The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 04, 1986, Image 9

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    Thursday, September 4, 1986/The Battalion/Page 9
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iday night I
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freighter's I
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W’ednes-
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55 feet of
Residents probe wreckage,
emotions after plane crash
vivors, in-
rew, were
Monday
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CERRITOS, Calif. (AP) — Street
I sweepers scrubbed blood and ash
I from the pavement Wednesday as
I residents tried to cope with the hor-
Irible memories of the day a jetliner
I crashed in their neighborhood.
“It'll never he normal. Never,”
I Randy Economy said of his neigh-
[borhood. "The emotional scars are
[there too badly. When I take a walk
| here at night, that’s all I think about:
[the horror of seeing bodies flying,
[the screaming, and myself, helpless
| to do anything."
Economy, 2b, has had little sleep
| since the crash.
“I don't want to sleep anymore,”
[hesaid. “I keep) hearing the noise —
[ the horrible sound of that impact.”
Economy also is disturbed by the
[crowds of curious people who have
| been streaming into the neighhor-
[ hood to see Sunday's disaster scene.
“It’s macabre,” he said. “On Sun
day, a head landed in my neighbor’s
yard and a guy tried to walk off with
it."
Several numbed residents
searched through the remnants of
[ their homes for belongings.
| As Ivan Medina picked through
| the half-gutted home where he’d
lived for 2'/2 years, he said, “At this
It’ll never be normal . . .
The emotional scars are
there too badly. W hen I
lake a walk here at night,
that's all I think about ...”
— Randy Economy,
neighborhood resident
time 1 have no plans at all. I’m just
taking one day at a time."
“Probably, it will take me about a
week before I settle down com
pletely, and get over with this
shock,” he said.
Beside Medina’s home, 15-year-
old Rochelle Neally waited with a
relative for authorities to allow them
to search the charred hulk of her
home for a metal box with the fami
ly’s insurance policy and other docu
ments.
She had fled from the house with
her parents, her sister and a friend
during the flaming chaos. All es
caped, but her father and sister suf
fered burns.
But she said her father wants to
stay and rebuild.
Clergy and psychologists can
vassed die neighborhood, offering
support and distributing notices list
ing services that range from counsel
ing to police protection.
Six park employees swept the
streets and raked debris from lawns.
Burned-out vans and cars were piled
on an empty lot where a house once
stood.
At least (57 people died aboard an
Aeromexico DC-9 and a single-en
gine Piper Archer dial collided Sun
day above Cerritos. The number of
people who died on the ground is
unknown, with some estimates
reaching as high as 24.
Isabel Langerman said her 10-
year-old daughter did not want to go
into her bedroom after the accident.
“It’s never bothered her before,”
Langerman said. “But now she says
it's too dark.”
David Remo, a psychiatric techni
cian from Los Angeles County, said,
“Nobody took it well. Shock, some
despair. Denial. . . . The psychologi
cal implications of a disaster like this
are sometimes beyond words. How
do you define despair?”
Don't let your room
be caught
NUDE
without any plants
FOH PLANT SALE
Saturday, Sept. 6, 1986
10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
Ficus trees
Boston Ferns
Hanging Baskets
Palms
and much ,
much more.
COMMONS
QUAD
LUBBOCK ST
PCANT SALE
cn
LAMAR
t r
LIBRARY
Save $2.00 on $10.00 or
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4
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Children under 12 accompanied by an adult
receive free $1.25 basket through September and October
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