Saturday, July 6, 2013

2 Boeing 777's and 2 Stars

Global News reported the Boeing 777 crash at San Francisco Airport, in an article (Here) entitled:
2 Boeing 777 accidents similar, but plane has ‘fantastic’ safety record, experts say
This smacks of inner twin infiltration, and as I stated before, they have a propensity for generating "anything twin"... such as near "identical" events.  Note this next excerpt from the article:
The previous accident occurred on Jan. 17, 2008, at London’s Heathrow Airport. In the process of landing, British Airways Flight 28 from China landed hard about 1,000 feet short of the runway and then slid onto the runway. The impact broke the 777-200′s landing gear. 
Global News made a bit of a mistake, it wasn't Flight 28 that crashed at Heathrow, butt Flight 38.  Weirder yet is the fact that when I Googled Flight 28 crash at Heathrow Airport, one came up.

Note the following excerpt taken from the Flight 28 crash's wiki page http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Airtours_Flight_28M :
On 22 August 1985, this flight was being flown by Boeing 737–236 G-BGJL, ("River Orrin"), when take-off from Manchester Airport was aborted due to Engine Failure on Take-Off (EFTO)
First of all, note the day-- the 22nd.  I decided to do an etymology check on the name re: River Orrin, the closest thing I could find was:
 Means "descendent of Rinn". Rinn means "star" from the Irish rinn.
That "star" should crop up at this point in time is also meaningful given my recent July 5th post that talks about a star!! 

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