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N E W Y
O R K, Sept. 11 — It was a scene of unspeakable horror
— a surreal sequence of events that unfolded before the eyes of
thousands in downtown New York this morning.
A hijacked passenger jet hit One
World Trade Center, the northern tower of the landmark 110-story
World Trade Center, at about 8:50 a.m. ET.
A second commercial jet hit the tower's twin building about 10
minutes later.
Within an hour, the southern tower collapsed in a deafening roar,
enveloping lower Manhattan in a 20-story-high wall of cloud of
dust, ash and debris that billowed up Broadway and overtook thousands
of people fleeing the melee. The northern tower collapsed several
minutes later, engulfing the southern tip of the island of Manhattan
in smoke, ash and rubble. Police, firefighters and FBI agents
ran alongside thousands of panicked workers, screaming for them
to get as far as possible from the area.
Police had feared the main sections of the destroyed buildings
might fall north, crushing people; there was also concern about
additional terrorist attacks in other parts of the financial district,
TriBeCa, Soho and the South Street Seaport. "I was looking at
the smoke and saw a plane heading low over lower Manhattan," said
33-year-old Jennifer Tammi, a doctoral student who was taking
an elevated subway to classes at Columbia University in upper
Manhattan. "It banked and headed straight for the middle of the
other tower. It looked like it flew right through the building."
Calm, Then Chaos
As people began flowing out of the stricken buildings, the scene
became increasingly chaotic, according to Katherine Fegan, who
works at Salomon Smith Barney. "Many people were crushed people
were going crazy, crying, and everyone was running," she said.
"Five minutes later and I would have been in that building."
Injured people were spread in a wide area, including burn victims
and survivors who lay on the sidewalks after collapsing from shock
and exhaustion. Dust covered the shoes and clothing of thousands
of dazed people stumbling north. Many people held their hands
to their hearts and heads, mouths open. "Why would someone do
this to us?" sobbed Sonya Fernandez, a receptionist with a law
firm who was a block away from One WTC, the northern building,
when the first jet hit.
"I heard this horrible explosion and
when I looked up there was a fireball coming out of the building.
I dropped my bag and just started running." When the first plane
hit the northernmost building, some inside thought it was an earthquake.
Others suspected a bomb. "I thought it was a bomb," said one witness.
"The ceiling started to collapse and then we evacuated." The man
was on the 81st floor when the plane hit, and he and his co-workers
ran down all 81 flights of stairs to escape the disaster. They
were soaked with sweat and water from the sprinklers when they
emerged from the building.
Victim information Hospitalized
victims:
• New
York City online hospital
patient locator system
Airlines:
Friends and family who wish to check on passengers and flights
may call:
American Airlines, 1-800-245-0999
United Airlines, 1-800-932-8555
World Trade Center businesses:
• Morgan Stanley: 1-888-883-4391
• Fuji Bank: 1-888-537-FUJI (3854)
• Carr Futures: 1-800-755-7620
• Cantor Fitzgerald: 1-212-940-8162,
1-212-940-8482, 1-212-940-8492,
1-212-893-6073
• Lee Hecht Harrison: 1-201-782-3704
• AON Corporation: 1-866-256-4154
• Thacher, Proffitt, & Wood: 1-800-698-4567
• Marsh & McLennan (includes related businesses
of Mercer, Guy Carpenter, Seabury & Smith and MMC Enterprise
Risk):
1-212-345-6000
• Fiduciary Trust Co. International: 1-800-632-2350,
ext. 22578
• Electronics Trading Group: 1-917-859-7059 or 1-917-682-9827
• Dow Jones & Co.: 1-800-530-4504
• Deutsche Asset Management: 1-800-475-6701 code:
603374
• Port Authority employees and family members: 973-624-6203
• Windows of the World Restaurant: Employees of the
restaurant can contact H.E.R.E. New York Assistance Fund 321 W.
