[Home]History of Brenda Kegler

HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences

Revision 2 . . October 9, 2001 4:41 am by TimShell [No copyright-restricted material.]
Revision 1 . . October 9, 2001 4:36 am by A friend [This article came from the Washington Post!!!]
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (no other diffs)

Removed: 4,49d3

Brenda Kegler
Attack Location: Pentagon (missing)
Age: 49
Home: Capitol Heights, Md.

Brenda Kegler is so afraid of airplanes falling from the sky that she hates to fly.

It is "the ultimate irony," her husband Bing said, that she is
listed as missing because of a plane crash that occurred as she
sat at her desk.

"She does not like airplanes," Bing said. "She could hear them
flying overhead from her office at the Pentagon. That's why this is all so strange. She was always worried about a plane going down."

Kegler, 49, has worked at the Pentagon for 30 years, most
recently as a budget analyst for the Army, her husband said.
She loved her job and enjoyed the company of co-workers
Carrie Blagburn and Samantha Allen so much that even after
her husband retired and moved to Florida, she stayed on at her
job and Capitol Heights home.

"We were talking about her retiring and moving down to Florida
with me," said Bing Kegler, 63. "She was younger and loved her
job, so it was harder for her to retire. But we were making
plans. She was excited about us being together again, and so
was I."

Kegler, the mother of two grown daughters and a
granddaughter, loved to spend time with family and friends.
They would play bid whist at parties where friends gathered
over cards until the wee hours, Bing Kegler said.

She and Blagburn, 48, also a budget analyst, shopped together
and swapped stories about their family's exploits, news events
and religion, acquaintances said. Now, both families are waiting and hoping that the two could have survived the ordeal in the Pentagon to shop again.

"Every payday, Brenda came over here so Carrie could do her
hair," Blagburn's husband, Leo, said. "They would sit back
there and laugh and talk and have a good time. They were
very close."

-- Avis Thomas-Lester


Source: The Washington Post, AP and washingtonpost.com

HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences
Search: