The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 17, 2001 - 5B SEPTEMBER 11, 2001 The recovery FMourners view changed. skyline from across river By David Enders Daily News Editor JERSEY CITY, N.J. - Residents here joined people across the country in lighting candles Friday evening, but with one difference: Here they were aware of perhaps a more poignant reminder of Tuesday's destruction than most places in the country - the forever changed New York skyline directly across the Hudson River. Thousands of people showed up to sing patriot- ic songs and grieve. "It's nice to be around all these people," said Alfred Martino of Jersey City. Standing next to Martino was his friend, Alisa Weiserman, who graduated from the University of Michigan in 1989. "It also reminds us that this country is made up of a lot of different faces," Weiserman said, refer- ring to the ethnic and racial diversity of those attending the vigil. Across from the changed skyline, Gauri Mohan sat beside her husband, P.S. Mohan, who works near the World Trade Center. "I couldn't find him when the building fell -it was the worst feeling" she said. "Every time I close my eyes, I see people falling out of those windows." Gauri Mohan comforted Jersey City resident Diviana Marin as she wept. Marin said her broth- er had escaped from the 84th floor of the North Tower after the attack. "I just think it's so sad that people come to our country to learn to destroy it," she said: "The symbol of the buildings is home, it's a lot of things - I couldn't believe they could collapse for any reason," Weiserman said. "If you haven't seen the World Trade Center up close, you have no idea." Lt. William Costigan of the Jersey City Police Department estimated about 1,500 people were on the waterfront by 7:30 p.m. Friday. More were on their way, marching through the streets toward the waterfront carrying flags and singing. Residents have been donating supplies and putting them on boats to send across the river, Costigan said. "You had people here in four- and five-thou- sand-dollar suits helping out, Costigan said. "We'll be shipping the supplies over as long as it takes," he said. "People have been phenomenal ... It's a shame it took something like this." Jersey City resident Miriam Smith works near the World Trade Center. She and her friend Stephen Mohr said they found themselves in the midst of a stampede as people frantically tried to get away from the Trade Center. Not knowing planes had crashed into the buildings, they initially thought the city was being bombed. "I thought I was going to die," she said. "We were just running and screaming and cry- ing and praying that we wouldn't get hit by bombs. ... It was unreal," Mohr said. "I'm here tonight because I got away and I'm here tonight for the people who didn't" he added. Mohr said he hasn't gotten much sleep since the bombing, constantly watching news coverage on television instead. "These past few days have been filled with every emotion," he said. "I tried to go to work yesterday but there were bomb threats all over the city." David Anderson had a view of the World Trade Center from his Jersey City apartment. "I was just looking out the window in disbelief and I saw the other plane deliberately crash into the building," he said. "After that, the Star Spangled Banner has much more of a meaning." - Daily StaffReporter Elizabeth Kassab contributed to this report. Some try to return home for necessities By David Enders Daily News Editor NEW YORK - Thousands of lower Manhattanites crowded in front of barriers manned by New York police and National Guard Troops yesterday, waiting to reoccu- py areas closest to the rubble of the World Trade Center. Utility crews swarmed Wall Street, preparing for the planned reopening of the New York Stock Exchange today. Other crews hosed soot and dust off buildings and picked up glass from broken windows. "We don't even know if we're going to be let back in," said 13- year-old Stephanie Millan, who waited with her mother for a National Guard escort to take them to their apartment in Battery Park Place. In front of the crowd, a guardsman barked out addresses on a megaphone. Millan said she was at school when the towers collapsed Tuesday. Her mother was at work. "We didn't have any chance to take anything with us," she said. Security will be tightened all over the city, especially in the financial district. "We don't even know if we're going to be let back in ... We didn't have any chance to take anything with us." - Stephanie Milan Battery Park Place resident Joey Perez, a security guard who works at 50 Broad St., said his, building has hired two extra securi- ty guards, among other precautions. Normally there are only two, he said. In the rest of the city this weekend, security guards were sta- tioned in front of many buildings 24 hours a day. "We have to check packages," Perez said. "If you feel suspicious about an individual, ask them more questions." For many, coming back to home' and work seemed to be a step in returning the city to normal. "There are a lot of people by the twin towers who work out at our club," said Greg Barthelemy, an employee of the New York Sports Club on Wall Street. "Maybe they'll try to get back in their routine." Whatever