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OK, I found it in my email archives:
============ =========== ========== DIX HILLS Safe landing after scare BY COLLIN NASH STAFF WRITER March 2, 2004 Just minutes away from touching down at Rutland airport in Vermont on Sunday, the four Long Island men aboard the single-engine aircraft talked excitedly about skiingdown the sun-bathed slopes of Okemo or Killington. Suddenly an eerie quiet took the place of the drone from the six-passenger Beechcraft Bonanza. The engine was dead. Gliding more than 7,500 feet above the valleys and foothills of the Green Mountains and losing altitude at about 700 feet a minute, the pilot, Dr. Jeffrey Epstein, a neurosurgeon, drew on training from his high-pressure profession. "I wasn't panicked," he said yesterday, recalling how he calmly radioed Albany airport for the nearest site to land the plane. "I was more concerned about making it over the mountains and finding a flat place to land." Epstein, of Dix Hills, and his three passengers, Dr. Brad Litwak, an anesthesiologist also of Dix Hills; Ed Garger, an insurance manager from Glen Cove, and Bob McBride of Northport, made it safely over the mountains. And Epstein, skirting under overhead electrical wires and a 16-foot overpass, found his flat surface to put the plane down - the northbound lane of U.S. Route 7 in Sunderland. The plane, which Epstein said underwent its annual maintenance check just more than a week ago, blew out its tires and sustained wing damage. No one, including Epstein, 52, a father of three, and his passengers, was injured, authorities said. Garger, 52, had agreed on the spur of the moment to join the three others on the ski trip when his friend McBride invited him during dinner Saturday. It was his maiden voyage in a single-engine aircraft, Garger said. The takeoff about 8:15 from Farmingdale "was perfect," he said. Epstein was very thorough about staying in radio contact with air traffic controllers throughout the flight, he said. "We were all calm" when the engine died, he said. "I said to myself, 'This is not the day I'm gonna die.'" His fate didn't cross his mind, Epstein said. Vermont State Police said the Federal Aviation Administration is investigating the incident. Copyright C 2004, Newsday, Inc. |
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