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'It just kept rolling and thundering' - hearing was believing that something wasn't quite right
The Dallas Morning News ^ | February 2, 2003 | By MICHAEL GRANBERRY / The Dallas Morning News

Posted on 02/02/2003 3:23:34 AM PST by MeekOneGOP




'It just kept rolling and thundering'

For Texans, hearing was believing that something wasn't quite right

02/02/2003

By MICHAEL GRANBERRY / The Dallas Morning News

Vaudie Dowdy of Tyler gazed out her big picture window, using a quiet Saturday morning to think and pray.

Ken Foster sat at his kitchen table in Rowlett, reading newspaper stories about war and terrorism.

Gary Hunziker and his wife stepped onto their patio in Plano to watch the space shuttle Columbia fly overhead.

Suddenly, an explosion rattled windows and shook rooftops across North Texas and East Texas. To people waking to the new day, it was the sound of the sky falling. To the controller at NASA's mission control, it was a grim "contingency." And for all Americans facing fears of war and terrorism, the instinctive reaction was, "What next?"

"I have not heard a noise like that since the New London school blew up," said Mrs. Dowdy, 82, referring to a natural gas explosion that killed hundreds of students and teachers in East Texas in 1937. "A great tragedy," she knew, had once again struck Texas - and the rest of the nation.

Residents across East and North Texas shared her fear, anxiety and grief as Saturday morning's calm was shattered by the explosion of the shuttle. In an era of terrorism, and with the possibility of war approaching, many are conditioned to expect the worst.

"It was a big shock," said Mr. Foster, 40, a banker. "It sounded like something fell on the house. I said, 'Oh, hell - what is that!' It was a 'BOOM!' - like none I've ever heard before. ... After Sept. 11, with anything unusual like this, I immediately think we're being attacked. And because of the cautious nature I've developed, it's made me somewhat unnerved when anything like this occurs. I feel much more anxiety about things like this, if only because they occur in a post-Sept. 11 context."

'The house shook'

In Carrollton, John Ferolito, 60, prepared for a bike ride with a cycling club. The boom sounded overhead.

"The house shook, and the windows rattled," he said. "I ran outside and looked in the alley and the yard. I thought, 'Maybe the shuttle set off a sonic boom.'... I turned on the news and heard they'd lost contact with the shuttle. I got that the same feeling I did in 1986 [with the Challenger explosion] - that things weren't right."

In Plano, Mr. Hunziker, 49, and his wife went outside to view the shuttle. "At that point, the shuttle was almost due south and had a very substantial vapor trail," he said. "I had some field glasses... The shuttle was flying east. I had a devil of a time finding it in the binoculars. When I did, it was well east of us. I said to my wife, 'Look, chase jets have already intercepted it.' It looked like two bright spots immediately to the side and behind the shuttle. Twenty minutes later, I turned on the TV and realized that what I saw wasn't chase jets at all - but debris from an explosion."

In East Plano, a fire of unknown origin started on the roof of a condominium at Park Boulevard and Ridgewood Drive. It drew spasms of panicked speculation. Frantic residents blamed the fire on debris raining down from the shuttle, saying no other cause was possible. Officials were still investigating the fire Saturday night and would not confirm the cause.

In Garland, Marcella Seeley, 47, a print production manager, said the blast shook her from a sound sleep.

"It sounded like something had crashed into the window or the roof," she said. "So I went outside, thinking some kids were playing football and had hit my house with it. It was that loud. A few minutes later, I turned on the TV and said, 'Oh, my God!' "

Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison was walking in her North Dallas neighborhood.

"And I heard this boom," she said. "I thought it was a sonic boom, which I mentioned to my friend, with whom I was walking. It was so pronounced, I thought it must be an F-16 training overhead. But then I came home and turned on the television and found out quickly what it really was."

Within minutes, the senator telephoned NASA officials and offered them the use of her Dallas office as an emergency command post.

At White Rock Lake, Murray Forsvall, a former journalist, said he and about 150 runners looked up from their morning jog to see "a wide vapor trail. It was like a 50-yard line seat. We thought it was an airplane. But someone said, 'It has a tail.' We continued to watch, and just seconds later it all broke up into smaller pieces."