routine people fall into., there are still considerable reminders of what happened here. Walls of buildings and subway sta- tions have become impromptu memorials for the missing, and fires still burn at the World Trade Center site. Firefighters mourn their comrades, keep working By David Enders Daily News Editor NEW YORK - James McRoberts still can't believe 15 firefighters are miss- ing from the Engine 54 Fire Station. "Nobody ever can turn around and say they lost 15," said McRoberts, a lieu- tenant with the Southfield, Mich., fire department. His nephew, who is alive, is a member of the Engine 54 station at the corner of Eighth Avenue and 48th Street in Manhattan. Outside the station, relatives of fire- fighters lost when the World Trade Center towers collapsed wept and lit can- dles, so many that the entire sidewalk was covered with wax. "This is going on at every engine house," McRoberts said. As McRoberts spoke, dust-covered firefighters arrived from Ground Zero. The crowd around the station clapped for the new arrivals. Firefighters and other rescue workers have been working 10- to 12-hour shifts at the site, he said, removing what is left bucket-by-bucket so no remains are missed. McRoberts spent time at Ground Zero earlier in the week, and was planning to return Saturday. "It's a logistical nightmare," he said. "With decomposition (of the bodies) it's going to be extremely difficult." The toll on the entire fire department has been estimated at around 300. "I think there were more people than normal (responding to the World Trade Center) because it was a shift change," McRoberts said. "You had guys who were coming in early and guys who were still hanging around." At the Jacob Javits Convention Center at l Ith Avenue and 34th Street, people from all over the country stood in a line that stretched two city blocks, waiting to become part of the relief effort. "The crater is 60 feet deep," said Lance Myck, a structural steelworker from Queens, N.Y., who was at Ground Zero Wednesday. "They can't use a crane (to move the rubble) because it's too heavy." Officials announced during the week- end that they will use DNA to identify many of the remains. "We couldn't find anybody" Myck said. "Everything was pancaked:' Fires still burned at the site Saturday, sending smoke across lower Manhattan. People walked down Wall Street in gas masks. On King Street between Sixth and Seventh avenues, the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals was reuniting pets with their owners. "We're providing food, transportation and carriers," said ASPCA spokeswoman Deborah Sindell. "In the last two days, we've rescued 45 to 50 pets - cats, dogs, ferrets, guinea pigs." Sindell said the group was sending "Humane Law Enforcement Officers" into areas near Ground Zero to bring the pets out. "We've seen some extremely stressed out pets," she said. "Some with respirato- ry problems." DAVID KATZ/Daily Two New York City firefighters stand outside the Engine 54 fire station after hav- ing returned from Ground Zero. More than 135 firefighters were promoted in a cer- emony yesterday following reports that hundreds are still trapped in the rubble. NYU students adapt to life near Ground Zero By Elizabeth Kassab Daily Staff Reporter NEW YORK - New York University sophomore Bryce Roebel said he attended class as usual after watching from Washington Square Park as United Airlines Flight 175 crashed into World trade Center Tower 2 Tuesday. "During class they collapsed, so when I came out of class and looked south, they weren't there," he said. The collapse knocked out power in four of NYU's residence halls, including the one Roebel lives in. Like thousands of other New Yorkers who live in the vicinity of the World Trade Center, Roebel has not yet been able to return to his home. Roebel said he has been staying with friends, and NYU gave students some money to buy clothes and other necessities they didn't have. The residence halls farther away from the site of the terrorist attacks were able to remain open. NYU freshman Chris H ale still has access to his residence hall, located near Washington Square Park. He walked out of his room Tuesday morning for a class, not realizing what had happened. "I noticed a lot ofpeople just standing around," he said. "When I got to the corner, I looked downtown and saw lots of smoke." Second-year law student Denise Ryan said she and her neighbors stood in and around Washington Square Park watching the destruction of the twin towers last Tuesday. "You could see glass coming out and people com- ing out" of the top floors, she said. In the streets, people clustered around the cars that were stopped in the road to hear the radios' explana- tions of the sight. Ryan said she listened in "complete disbelief" as the reports kept coming in. She then went to the law school, where there were televisions set up in the lounge. Some of the students watching had friends, family or fiances who worked in the World Trade Center. "When the first tower fell, you knew there were people in there that you knew, and there was nothing you could do;" she said. Tuesday was filled with frantic searches, Ryan said. Since virtually no telephones were working, people were using e-mail and instant