Pan Am Flight 313

Pan Am Flight 313 was a scheduled flight serving the route ––Vrachiapolis––. On August 2, 2004, the performing the flight, named Clipper of the North Atlantic, crash-landed in the  near, after the crew performed a partially-successful ditching following a loss of control caused by an electrical failure; 178 of the 218 passengers and crew on-board died, while 130 survived.

Crew
Flight 313's captain, Alan "Al" Van Hove (56), was originally from and was hired by Pan Am in 1989. A former pilot for and, he had over 23,030 hours of flight time with Pan Am, 11,450 of which was spent on the 767-300ER.

Van Hove's co-pilot was First Officer Ronald "Rod" Stephens (49). Originally from, he was hired by Pan Am in 1996. A former employee of, he had estimated he had 17,022 hours of flight time with Pan Am.

Third Officer Sophia Magnan (35), was originally from Asbestos (now ),,. She was hired by Pan Am in 2000, and was the youngest of the three cockpit crewmembers.

William "Bill" Hamilton Jr. (53), a flight engineer aboard Flight 313 as a passenger, was hired by Pan Am in 1990. A native, he had previously worked for.

Victims

 * Trevor McCall - music producer and songwriter
 * Larry Shing – radio broadcaster for the Columbus Stallions

Survivors

 * John Bendixen – Olympic swimmer
 * Ahmaud Daniels – television animation writer
 * April Hartwig – Olympic figure skater, who managed to return to competing only two months after the crash
 * Michał Łucki – filmmaker
 * Sophia Magnan – airline flight engineer, pilot and activist investor
 * Alain Teng – Mandopop singer
 * Al Van Hove – airline pilot