All is well when you have a miracle maid

I know that I certainly think to look up whenever I hear a plane engine getting louder or really close. In fact, I was in NYC during Memorial Day weekend in 2005 where there was a fly over by some military jets. Buzzed right over downtown during Fleet Week celebrations, and I swear that you heard the entire city pause for a moment.

I’m not so sure that I would have had this quick of wit though. I guess you never really know until you’re put into that situation. Did 9/11 prime this woman to be more attentive for these types of situations?

NEW YORK (AP) — A woman in a high-rise apartment hit by New York Yankee Cory Lidle’s plane survived after her housekeeper saw the aircraft coming and rushed in from another room to get her out, a relative of the resident said Thursday.

Flames from the deadly crash scorched Ilana Benhuri’s back and legs but she “has very good spirits,” said her husband, Dr. Parviz Benhuri.

“She was in the same room that the nose of the plane hit,” said her brother-in-law Dr. Marc Benhuri. “I’m telling you it’s an absolute miracle that she’s alive. I honestly believe that God was sitting on her shoulder.”

Ilana Benhuri, 50, was doing paperwork at her desk when she heard the small plane outside her 30th-floor apartment, Marc Benhuri said. The housekeeper, Eveline Reategue, saw the plane coming and rushed into the room to get her, he said.

The plane crashed into the apartment as they were trying to get out, Marc Benhuri said. Lidle and his flight instructor, Tyler Stanger, were killed.

“I took my boss [by the arm], and we ran out,” Reategue, told the New York Post. “The floor was on fire, and it looked like it was going to cave in.

“The women closed the door of the room where the plane hit, then closed the front door and ran down a fire escape to safety, Marc Benhuri said. Closing the front door of the fiery apartment probably saved their lives, he said. [cnn]

The power of pancake mix

When you instill the fear of terror in everyone, there is no telling what the effects can be. It can happen anywhere, anytime, and no one is safe. That’s what everyone is told, and some folks believe it to the most extreme. There is always reason to be cautious. Afterall, no one is safe.

“Suspicious” powder in Indianola is pancake mix

REGISTER STAFF WRITER
October 10, 2006

Three plastic bags containing a suspicious powder found in Indianola on Sunday turned out to be pancake mix.

The Des Moines police bomb unit was called out to help investigate the discovery of the three bags, placed at the intersection of East Fourth and Buxton streets.

Inspection procedures found the items were not explosive devices, police said in a report. “Two bags had broken open and contents were strewn onto the pavement. The items appeared to have been thrown.”

Investigators found no witnesses and ultimately determined that there not only was no health threat, there may not have been any criminal intent.  [desmoinesregister]

It’s not the biggest city in the state by any means.  With a small, private college in the area, I would doubt that it would be a high profile target.  Stranger things have happened.