seen in the store's signature blue vest at a Walmart in Federal Way, Washington tries to stop the unmasked man from leaving the store.
He tells the worker to 'back up' while approaching the exit and carrying an unknown item.
'You better put that down before I knock you out,' says another customer in a white shirt to the drunken man, wearing a dark top. The drunken man drops what he is carrying as the two raise their fists and start circling each other.
Before the blows start, the drunken man picks up the merchandise he was attempting to steal – which is kicked out of his hands by the other customer.
Employees are heard shouting at the men to ‘stop the fight’ while the customer pounds the drunken man – who attempts to swing at him but is quickly taken to the ground.
A store security guard then taps for the other customer to get off the man.
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Ear Pulling contest with ease, stone cold wins 2012
Stone Cold Killer wins the 2012 Ear Pulling contest with ease, a breakdown. his cool
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PH Shocking video shows guy smashing up Porsche Carrera GT
Shocking video shows guy smashing up Porsche Carrera GT
Astonishing footage shows a youth smashing up the bonnet of a Porsche Carrera GT with a wrench in broad daylight - after the owner said he could.
Shocked onlooker Ryan Hambrook captured the incident on Folkstone Road in Dover, Kent while driving back to his home in Deal, Kent after work.
Mr Hambrook, 28, could hardly believe his eyes when he spotted the youth standing on top of and lashing the luxury car with a metal socket wrench on June 25.
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