44th Street, 5th Floor, New York, NY 10036 212-541-4226
Marriott
• Employees, families of employees or families of
guests staying at the Marriott Hotel near the World Trade Center
should call 1-866-866-9928
Cell phone/pager tracker
• 24-hour hotline for families of victims to call
and provide the number of any cell phone or pager victims might
have had with them the morning of the attacks: 1-877-348-8579
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An
Explosive Shock
For more than an hour, evacuation efforts remained relatively calm
as thousands of people poured out of the two buildings and other
offices surrounding the dense business district. But after the first
tower collapsed, it was complete pandemonium, according to eyewitnesses.
"At first it was calm and orderly; people were going down the stairs
and helping each other," said Tom Grassi, an executive who was in
the North Tower. "Later people seemed to realize how bad it really
was and it became complete bedlam. There was a lot of shoving and
trampling just to get out and get away from there." As Grassi was
making his way out, he witnessed "hundreds" of rescue workers rushing
in. Some witnesses said they saw people jumping from windows in
the World Trade Center. Others had run to the roof, hoping to be
airlifted to safety. So far, about 200 firefighters are unaccounted
for, according to media reports.
Outside, shocked survivors and witnesses gathered in the streets,
standing in an inch and a half of ash and dust and a torrent of
falling debris and papers. Cell phones and many pay telephones were
inoperable in the wake of the disaster.
Eerily Quiet
After the two buildings collapsed, the scene became eerily quiet.
Most were in a state of shock, wandering up and down the streets.
Many were crying, with many others trying to comfort those that
had just witnessed first-hand one of the most horrific and devastating
disasters in American history. "We pray that your sister will be
OK," one group told a grief-stricken woman sitting on the sidewalk.
"She will be OK. God will make sure she is OK." New York's intricate
subway system was shut down shortly after the second attack, leaving
thousands of people with nothing but their two feet to make their
way out of the downtown core area. Virtually all businesses closed
in the downtown core and most businesses throughout all of New York
sent their workers home. Few were lucky enough to hail a cab. Along
New York's main thoroughfares, people outnumbered cars and taxis,
walking up the middle of the street in a mass exodus from the lower
part of Manhattan. Some shops set up tables with free water and
juice; others set up radio speakers, attracting throngs of people
listening to the latest developments. Buses packed with passengers
inched past bus stops where hundreds lined up waiting for transportation.
A large group of people gathered at the southern tip of Central
Park to listen to the unspeakable events unfolding on radio broadcasts.
Speaking in a slow, stunned tone, Tani Hironaka, who had been on
the 80th floor of One WTC, said: "I thought it was an earthquake
at first." The buildings are no longer there.
(ABC News Article)
Pentagon personnel:
• Pentagon employees only are asked to check in by calling
1-877-663-6772
Army personnel
• Army personnel assigned to the Pentagon asked to call 800-984-8523
Air Force
• Air Force family members can call 800-253-9276. Evacuated
Air Force members are being asked to call 800-558-1404.
Justice Department:
• The Justice Department's Office of Victims of Crime has set
up a phone line to provide information to families about victims
and about services for survivors and their rights: 1-800-331-0075
• The Justice Department has also set up a Web site for victims
and families at:
www.ojp.usdoj.gov/ovc/terrorismvictimassistance
Other:
• Blue Cross Blue Shield: 1-866-761-8365
• Millennium Cluster at the University of California, Berkeley
information exchange page.
http://safe.millennium.berkeley.edu/
• Japanese language assistance for relatives is available at
jhelp.com
or 1-800-527-2611
New
York City emergency personnel
• New York City firefighters: 1-718-999-2541
• Families of New York police officers: 1-212-741-4626
• Survivors of firefighters, polices officers and emergency medical
technicians killed in the line of duty are eligible for death benefits
from the U.S. Justice Department. For more information, call 1-888-744-6513.
Investigation
FBI tip Web site:
•
http://www.ifccfbi.gov/
Department of Justice tip line:
•
1-866-483-5137
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