In East Texas, Larry Weisinger, 52, a Chandler pipe welder, was fishing on Lake Palestine. He and his brother were lazily adrift on the calm waters, hoping to hook a striped bass. "We were just sittin' there in our boat," he said, "when all of a sudden, I said, 'What was that sound?' It just kept rolling and thundering. I said, 'It sounds like Texas Eastman just blew up," referring to the Eastman Kodak chemical plant in Longview.

Near Red Springs, Danny McDaniel, 54, an ex-Marine and barbecue cook, said "a big boom" sent his dog scrambling for cover. "We didn't know what was going on. The whole house shook. A friend of mine said it sounded just like an earthquake." His neighbors said their dogs and livestock behaved strangely even before the blast occurred.

Sound and debris

In Canton, Kelli Clower, 25, a reimbursement manager at Terrell State Hospital, was changing her 2-year-old son's diaper when her home shook violently. "I thought a tree had hit the house," she said. "We have big pine trees, and I thought a limb from one of the pine trees had fallen and hit the house. And then my grandmother from Arkansas called, telling me about the space shuttle."

In Rockett, near Waxahachie, Mary Sinyard lay on the couch of her mobile home, chatting on the phone with her daughter. She looked out the window. She saw fiery debris streak across the sky, then appear to stop in mid-air and fall, until it disappeared from sight.

For a minute or so, the boom shook the mobile home and rattled its windows.

In Center, about 20 miles northeast of Nacogdoches, environmental consultant Trey Rushing, 51, of Austin had just bought some work gloves at a discount store to fend off the chill as he headed toward a demolition job.

"I just happened to come out of the Wal-Mart and look up in the sky, and there was this bright object going from the north to the south. It was weird," he said. The object looked "like a brilliant, blue-white flare," he said.

He said he thought he was witnessing an F-16 fighter pilot in the midst of war-training exercises, dropping "chaff" to evade being hit by enemy rockets.

But the trail from the shuttle was too low, and the falling objects were burning too brightly for it to be a jet, he said.

Reports of falling debris reached a crescendo in Nacogdoches, where Eirial Stansell was working at his hair salon.

"We were in the office doing payroll for the day," he said, "and all of a sudden this rumbling started. It was like an earthquake. I looked up at the clock, and the building shook for 45 seconds."

Now there's a 4- to 5-foot piece of debris in the parking lot behind the salon.

Being awakened

Kim Hedtke, a student at Stephen F. Austin State University in Nacogdoches, said the explosion woke her up.

"It sounded like thunder at first, but then it just kept getting louder and then the walls started shaking," she said. "And I really didn't know what was going on. My first thought was, this was an earthquake, but, you know, this is Texas."

Nacogdoches resident Jim Garrett said he felt a prolonged tremor shortly after 8 a.m. while reading the newspaper.

"This old, two-story farmhouse, it rattled and rolled," said Mr. Garrett, 50, a lawyer. "My first response was, 'Dang, that jet is flying low.' And then the intensity slackened, but it continued for what seemed like a long time - a lot longer than you'd feel a jet passing over."

For Susan Rushing, who lives in a one-story frame house north of Nacogdoches, the explosion "felt like the washing machine was on spin, and off-balance, for a long time - but a lot louder."

Her daughter Katie, 11, and six other girls were sleeping over for a slumber party. They were jolted from bed. "The house started shaking, and there was this loud rumble," said Ms. Rushing, 50.

"The windows rattled, the glassware clinked, the cabinets slammed and the lamps swayed," she said.

"It lasted for about a minute and a half. One of the girls and I ran out and tried to see what was happening. It was like the longest sonic boom I've heard. But you just didn't know what.

"And then when you later found out, it was just so sad."

Staff writers Teresa Gubbins, Linda Stewart Ball, Jennifer Emily and Robert Garrett contributed to this report.


Online at: http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dallas/latestnews/stories/020203dnlivanxiety.35ee7.html


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; News/Current Events; US: Florida; US: Louisiana; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: florida; louisiana; nasa; shuttlecolumbia; shuttledisaster; texas
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"It was a big shock," said Mr. Foster, 40, a banker. "It sounded like something fell on the house. I said, 'Oh, hell – what is that!' It was a 'BOOM!' – like none I've ever heard before. ...

< snip >

"And then when you later found out, it was just so sad."

