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NEW YORK (AP) Six days after the apocalypse came to lower
Manhattan, much of the neighborhood opened for business Monday,
even as thick smoke drifted from the pile of rubble where the World
Trade Center once stood.
But it was far from business as usual: Wall Street's foot
soldiers some carrying American flags, some wearing masks to ward
off the smoke were greeted by police checking identification.
National guardsmen in camouflage stood silently on some street
corners, gripping semiautomatic rifles.
The missing haunted the streets: Homemade posters with smiling
faces stared from telephone poles and restaurant windows.
Blocks away, the rescuers continued the desperate work of
sifting the wreckage of the Trade Center, hoping to find survivors
among 4,957 missing souls. Around 300 of the missing are
firefighters.
After a two-minute silence and a trading-floor chorus of "God
Bless America" a group representing New York's rescue workers
rang the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange. The market
plummeted in early trading, and then stabilized.
"We're going to stick our thumb in the eye of the murderers,"
Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill at the NYSE building Monday where
an American flag was draped over the entrance.
"Tuesday was such a nightmare, people covered in ash, people
crying, people not knowing what was going on," said Shannon
Jeffries, 32, on her way to work Monday at JPMorgan Chase. "I
haven't been back to work since, and I'm not sure what to expect."
Harvey Grossman, a state Insurance Department employee, emerged
from a subway station in lower Manhattan and had to show two forms
of identification to walk on the streets.
"Then I went through a second checkpoint which is OK with me,"
he said. "They can stop me a half a dozen times if they want to.
It's for my safety."
The confirmed death toll from Tuesday's terrorist attacks on the
World Trade Center towers hit 190. On Sunday, rescuers reached a
train platform 80 feet below the center's remains but found no
survivors.
Monday was a day for reopenings. Besides the markets, City Hall,
other government buildings and courthouses opened their doors.
"The life of the city goes on, and I encourage people to go
about their lives," Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said Sunday.
They just had to step carefully. The narrow streets of the
city's southern tip home to the city's financial and government
sectors were crisscrossed with heavy utility cables. Portable
generators hummed on sidewalks. Telephone and electric service was
spotty.
The Wall Street subway station was closed, and only subways on
the east side of downtown Manhattan were running. A new ferry
service carried passengers across the East River from the borough
of Brooklyn. Streets are closed to vehicles and some thoroughfares
are blocked altogether.
Telephone and electric service were spotty; police headquarters
was among the places with phone problems on Monday morning.
Newspaper vendor Dhiren Shah was apprehensive as he carried
bundles of newspapers to his job on Broadway, even though he was
about to start making money again after losing about $1,000 over
the last week.
"We don't want to work, actually, but we have to pay bills,"
he said. "It's terrible. We feel like we are missing the landmark
of New York."
Preparations for this day had been difficult, and fraught with
emotion.
Felix Fajardo mopped the foyer of a Wall Street law firm Sunday,
trying to clear off the film of fine gray dust that spread for
blocks, sticking to shop windows, ATMs, awnings "all over the
place."
Dennis Goin, president of Goin & Co. brokerage firm, planned to
sleep at his office down the street from the NYSE building, just to
be ready for what he feared would be a financially tumultuous and
emotionally searing day.
"You might be calling to people ... who you might call once a
month, and when you place that call, you might be told that Joe
isn't here anymore," Goin said.
There was scant room for hope that all those missing Joes would
be rescued.
"The recovery effort continues and the hope is still there that
we might be able to save some lives. But the reality is that in the
last several days we haven't found anyone," Giuliani said.
No survivors have been pulled out since Wednesday, and Giuliani
said that most of what rescuers found was body parts, not bodies.
Among the grisly finds have been a pair of hands, bound
together, found on a rooftop. Another was the torso of a Port
Authority police officer, identified by the radio still hanging
from his belt.
James Monsini, a volunteer and demolition expert from Brockton,
Mass., said he and some fellow workers were concentrating on
subbasement level garages and shops. He said they were hoping for
air pockets that would allow victims perhaps trapped in their
cars to breathe.
"I saw a car with an interior light on, and I got really
hopeful that it was a sign (of life)," he said. "But the person
was dead."
On Sunday, rescue crews for the first time penetrated into the
lowest underground level beneath the towers, to the New Jersey
commuter train station 80 feet down. They found gaps in the debris
but not one survivor.
"In my opinion, I don't think we are going to find anyone
alive," U.S. Marshal Paul Stapleton said. "This is worse than an
earthquake."
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