10 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 14, 2001 Putting together the pieces GiIimni keeps city reassured inM the face ofterror The Washington Post NEW YORK=- This, New Yorkers have been saying almost since the first frightening fireball appeared on their television screens, has been Rudy Giuliani's finest hour. The wartime analogy feels apt. The mayor this week has offered a grittier, Flatbush-flavored version of FDR's fire- side chats. He's been operations manager and pastor, diver- sity-training counselor and dauntless cheerleader, a normally contentious figure suddenly turned symbol of the city's unity. He's been Winston Churchill in a Yankees cap. "I want the people of New York to be an example to the rest of the country and the rest of the world that terrorism can't stop us," he said on the first day, having scrambled out of a downtown building where he himself was trapped for several minutes after the first of the Twin Towers dissolved. "Everything is safe right now in the city," he assured them, and he urged residents to go about their normal rou- tines. He's kept up the exhortations, suggesting by Day 2 that New Yorkers go shopping and visit restaurants, "do things that show you're not afraid." They have begun to, tentative- ly. Giuliani's omnipresence has been a significant factor-a political cartoon in yesterday's Newsday depicted the 57- year-old Republican looming gravely over the smoking hulks of the World Trade Center, a single tear drawn on his left cheek. The, mayor's everywhere, all the time, it seems - visiting Ground Zero numerous times with his new accessories, a white mask and a hard hat; going to hospitals; phoning news radio stations; giving multiple press briefings from his command center in an "undisclosed location." Wednesday night he gave a briefing in an FDNY cap and an EMS wind- breaker, a tribute to the city's firefighters, who've taken cat- astrophically heavy losses, and emergency medical workers. yesterday morning, having reverted to a political gray suit and tie, he was on the early news. He's looked tired, has on occasion grown emotional, but he hasn't allowed more than a few hours to pass without reminding the city that someone was at the helm. ------------ ' :: ... Vk ~' L - , 4' s~ a .. r o ...r r ,,_ .. , . < ~, 4 .I SAM HOLLENSHEAD/Daily Two firefighters embrace yesterday on the scene of rescue efforts near the site where the 110-story twin towers of the World Trade Center collapsed Tuesday. Rescuers had recovered 184 bodies from the ruins as of yesterday. Victims' relatives keep searching, hoping Ident/5y1g bodies may take wee4 months The Washington Post NEW YORK - The city is begin- ning the most massive job of unearthing and identifying bodies ever faced by any government. "There's never been an effort like this in terms of identification and recovery of the dead in history. It's going to be a terrible job," said forensic anthropolo- gist Clyde Snow, who is considered the world's leading expert on body identifi- cation. "This is so unprecedented," forensics expert Lawrence Kobilinsky of John Jay College in Manhattan, said. "There has never been anything that comes close to what we're facing." The New York City Medical Examin- er's office has been marshaling forces from several states and dozens of agen- cies, preparing to receive, process and identify up to 20,000 bodies, all victims of Tuesday's attack on the World Trade Center, although nobody is sure how many people are buried in the debris. One complicating factor, caused by fears of biological terrorism, is that forensics examiners will also examine the bodies for any signs of infection, said Health and Human Services Secre- tary Tommy Thompson. And patholo- gists and investigators will have to take precautions to protect themselves in case dangerous organisms are present, he said in a news conference Wednes- day night. In New York, medical specialists are busy afternoon inputting infor- mation on missing individuals. That data was gleaned from seven-page questionnaires filled out by search- ing family members, coupled with such identifying material as pho- tographs, hair, saliva and blood sam- ples (extracted from toothbrushes and combs), and the names of the missing person's dentists and physi- cians. The data and samples will be used to identify bodies and body parts retrieved from the devastation. 'Discussion of bodies and, worse yet, parts of bodies may seem disturbing or tasteless. But for many - especially for those who adhere to particular religions - finding their loved one's body can be spiritually important. "Christians and Buddhists have no time stipulations as to the disposal of bodies," Huston Smith, a professor of religion at Syracuse University, explained. "But Jews - within 24 hours the funeral process must be completed. Muslims must be bathed and the traditional orthodoxy is to be buried within 24 hours. For Hindus, cremation must be almost immedi- ate." For some Christians, open casket viewings are favored. And among some Buddhists, it is believed that cremation of an incomplete body ensures that the reincarnated soul will inhabit a body that is missing limbs or parts, Snow said. "The first priority is taking care of the families - the living. Just about any family in New York has probably got somebody, some distant or close rela- tive, in there," Snow said. "And they need to understand what the process entails." It is a process that could take weeks, or