Almost my identical reaction here at my house. I was FReepin' away when I heard it. I turned my head to try to figure out what and where it might be from, thinking 'what was THAT?' Living right next to Rowlett Road here in Northeast Dallas County, I am used to hearing trucks and so forth near my house, but this was different and louder. I had no idea until a short while later when I heard about the loss of communication of the Columbia. When it sunk in that it had broken up over the D/FW area, I realized what I had heard.

Fellow FReepers in Texas, Louisiana, or wherever you are, post your story/reaction on this thread. Thanks...

This thread is dedicated to the memory of the seven Columbia astronauts...


Video link: Shuttle over D/FW, Texas





1 posted on 02/02/2003 3:23:34 AM PST by MeekOneGOP
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To: Squantos; GeronL; Billie; Slyfox; San Jacinto; SpookBrat; FITZ; COB1; DainBramage; Dallas; ...
'It just kept rolling and thundering' - hearing
was believing that something wasn't quite right

Pinging to Texas and Louisiana FReepers. FYI, and post your reaction, etc. here. Thanks...



Please let me know if you want ON or OFF my Texas or Louisiana ping list!. . .don't be shy.
No, you don't HAVE to be a Texan to get on this list!


2 posted on 02/02/2003 3:26:50 AM PST by MeekOneGOP (9 out of 10 Republicans agree: Bush IS a Genius !!)
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To: Alamo-Girl; onyx; SpookBrat; Republican Wildcat; Howlin; Fred Mertz; dixiechick2000; SusanUSA; ...
'It just kept rolling and thundering' - hearing
was believing that something wasn't quite right

FYI, and post your reaction, etc. here. Thanks...



Please let me know if you want ON or OFF my General Interest ping list!. . .don't be shy.


3 posted on 02/02/2003 3:28:45 AM PST by MeekOneGOP (9 out of 10 Republicans agree: Bush IS a Genius !!)
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To: McLynnan
In East Plano, a fire of unknown origin started on the roof of a condominium at Park Boulevard and Ridgewood Drive. It drew spasms of panicked speculation. Frantic residents blamed the fire on debris raining down from the shuttle, saying no other cause was possible. Officials were still investigating the fire Saturday night and would not confirm the cause.

Hey, there is a mention of the fire you asked about yesterday. It wasn't in the DMN yesterday though. Interesting...
4 posted on 02/02/2003 3:35:22 AM PST by MeekOneGOP (9 out of 10 Republicans agree: Bush IS a Genius !!)
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To: MeeknMing
BTTT
5 posted on 02/02/2003 6:37:38 AM PST by TLBSHOW (God Speed as Angels trending upward dare to fly Tribute to the Risk Takers)
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To: TLBSHOW
Thanks. I guess everybody else is sleeping in this morning?...
6 posted on 02/02/2003 6:55:08 AM PST by MeekOneGOP (9 out of 10 Republicans agree: Bush IS a Genius !!)
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To: MeeknMing
"It was a big shock," said Mr. Foster, 40, a banker. "It sounded like something fell on the house. I said, 'Oh, hell - what is that!' It was a 'BOOM!' - like none I've ever heard before. ... After Sept. 11, with anything unusual like this, I immediately think we're being attacked. And because of the cautious nature I've developed, it's made me somewhat unnerved when anything like this occurs. I feel much more anxiety about things like this, if only because they occur in a post-Sept. 11 context."

If this guy actually talks like this, I'm a red hen. It's okay, until we get to the part I've bolded.
7 posted on 02/02/2003 7:16:01 AM PST by Xenalyte
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To: MeeknMing
Still can't believe it.
We were millimg around yesterday morning, we live in Smith County, just north of Tyler, when the ground starting shaking and a rumbling noise, accompanied by a very loud boom, rolled through.
My wife and I said "what the heck was that" in unison.
We actually thought a high pressure aquifer across the road had come uncapped and was spewing water.
The noise was very unnerving. Our place is on a hill in the woods and the ground was shaking, it was weird because the rumbling noise and ground shaking started and went on for about 5 seconds, then a very loud BOOM, and about 5 more seconds of shaking and the rumbling noise.
We had to go to Tyler and do a little job and when we started out, we heard on the radio what had happened.
We didn't get any debris as we are north of the flight path. Most of it landed about 70 miles SE of us.
8 posted on 02/02/2003 7:38:04 AM PST by dtel (Texas Longhorn cattle for sale at all times. We don't rent pigs)
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To: MeeknMing
I'm in Palestine, Tx.....Yesterday AM I was outside, in a
somewhat "tree covered" area. I heard a loud boom, followed
by several smaller (sounding) ones. The sound very hard to describe, like loud, muffled, sonic booms. My first reflex
was to duck. When I looked up I could see two, widening vapor contrails.

