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NYC Jet Passengers Marvel They're Alive

Miracle or not, survivors of US Airways Flight 1549 say they are just lucky to be alive.

Many passengers didn't think they'd make it. One man turned his cell phone on so his body could be found through the phone's GPS. A woman left a message for her husband: "Tell the kids I love them."

Carl Bazarian described the moments before impact: "You know how you're supposed to put your head down? We didn't. Really, most of the people, we were all looking, we wanted to see reality. We all wanted to see how we were going to die."

"It's still pretty surreal. It's amazing to be sitting here," Bill Elkin, who sat in row 18 of the downed plane, told CBS' The Early Show Friday.

Along with fellow crash survivor Eric Stevenson, the two men described hearing a "series of thuds" shortly after takeoff. Stevenson, who was sitting near the wing of the plane, said he could see a flock of birds, but figured the plane would simply plow through them without incident.

But that did not happen.

Instead, the birds most likely caused both engines of the plane to fail. Elkin recalls the plane's pilot telling the passengers, "Brace for impact."

"I thought this was it," Elkin said.

As the plane descended toward the Hudson River, Stevenson pulled out a business card and scribbled a quick note addressed to his mother and sister, Jane. "I love you," it read.

Vallie Collins - seated in the last row, in 26D - reached for her phone.

"I thought, 'OK, I'm not going to see my husband and three children again.' And I just want them to know at this point they were the No. 1 thought in my mind," she said hours after the ordeal.

She sent them a text message: "My plane is crashing." There was no time for the final three words she wanted to include: "I love you."

Barry Leonard, a 55-year-old father of two from Charlotte, is one of the last passengers still in the hospital — and was the first one off the plane.

"They just said 'jump,'" he said.

In the water, freezing, he swam to a lifeboat. One of the pilots (he still doesn't know which) helped him.

"The pilot gave me the shirt off his back," he told CBS News correspondent Kelly Wallace, which led to a case of mistaken identity:

"People were saying, 'Great job landing the plane!'" Leonard said. "And I was like, 'I didn't land the plane!'"

On the raft and with a cracked sternum, he managed to call his wife Sherri. Today they were reunited. She is not leaving his side.

Aboard the downed jet were businesses executives, golf buddies, and a mother clutching a nine-month-old in her arms.

"She wouldn't let go of the baby," fellow survivor Dick Richardson told :Wallace, "so we had to move here toward the end of the wing so she'd be one of the first. It was amazing how people moved, the women and that woman with a child to the front of the wing."



Photos: Dramatic Images
The latest photos from the crash of Flight 1549(Photo: AP)

For Collins, the most terrifying moment came when she was caught in the back galley of the plane - water seeping in from exits that would open only a crack, and dozens of passengers bearing down on her, frantic to get out.

"Trying as hard as we could to push both of those doors," Collins said, recounting the moments after Flight 1549 touched down on the Hudson River on Thursday. "And the flight attendant said: `We probably only have two minutes."'

Just seconds before, Collins had been convinced she would die on impact. Now, with the frigid river water swirling around her waist and seat cushions floating between the passengers, she believed she was going to drown.

But there was daylight ahead, toward the front of the plane, and Collins, a 37-year-old mother of three from Maryville, Tennessee, drew on her memories of being a high school cheerleader.

"I put my hands up and said: "You can't get out this way. ... Go to the wings! Keep moving, people! We're going to make it. Stay calm."

It was only when she was safe aboard a rescue ferry that she felt her panic - and gratitude. "We were just very fortunate. Very blessed," Collins said.

That sentiment was echoed by a number of passengers on the US Airways flight, amazed to be alive after the jet ditched in the water following an apparent collision with a flock of birds.

After staying on the plane to make sure everyone got out, Dave Sanderson said he "jumped up and tried to swim to the first boat I could find."

"Fortunately, someone pulled me up on the boat because I didn't have much use of my lower extremities at that point and they pulled me up and threw me on the boat and thank God that they did," he told CBS News anchor Katie Couric.

"You've got to give it to the pilot," said Jeff Kolodjay of Norwalk, Conn. "He made a hell of a landing."

By CBS News' calculations, the plane hit the water by about 150 miles an hour.

"It is remarkable that it did little damage to the aircraft, it did not break the fuselage," said CBS News correspondent Bob Orr, who is an aviation expert.

Kolodjay, 31, who had been headed to a golfing trip in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, said he noticed a jolt and felt the plane drop. He looked out the left side of the jet and saw one of the engines on fire.

"Then the captain said, `Brace for impact because we're going down,"' Kolodjay said. "It was intense." He said some passengers started praying. He said a few Hail Marys.

"It was bad, man," Kolodjay said. But he and others spoke of a sense of calm and purpose that quickly descended on the passengers and crew as the plane started filling with water and rescue boats swarmed to the scene. They decided women and children would be evacuated first.

"Then the rest of us got out," he said.

One woman had two small children who couldn't swim. She held on to the infant, and Collins, aboard an emergency raft, grabbed hold of the older girl, who was not yet 3.

"She was so scared. She had a little blue blanket, and she just was hunkered in my lap," Collins said. "She just kept biting on my left arm - she never said a word." The group was pulled aboard a rescue vessel.

Emergency medical service worker Helen Rodriguez was one of the first rescuers on the scene. She saw stunned, soaking passengers, saying "I can't believe I'm alive." The worst injury she saw was a woman with two broken legs.

(CBS)
Paramedics treated at least 78 patients, many for hypothermia, bruises and other minor injuries, fire officials said.

Police scuba divers arrived at the scene to see a woman in her late 30s or early 40s in the water, hanging onto the side of a ferry boat.

She was "frightened out of her mind," suffering from hypothermia and unable to climb out of the water, said Detective Robert Rodriguez of the New York Police Department.

The detectives swam with her to another ferry and hoisted her aboard. As they were wrapping that up, another woman, who was on a rescue raft, fell off. So they put her on a Coast Guard boat.

About 70 passengers were taken to the New Jersey side of the river.

Some looked "smiling and happy to be alive." Others were "a little stunned," said Jeff Welz, director of public safety for the city of Weehawken. "I'm looking at them and saying, `I don't know if I'd look good if I went through what they went through."'

Early this morning, survivors reunited with loved ones back home in Charlotte.

Brad Wentzell talked of snuggling his two-year-old daughter. "I want to take her warm body and give her a face kiss from daddy, 'cause I'm alive."

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