messaging ser- vices to try to locate friends and family. The rest of New York responded with an outpour- ing of support, she said. "People were just trying to find out how they could help," Hale said. "They told people they need- ed blood, and then within an hour they were telling people there were five-hour lines." Hale said he always took it for granted that he was born an American.. But the recent events and New York's response "brings a deeper sense that we are all Americans. It has made it a little more real," he said. Ryan said she is skeptical that the United States would commit to a ground war, but she adlmitted she acks would never have imagined a week ago that the twin towers could be the target of a terrorist attack. "If we've ever been justified in going to war in the past, we're justified now,' she said. When he was growing up, Roebel said he dreamed of being in the N'avy. Though he didn't pur- sue that ambition, he said he is willing to serve his country now. "I'd do almost anything if they asked me to;' he said. "It's time for everyone to come together." Ryan said last week's events have New York shak- en, but she said it will get back to normal. She said New Yorkers have no choice but to con- tinue walking the streets and taking the subway. "It's hard. You can't really leave" The normally busy campus was transformed into a virtual ghost town in the days after the terrorist attack, but things are slowly starting to return to nor- mal. "It was dead silent,".Hale said. "I could walk down the middle of 5th Avenue in the middle of the day without people or cars. Immigrants angered by att By Elizabeth Kassab Daily Staff Reporter NEW YORK - Many of the resi- dents in Chinatown do not speak fluent English, but the stars and bars flying in and around their shops leave no doubt that they are Americans, and the terror- ist attack that destroyed part of their city Tuesday has had a deep impact on them. "Every morning when we woke up before we could see the World Trade Center," said Nelson To, gesturing to the blue sky above the buildings. "Now we see nothing." The language barrier has proved to be a problem in the days since Tuesday as police set up barricades nearby, and some residents were apprehensive to leave their homes, partly because they cannot understand the police, said Donald Moy, whose father owns the Mee Sum Caf6 on Pell Street. . But aside from that, Chinese- Americans and other predominantly immigrant communities in New York feel the same fear, anger and disbelief as the rest of the nation. "I feel so sad, you know, so sad. The buildings were very beautiful," Moy said. Near Chinatown, in Little Italy, reac- tions to the fall of the twin towers was much the same as elsewhere. "To see them collapse broke my heart, said Alfonse Ferrara, general manager of Cafe Napoli on Hester Street. "We can only pray and feel sympathy to the people who have lost victims in the tragedy, but we must go on and prevent such an incident from happening in this country or in the world." Ferrara said the terrorist attacks have caused him to reflect on being American. "It's such a great place to live," Ferrara said. "I'm always flabbergasted by how great this country is whenever I go to other countries. I believe we will continue to succeed because we are such a great nation." He said the community in Little Italy feels much the same as the rest of America. "We're of Italian heritage, but most of all we're Americans," Ferrara said. "Most of us were born here, some of us served in the armed forces." But Little Italy is hurting economi- cally, like much of the rest of New York. The area is all decked out for a cele- bration that will not happen. The annu- al St. Gennaro festival, one of the largest the Italian community cele- brates, was supposed to be one of the major events of the year, held from Sept. 13 to Sept. 22. Instead of bustling around a restau- rant bursting with hungry patrons, Cafe Napoli's waiters walked around vacant tables to serve their customers. Ferrara said he increased his staff by 20 percent in anticipation of the cele- bration but since Tuesday has had to lay off the extra workers in addition to other regular workers. In addition to the drastic drop in business, Ferrara said the shopowners in Little Italy are expecting to lose the money they paid the city to cover the cost of the festival's maintenance and clean-up. DAVIT/Daly Young Chao Yi, a Chinese-American barber, hung an American flag on the mirror of the Hip Kee Beauty Salon on Boyers St. In Chinatown. Many immigrants are shocked and saddened by Tuesday's events. 10:50 a.m. President Bush labels Tuesday's attacks "acts of war," and requests $20 billion from congress to help rebuild and recover from the attacks. 8:09 a.m. Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta says airports will be opened and flights resumed on a case- by-case basis - and only after stringent new security measures are in place. Late Afternoon Secretary of State Colin Powell states that Osama Bin Laden is the prime suspect in the attacks. Morning White House officials and congressional leaders agree to a $40 billion package to combat terrorism and recover from the attacks. The figure was double what President Bush requested. I I rw