A neighbor's son came over, first asking "what that was",
then saying it must have been an airplane. I told him, I
had never heard any plane making that kind of noise.

Not hearing anything that sounded like an *impact*, it
was about 15 minutes before I went back inside, where
the TV was on with the breaking news.......

As of 9:00AM this morning our Sheriff is reporting more
than 200 confirmed debris sites in & around Palestine, Anderson county.

My thoughts & prayers to these seven and their families.
9 posted on 02/02/2003 7:41:54 AM PST by txdoda
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To: MeeknMing
May God be with the families, friends, and colleagues of the shuttle crew.
RIP.
10 posted on 02/02/2003 7:50:13 AM PST by ladyinred
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To: MeeknMing
I still can't believe it.

We had just come in from watching the shuttle pass overhead, and I realize now that what we saw was the craft breaking up. About 30-45 seconds after we came in into the house we heard one or two loud booms. My first thought was that a transformer in one of the neighborhood's electrical boxes had blown up... that's happened before and it will rattle the garage door a bit. I've seen the shuttle's approach before over North Texas and have never heard a sonic boom - it's just too high... it couldn't have been the shuttle. But at 8:15, when NASA TV was long overdue to show the landing approach, we just knew that something was wrong.

As Columbia passed overhead, we saw it get shredded by unimaginable forces. It was falling like a rock, out of control. Yesterday was a tough day.

11 posted on 02/02/2003 8:01:43 AM PST by ken in texas
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To: dtel
That was quite a boom alright. I didn't hear until this morning that some folks had to be treated when they handled some of the debris. Saw that on a couple of threads.

Palestine and Nacogdoches had a lot of debris. I have an aunt and uncle that live in Flynt, just down the road from Palestine. My uncle fishes all the time at Lake Palestine.

Glad ya'll didn't get 'rained on' by the debris...

12 posted on 02/02/2003 8:17:35 AM PST by MeekOneGOP (9 out of 10 Republicans agree: Bush IS a Genius !!)
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To: ken in texas
Yes it was a difficult day, wasn't it? Thanks...
13 posted on 02/02/2003 8:21:31 AM PST by MeekOneGOP (9 out of 10 Republicans agree: Bush IS a Genius !!)
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To: Xenalyte
If this guy actually talks like this, I'm a red hen. It's okay, until we get to the part I've bolded.

Yeah, he sounds like a regular Chicken Little, doesn't he?, lol !...



14 posted on 02/02/2003 8:36:31 AM PST by MeekOneGOP (9 out of 10 Republicans agree: Bush IS a Genius !!)
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To: Xenalyte
Sort of...
15 posted on 02/02/2003 8:37:43 AM PST by MeekOneGOP (9 out of 10 Republicans agree: Bush IS a Genius !!)
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To: MeeknMing
It is really hard to believe something cruising through the air, 40 miles above earth, could actually make the ground shake.
It seemed like an earthquake was occuring.
Do you know if the boom was a sonic boom or an explosion?
It seemed more like an explosion to me. I have heard several sonic booms and this did not seem like a normal sonic boom.
16 posted on 02/02/2003 8:47:04 AM PST by dtel (Texas Longhorn cattle for sale at all times. We don't rent pigs)
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To: MeeknMing
Actually, I just saw the video again and there is a definite explosion as it is breaking apart.
That must be the boom I heard.
17 posted on 02/02/2003 8:49:45 AM PST by dtel (Texas Longhorn cattle for sale at all times. We don't rent pigs)
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To: MeeknMing
Thanks, now I know I didn't imagine reports of fire in Plano. It will be interesting to learn the cause.
18 posted on 02/02/2003 8:56:38 AM PST by McLynnan
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To: dtel
No earthquakes - east and south Texas doesn't get 'em, as far as I know, and I've been here for 34 years.
19 posted on 02/02/2003 9:04:05 AM PST by Xenalyte
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To: dtel
I think that's right. I believe it was the explosion too.
20 posted on 02/02/2003 9:36:57 AM PST by MeekOneGOP (9 out of 10 Republicans agree: Bush IS a Genius !!)
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