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The moment the two women and their dogs were finally rescued is captured on video, taken from the deck of a Navy boat.
The camera wobbles as the motorboat cuts across the ocean, some 900 miles southeast of Japan, toward the lone sailboat that had been sending distress signals for months after its engine died.
One of the women is on the deck, her arms outstretched.
She feverishly blows kisses toward the rescue boat. This is the reaction of someone who had been lost at sea for months.
“They saved our lives,” rescued sailor Jennifer Appel said, according to a Navy news release. “The pride and smiles we had when we saw [U.S. Navy] on the horizon was pure relief.”
Jennifer Appel is welcomed aboard by USS Ashland Command Master Chief Gary Wise after her rescue. (Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Jonathan Clay/Navy)
“When I saw the gray boat on the edge of the horizon, my heart leapt,” Appel said on NBC’s “Today” show. “Because I knew we were about to be saved. Because I honestly believed we were going to die within the next 24 hours.”
Appel and Tasha Fuiaba, both from Honolulu, had set sail for the Polynesian island of Tahiti in the spring.
But their boat’s engine died in May after a bout of inclement weather.
They pressed on, hoping to make it to land by sail, the Navy said. But they soon found themselves lost.
Fuiaba told the “Today” show that she kept watch at night, sending distress calls and flares when other vessels were within sight. “And when they would turn or keep going,” she said. “Yeah, it was kind of sad.”
Their distress signals, in fact, went unanswered for months. The Navy said that “they were not close enough to other vessels or shore stations to receive them.”
The pair had prepared for a long trip; they had water purifiers and over a year’s worth of food on board, mostly dry goods including oatmeal, pasta and rice.
But, at times, there were still other dangers surrounding them: sharks.
Appel told the “Today” show that she once took the dogs downstairs and “we basically laid huddled on the floor and I told them not to bark because the sharks could hear us breathing. They could smell us.”
Appel said in a conference call with reporters from the Ashland that the pair sent a distress signal for 98 days.
“It was very depressing and very hopeless, but it’s the only thing you can do, so you do what you can do,” she told reporters, according to the Associated Press.
When asked whether she thought they might die, Appel responded that it was only human to believe that.
“There is a true humility to wondering if today is your last day, if tonight is your last night,” she told reporters.
On Tuesday, a Taiwanese fishing vessel came across their sailboat, “well off its original course.”
The fishermen alerted the U.S. Coast Guard, and on Wednesday, the USS Ashland, a warship operating out of Sasebo, Japan, tracked them down and dispatched the rescue boat.
The Navy (left) arrives to rescue the two distressed mariners. (Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Jonathan Clay/Navy)
The two sailors and their two dogs were brought safely aboard after the Navy determined that their boat was no longer seaworthy.
Once aboard the Ashland, they were assessed by medical staff and given food and lodging arrangements. The Navy said that they will remain on the ship until its next port of call.
Photos distributed by the Navy show the women smiling aboard the warship. Zeus the dog appears in good spirits, if a bit skinny.
Tasha Fuiaba climbs on board the USS Ashland after being rescued. (Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Jonathan Clay/Navy)
A sailor greets Zeus the dog with his owner, Tasha Fuiaba, on the USS Ashland. (Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Jonathan Clay/Navy)
This story has been updated.
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A second actress has accused former president George H.W. Bush of groping her while being photographed with him.
The actress, Jordana Grolnick, said Bush joked at the time that his favorite magician is “David Cop-A-Feel.”
Grolnick told Deadspin that in August of 2016 she was appearing at a Maine theater near the Bush home in Kennebunkport. The former president attended the performance one night and went backstage during intermission and posed with the cast.
“We all circled around him and Barbara for a photo, and I was right next to him,” she told Deadspin. “He reached his right hand around to my behind, and as we smiled for the photo he asked the group, ‘Do you want to know who my favorite magician is?’ As I felt his hand dig into my flesh, he said, ‘David Cop-a-Feel!’”
Grolnick described how other people in the room “laughed politely and out of discomfort.”
She said former first lady Barbara Bush said “something along the lines of, ‘He’s going to get himself put into jail!’ to which we laughed harder.”
Deadspin contacted the Bush camp for comment on Grolnick’s account. Bush spokesman Jim McGrath issued an apology.
“At age 93, President Bush has been confined to a wheelchair for roughly five years, so his arm falls on the lower waist of people with whom he takes pictures,” McGrath said in the statement.
“To try to put people at ease, the president routinely tells the same joke — and on occasion, he has patted women’s rears in what he intended to be a good-natured manner. Some have seen it as innocent; others clearly view it as inappropriate.
“To anyone he has offended, President Bush apologizes most sincerely.”
Earlier this week actress Heather Lind, in a now-deleted Instagram post, wrote that Bush “touched me from behind from his wheelchair with his wife Barbara Bush by his side. He told me a dirty joke. And then, all the while being photographed, touched me again.”
After Lind’s allegation McGrath said in a statement that “President Bush would never — under any circumstance — intentionally cause anyone distress, and he most sincerely apologizes if his attempt at humor offended Ms. Lind.”
In her Instagram post, Lind wrote that Bush’s security guard told her “I shouldn’t have stood next to him for the photo.”
Grolnick, too, told Deadspin that people warned her about standing next to Bush for the photo. She said she told people what happened. Her grandmother laughed it off, saying, “Oh, he’s just sick! He hasn’t been well for years!”
Her dad, though, got angry, she told Deadspin.
She said she didn’t seriously consider telling the theater or police about it. “I just thought, ‘Whatever. He’s a dirty old man.’”
She decided to come forward to support Lind, she said.
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Look at the overwhelmingly positive responses to #metoo, a hashtag for survivors of sexual abuse
Actress Alyssa Milano got an idea from a friend of a friend on Facebook to elevate the Harvey Weinstein conversation. She took the idea to Twitter, posting: “If you’ve been sexually harassed or assaulted write ‘me too’ as a reply to this tweet.” The hashtag #MeToo was tweeted nearly a million times in 48 hours, according to Twitter.
Lena Blietz
Star-Telegram
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