Flight 5191: The victims
Torn too soon from the fabric of our life
The wreckage of Flight 5191 has been cleared away. For all the loved ones of the victims, children, siblings, mothers and fathers, the initial shock may be over. Now comes the reckoning. Now everyone must begin to calculate the holes -- big and small, tangible and emotional -- left in the fabric...
Flight 5191: The victims
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FLIGHT 5191: THE VICTIMS
Reflection: Boarding plane showed commitment to living
In my mind's eye, I keep visualizing the passengers of the ill-fated Comair Flight 5191 in the final seconds before they boarded last Sunday.
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FLIGHT 5191: THE VICTIMS
Reconstructing a takeoff: How could this have happened?
The runway repaving project at Blue Grass Airport cut off the normal route that taxiing planes used to take off from Runway 22, the long runway that points to the southwest.
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FLIGHT 5191: THE VICTIMS
Nightmare began before dawn
It was too early to be good news when the telephone jarred Michael Gobb awake at his home in east Lexington about 6:15 on a Sunday morning.
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FLIGHT 5191: THE VICTIMS
Betty Young: Was involved in a variety of charitable, civic groups
Comair Flight 5191 to Atlanta was the first leg of Betty Young's trip on to her condominium in Naples, Fla., for a visit with her two daughters.
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FLIGHT 5191: THE VICTIMS
Bryan Woodward: Louisiana man was on his way to Texas
Bryan Woodward was on his way to Texas on business Sunday when Comair Flight 5191 crashed during takeoff from Blue Grass Airport.
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FLIGHT 5191: THE VICTIMS
Jeff Williams: Thoroughbred trainer
Thoroughbred trainer Jeff Williams, 49, kept horses at the Thoroughbred Training Center on Paris Pike. "He was particularly good with young horses," said Dayton, Ohio, lawyer Larry Denny who grew up with Williams in Centerville, Ohio, south of Dayton, where they both showed saddlebreds as youngsters...
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FLIGHT 5191: THE VICTIMS
Victoria Washington: 'She was willing to help'
A 54-year-old Madison County resident known for coming to the aid of family and friends was doing just that Sunday morning.