even months, said Snow, who was head of forensic anthropology for the recovery effort after the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. "In Oklahoma City we had 168 deaths," Snow, recalled. "That occurred on April 19. We had 10 pathologists, 20 dentists, the FBI fingerprint people, Oklahoma state and city fingerprint people. And that was with 168 victims." The Washington Post By Day 3, most people had run out of places to look. Still, they gathered by the thousands at a Man- hattan armory, sweat glistening from their brows as the sun baked down, hoping for news of loved ones. Many faces were stained from tears, the fatigue of sleepless nights showing through. Others had taped color photos of relatives to their shirts. "Call Mom!!" read one. "Have you seen Myra Maldonado" read another. "She is the mother of two boys and is being missed terribly by her children, siblings and nephews." The number tells it all: 4,763 people were miss- ing, most, if not all of them, likely crushed beneath the tons of debris of the World Trade Center. But still, the people looking for them had to hope. To do otherwise would be giving up. Joe Boggio's search started immediately - as soon as he saw the fire from his offices a few blocks away he rtced to call his girlfriend, Jody Tepedino. Not a half hour before, he'd walked her to the elevators at the north tower and kissed her goodbye, just like every morning. As he dialed he watched the fire and smoke spread. The phone kept ringing, but there was no answer - and no word since. He'd sorted through rumors and Internet post- ings. He and Jody's brother, Vincent Tepedino, vis- ited every hospital Wednesday on the East Side of Manhattan - clutching pictures of Jody. The black and white photos showed a 39-year-old woman with curly hair and a mouth stretched into a broad smile. In hospital after hospital - so numerous they blurred in their memories - they scanned patient lists and left fliers. As they walked long city blocks to West Side hospitals, they got the call they had been praying for. Her name, another of Jody's broth- ers said, was on a list of people hospitalized from Cantor Fitzgerald, an investment firm where she worked as an executive assistant for the last year. For 15 minutes: joy. Then came the follow-up call that filled them with dread. It was a mistake. It wasn't true. On foot to yet another hospital, Boggio and Tepedino heard that Jody's company had opened a command center at the Pierre Hotel to help dis- "So many people are never going to be found. There isn't anything left to identify." - David Mortman Father of missing Trade Center worker traught families. Cantor Fitzgerald, with about 1,000 employees working in the tower, could find very few of them. But no one there knew anything about Jody. Yesterday, they took the train from Brooklyn again, this time to the armory - a large brick building with the names of America's bloodiest battles carved into the facade - to fill out the missing person's forms. What was the person's height, weight, hospital of'birth? Did the person have any distinguishing marks? One woman, speaking into a cell phone to her friend's family, sought more precise information. Was the birthmark on the back of her right thigh more of a flesh color or was it pink? Nearby, David Mortman, 50, shook his head despairingly. He was searching for the son of friends stranded in Florida. The son, Nicholas Lassman, a 28-year-old Cantor Fitzgerald employ- ee, worked on the 99th floor. "This form," said Mortman, grasping the six. pages of information he was struggling to fill out. "This is the normal form - so many people are never going to be found. There isn't anything left to identify." For others searching fruitlessly, the days after the tragedy yielded shreds of information. Harry Ramos' family tried to reach every co-worker of the 45-year-old trader with the May Davis Group - going down a list of names the Baltimore-based investing firm gave them. They knew where he was when the plane struck his building - at his desk on the phone with his wife. He told her something was wrong and that he was going to gather up his group and evacuate. His wife waited Tuesday at home - watching the news for any word, jumping each time the tele- phone rang. AP PHOTO' Flowers and post cards of the World Trade Center towers decorate a lamp post on Houston Street near a fire house yesterday in New York. Makeshift memorials are appearing throughout the city as people mourn victims of Tuesday's terrorist attack. Pollution worries experts as smoke lingers over the city 9 The Washington Post A hazardous brew of dust, soot, asbestos and toxic combus- tion gases will pose a continuing threat to rescue workers long after the flames are extinguished, environmental health experts say. Though some lucky weather patterns have helped reduce the risk that the airborne contamination poses to the general population, the environmental risks will be much higher for tion on this scale with so much dust and airborne contami- nants." He said people who are still having trouble breathing eight to 12 hours after leaving the blast site should consult a physician. Those who find themselves repeatedly spitting up phlegm are expelling dust and other particles from their lungs, a sign of a well-functioning respiratory system cleansing itself. But the greater threat is posed by smaller particles that penetrate past the upper bronchia of the lungs and lodge deeply in the