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Piece Found At Ethiopian Airlines Crash Site Shows Jet Was Set To Dive
- Friday March 15, 2019
- World News | Alan Levin, Bloomberg
A screw-like device found in the wreckage of the Boeing 737 Max that crashed last Sunday in Ethiopia indicates the plane was configured to dive, a piece of evidence that helped convince U.S. regulators to ground the model, a person familiar with the investigation said late Thursday night.
- www.ndtv.com
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Russia Asks Kiev for Permission to Help at Plane Crash Site
- Friday July 18, 2014
- World News | Reuters
Russia asked Kiev on Thursday for permission to help with rescue work in eastern Ukraine after a Malaysian passenger airliner was brought down there, the Emergencies Ministry said.
- www.ndtv.com
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Unlikely coincidence helps plane crash survivors
- Monday August 22, 2011
- World News | Associated Press
Within minutes after the Boeing 737-200 passenger jet slammed into a hill in Canada's remote Arctic region, military helicopters were landing at the crash site to evacuate the three survivors of the crash that killed 12 people. In an unlikely coincidence, several hundred military personnel in the region preparing for a mock airliner crash training ...
- www.ndtv.com
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Piece Found At Ethiopian Airlines Crash Site Shows Jet Was Set To Dive
- Friday March 15, 2019
- World News | Alan Levin, Bloomberg
A screw-like device found in the wreckage of the Boeing 737 Max that crashed last Sunday in Ethiopia indicates the plane was configured to dive, a piece of evidence that helped convince U.S. regulators to ground the model, a person familiar with the investigation said late Thursday night.
- www.ndtv.com
-
Russia Asks Kiev for Permission to Help at Plane Crash Site
- Friday July 18, 2014
- World News | Reuters
Russia asked Kiev on Thursday for permission to help with rescue work in eastern Ukraine after a Malaysian passenger airliner was brought down there, the Emergencies Ministry said.
- www.ndtv.com
-
Unlikely coincidence helps plane crash survivors
- Monday August 22, 2011
- World News | Associated Press
Within minutes after the Boeing 737-200 passenger jet slammed into a hill in Canada's remote Arctic region, military helicopters were landing at the crash site to evacuate the three survivors of the crash that killed 12 people. In an unlikely coincidence, several hundred military personnel in the region preparing for a mock airliner crash training ...
- www.ndtv.com