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Va. Tech hero: 'We were just sitting ducks'

Zach Petkewicz explains how fear, adrenaline helped him save his class

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Virginia Tech hero
April 18: TODAY host Matt Lauer talked with Zach Petkewicz, a senior whose quick thinking helped save the lives of his classmates.

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By Mike Celizic
TODAYshow.com contributor
TODAY
updated 12:08 p.m. ET April 18, 2007

Zach Petkewicz is one of the heroes, but when the shooting started, his first reaction was fear.

"I crouched down like everybody else," he told Matt Lauer on TODAY. "I got behind the teacher’s podium. Initially it was just fear."

But the gunshots and screams coming through the walls of his Norris Hall classroom didn’t go away. Petkewicz was "just hearing gunshots — eventually, the gunshots got closer."

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Petkewicz looked at the classroom door. It struck him that "There’s nothing stopping him from coming in here. We were just sitting ducks."

Galvanized to action, Petkewicz grabbed a table and with his classmates shoved it against the door. Students stood at each end of the table holding it to the cinderblock walls around the door frame.

The shooter, Cho Seung Hui, his bloody work done in the classroom next door, "tried the door handle" Petkewicz said. Finding the door blocked, he threw his shoulder against it, forcing it open six inches.

Petkewicz and his fellow students pushed back as Cho emptied a clip through the door. They heard him reload, but "he didn’t try to get back in the second time." Instead, the killer moved down the hall for easier game.

After Cho killed himself, ending an assault that left 32 students and faculty dead, the survivors were evacuated from Norris Hall and taken to another building. They talked, but not about
what they just had done. Since then, "I haven’t really spoke" with students from that class, he said. "I’m just trying to cope with it."

Lauer asked if he could have predicted before the shooting how he would have reacted. The young hero, whose first reaction had been paralyzing fear, said that’s not possible for anyone.

"There’s no way of telling what I would have done until you’re put in that situation," he said. Having been there, he now has an idea of what moved him to action:

"I think it was a mixture of fear and adrenaline. And the will to survive."

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