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Friday,
September 21, 2001
Number
of missing rises above 6,300
By Larry McShane
Associated Press
NEW
YORK Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said Thursday that the
number of missing and presumed dead at the World Trade Center
has climbed to 6,333 an increase of more than 900 since
the last estimate.
The
number may go up or down, Giuliani said. He said the
higher number reflects reports of foreigners believed to be
in the ruins.
Giuliani
has said it is virtually certain that no one will be found
alive. The number of missing had been at 5,422 for several
days.
According
to the mayor, the British consulate reported that 250 of its
citizens were among the missing.
The
bodies of 241 people have been recovered from the Trade Center
ruins. Of those, 170 have been identified by the coroner.
Earlier
Thursday, with the small steps of children walking back into
schools and the sounds of traffic on the Brooklyn Bridge,
lower Manhattan edged closer to normal.
But
at ground zero, where two of the worlds tallest buildings
were demolished by terrorists, rescue workers hunting survivors
toiled in vain. A delegation of 40 U.S. senators
toured the World Trade Center site for a firsthand look at
the devastation.
Giuliani
acknowledged that the combination of the 2,000-degree fire
caused by the explosion of two hijacked planes and the implosion
of the 110-story towers make it likely that some victims
bodies will never be recovered.
Even
weeks ahead, while were removing stuff, obviously were
going to be looking, Giuliani said. Right now,
the possibility still remains. Theyre slim, but they
still remain.
Still,
the curtain of sadness that had enveloped the city since Sept.
11 parted a bit Thursday, as thousands of students who were
driven from their classrooms near the World Trade Center by
the attack went back to school.
But
not back to their own schools, which remain closed. Instead,
they moved into other schools around the city, a tight squeeze
but not an unhappy one.
Im
excited to be back, said kindergartner Jason Brilliant
as he arrived at Public School 3 in Greenwich Village. It
was a long time because the World Trade Center went boom.
Parents
exchanged hugs and smiles outside the schools red doors.
The
kids were amazing, said teacher Julie Hiraga, who clutched
the hands of two students as they ran for safety last week.
The
Brooklyn Bridge a pathway to safety for thousands as
they fled the collapsing Trade Center reopened two
Manhattan-bound lanes to automobile traffic for the first
time since the attack. The Holland Tunnel could reopen next
week, Port Authority officials said.
A
delegation of 40 U.S. senators, led by Majority Leader Tom
Daschle and Minority Leader Trent Lott, toured the Trade Center
site for a look at the ruins left by the worst terrorist
attack ever on American soil.
We
support you, said Daschle, D-S.D. Were here
because we recognize this loss must be shared not only by
New Yorkers, but by all Americans.
The
group pledged to help the city recover and rebuild from the
attack. Last week, Congress voted a $40 billion appropriation
to help New York. The Bush administration has pledged to cover
all the costs of the massive cleanup.
Ive
never seen anything comparable to what weve seen here
today, the magnitude of it, said Lott, R-Miss. Its
so important that we come and see what were dealing
with.
Larry
Silverstein, leader of a consortium that took over a 99-year,
$3.2 billion lease on the complex in July, said Thursday he
intends to rebuild but not a carbon copy of what
was. Instead, he may construct four 50-story buildings.
At
least 30 people remained hospitalized at five Manhattan hospitals
that saw the majority of patients following the attack.
Twenty
Manhattan hospitals treated people that day, said Mary Johnson
of the Greater New York Hospital Association. All in all,
83 hospitals in the five boroughs and the suburban counties
of Westchester, Nassau and Suffolk treated 5,284 people, Johnson
said. Of them, 418 were admitted.
Some
residents were allowed into Battery Park City on Thursday
for the first time since the attack. They were allowed just
15 minutes. Most emptied refrigerators of spoiled food and
packed precious items into a suitcase or two.
However,
the residents are not sure when they will be allowed to return
home permanently.
You
can ask five different people, you get five different answers,
said Jay Jaffe, 34, an equity trader who lugged some of his
possessions through the rain.
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