A 96-year-old woman living at Cedarhurst Senior Living in Breese, Illinois, shared her remarkable story with First Alert 4.

Similar Posts
German Smuggler Sentenced in Australia
George’s Point of View
The exchange rate is always changing. Investors and travelers always keep their eye on the rates because day to day, it can make quite a difference on how much jingle you have in your pocket. For the rest of the world, exchange rates are not something one much notices unless the price of certain goods out of a particular location suddenly go up due to one or another international factors. So I wonder if the fiduciary value of the Australian gecko and skink has skyrocketed in Germany.
Who knew Germany had a market for Australian reptiles?
Apparently Hans Kurt Kubus had an inside track or perhaps had corralled the Australian reptile market. Although he’s no Bernie Madoff, nor even Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab (notorious Nigerian who attempted to blow up a Detroit-bound jet), Hans Kurt Kubus has a special brand of notoriety. He will go down in the history books as the gentleman caught smuggling 44 live lizards in his underwear (although one might normally not call someone with reptiles in his underwear a gentleman. He is more likely to found in psychological therapy somewhere for zoophilia.) Mr Kubus was caught at the airport. One can only envision an embarrassing moment. Fortunately for the lizards (or perhaps fortunately for Kobus’s unmentionables), the reptiles were contained in a package and not running loose on his person. One can only imagine the psychological damage to the lizards.
The world will now remember Hans Kurt Kubus as the German who collects reptiles who was caught red-handed (red-panted?) at Christchurch International Airport last December.
For two counts (trading in exploited species and hunting protected wildlife), Kobus has been jailed for 14 weeks, must pay $3,540 NZ, and will shortly be deported to Germany.
Protection of the species is only one factor. One can only imagine a worst-case scenario of Germany potentially awash in geckos (although climate-impaired for German winters), the kudzu of the lizarding world– to the detriment of the naturally occurring species. No doubt, Germans are thankful the scourge has been nipped in the bud. Or at least briefly amused.
The lizards have been valued at $2,000 euros each.

One Of Just Two CL-415 Super Scooper Planes Taken Out Of Palisades Fire Fight By Drone
The drone strike punched a hole in the CL-415’s wing and caused all firefighting aircraft on the Palisades fire to be temporarily grounded.
Pilot and passenger killed as light plane crashes into sea off NSW coast
Wreckage found after witness sees plane appear to go down off Nambucca Heads on the mid-north coast
Hawker Beechcraft Headed for Bankruptcy
Centerbridge Partners, Angelo Gordon and Capital Research & Management are negotiating bankruptcy with Hawker Beechcraft.
A forbearance agreement expiring in June will probably lead to a chapter 11 which will keep firm in operation.
Centerbridge is the biggest lender. The private equity investment firm manages a $3 billion fund focused on distressed-for-control and buyout investments.
Hopefully Hiring Pilots Who Can
Aviation is looking alive in India, according to Bombay’s * Economic Times.
The corporation running Air India, National Aviation Company of India (NACIL), is hiring experienced Boeing 737 commanders, and for its Budget division (Air India Express), they are looking for experienced and inexperienced co-pilots.
In this depressed global economy, jobs are always good news. Let’s hope that NACIL’s hiring practices involve some efforts at due diligence (hiring with a certain standard of care) and result in aviation excellence, even in its budget airlines Air India Express.
Hiring is good news…as long as cutting cost in tough times does not mean cutting safety. Even travelers with modest incomes deserve to make it to their destination in one piece.
“Recruitment gathers pace in aviation sector.” Economic Times. July, 2010.