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star_pittsburgh_010916 SOMERSET, Pa. A rural Pennsylvania community will honor the victims of a hijacked jetliner that crashed near Pittsburgh by having a star in the heavens named in their memory, an official said Friday. Somerset County District Attorney Jerry Spangler told an evening memorial service attended by relatives of passengers who died aboard United Airlines Flight 93 that the community had arranged for the naming of a heavenly body through the International Star Registry. Forty-five people died on board the Boeing 757, which crashed Tuesday in a wooded area 80 miles southeast of Pittsburgh. It was the only one of four hijacked commercial airliners not to strike a U.S. landmark, possibly because of a passenger revolt against the alleged assailants just before the crash. "They have thrown off this earthly coil, and touch the face of God," Spangler said at the candlelight memorial in Somerset, a town of 6,500 located about 10 miles from the crash site. Hundreds thronged the town's main square, clutching small American flags and candles, while dignitaries including Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge spoke beneath a giant American flag. Spangler did not say when the star would be named or what it would be called. However, whatever name they select will be unofficial. Stars and other heavenly bodies receive their names only from the International Astronomical Union. But he told grieving family members they would receive astronomical charts to help them locate the star in the night sky from the registry. Candles were lit for the passengers and a bell tolled as each name was read aloud. Names believed to be those of the alleged hijackers were said to be unavailable.
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