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Cracked Window On Southwest Flight Forces Pilot To Divert

A crack is seen on a window of Southwest Airlines Flight 957 after an abrupt landing in Cleveland on Wednesday.
Rachel Colby
/
AP
A crack is seen on a window of Southwest Airlines Flight 957 after an abrupt landing in Cleveland on Wednesday.

A jagged crack suddenly appeared in a window aboard a Southwest Airlines 737 on Wednesday, startling passengers and forcing the pilot on the Chicago-to-Newark flight to divert to Cleveland, where he made a safe landing.

Although no one was hurt, the incident reminded passengers of a high-profile incident just two weeks ago, when a jet engine blew apart on another Southwest Boeing 737, breaking a window and killing a woman who was partially blown out of the fuselage.

"It made you nervous because something like this just happened," Paul Upshaw, a passenger aboard the flight who was seated about two seats from the window, tells The Associated Press. "We didn't know if it was going to crack open."

"People just started scattering," Upshaw tells the news agency. He said no one was yelling or screaming. "We didn't panic."

Aviation Week says Southwest Flight 957 took off from Chicago's Midway International Airport bound for Newark, N.J., with 76 passengers aboard when the incident occurred. The plane landed in Cleveland at 10:43 a.m. ET.

Brandy King, a spokeswoman for Southwest Airlines, said the aircraft never lost cabin pressure and that the pilot did not declare an emergency before landing.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Scott Neuman is a reporter and editor, working mainly on breaking news for NPR's digital and radio platforms.
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