we have people raising, you know, concrete slabs that weigh thousands of pounds side by side people using their hands and buckets to take up smaller pieces of debris. this goes on 24/7. this is not stopping. this hasn t stopped. we are committed to this. you know, this story, your previous guest breaks all of our hearts and we are not stopping. we are keeping on going. we ve had a few delays buzz of weather but aside from that, we re determined to just keep going until every single piece of debris is removed. doctor, pablo from the beginning has been both grieving and outraged and heart broken and realistic. but of course, people are hoping and praying for there are some miracles that come out of this situation, even know. i want to play something the assistant fire chief said today. here he is, doctor. there are certain areas that we have not gotten to but been
1,000 miles an hour. you are talking a lot of energy with aircraft that weigh thousands of pounds. so when they do collide at that high velocity, there is typically total destruction of the aircraft. by the time radio contact is made at 4:53 p.m., the connection is so bad, the legacy pilots and controller can t understand each other. the planes are closing in. everybody was sort of dozing or working. i hear and feel a bang! the loudest noise i ve ever heard. i was in vietnam and i ve heard bombs and just, bang! and every atom in my body, i felt, kind of implode. i ve flown as a passenger a lot. you go through all kinds of weather and all kinds of turbulence, and i ve never felt an impact like this before. because of the angle at which the planes collide, the 737, though much larger, takes a far worse hit than the legacy.
plinterred and uprooted. the damage is widespread. dallas county sheriff lupe valdez tells cnn her ofrszs are going house to house, checking on casualties until warnings that more severe storms were on the way. the emergency lasted for hours. this call came into cnn over two hours ago. if you go north, there s warnings all over the place. it s raining. people are scrambling to try to get out of the offices just to get home, and now it s caused a big problem, a big problem on the streets. the sirens going on. even if you re not even in the tornado warning places. you don t know which way to go. you really can t decide if you want to make a run home or stay where you are. cnn s ed lavendera is on the phone right now from lancaster. what are you seeing where you are right now? we have made our way into hit hard by the storm that rushed through just a few hours ago. a neighborhood in lancaster, from what we have bib able to see, and it s difficult to navigate with the e