Mayor announces memorial service for those lost
by Larry McShane
The Associated Press
NEW YORK As rescue crews at the World Trade
Center found more shattered concrete and twisted steel but still
no survivors New York's mayor said a weekend memorial for the fallen
will take place at Yankee Stadium.
Authorities had said that a service planned for Central Park, once
expected to draw a million mourners, would not occur. But Mayor Rudolph
Giuliani told an afternoon news conference that there would be a memorial
at the stadium in the city borough of the Bronx at 3 p.m. Sunday.
Admission will be by ticket only; there should be room for about
60,000 mourners in a city of 8 million that is in mourning. Security concerns
shelved the Central Park event, the mayor said.
Meanwhile, the private grief went on funerals for six
firefighters and two police officers were conducted Wednesday.
Although city workers continued to pore over the rubble, the last
survivor pulled from the wreckage emerged one week ago. Giuliani said
their orders had not changed: They were still on a search and rescue mission.
He said the bodies of 233 people have been recovered from the debris
that was once the Trade Center; of those, 170 have been identified by
the medical examiner and their families notified. Another 5,422 were missing.
State officials said they were close to an agreement that would expedite
the issuing of death certificates so families of the dead would have quicker
access to insurance and other benefits.
There is no total for the massive costs incurred by the terrorists'
strike. Officials said the federal government had agreed to reimburse
the state for all costs, including debris removal, emergency protection
and repairs to public facilities.
Giuliani led French President Jacques Chirac on a tour of the command
center set up after the two hijacked jetliners slammed into the Trade
Center towers.
"When you see it from the air, there's an anger and determination
to do something about it that I can't describe," Giuliani said.
Chirac praised Giuliani and New York for their calm. Headlines in
France, according to Chirac, have referred to Giuliani as "Rudy the Rock."
"I have special thoughts for the firemen," Chirac said. "So many
of them paid with their lives."
France's 1886 gift to the United States, the Statue of Liberty, remains
visible through the smoke still rising from ground zero of the terrorist
attack.
On Friday, the city will receive a gift from Japan: $10 million in
relief aid, City Council President Peter Vallone said.
A new statue was on view in Manhattan - a bronze work that depicts
a praying firefighter, down on one knee. It originally was cast to honor
fallen firefighters in Missouri, but its maker and the foundation that
commissioned it decided to donate it to New York.
Many stopped Wednesday to gaze at the statue, perched temporarily
on a flatbed truck. Some lighted a candle or placed flowers around the
statue's base as others, visibly moved, bowed their heads.
"It touches you," said Hakeem Adesanya of Teaneck, N.J. "It makes
you reflect."
Former President Clinton and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, accompanied
by daughter Chelsea, visited the family center on the Hudson River where
thousands have flocked in search of loved ones.
"One of the strongest messages we have received is we have to go
on," the senator said.
Other New Yorkers settled into a somewhat nervous routine on the
third day of the workweek. Wall Street workers glanced over their shoulders
at the gap in the downtown skyline.
"People are definitely on edge," said Jess Spota, who walks to work
through lower Manhattan to Wall Street. "I don't have a chance to forget
about it. I look out my window at where the towers are supposed to be."
For others, normalcy remained days - or weeks - away.
One block east of the Trade Center site, Andy Jurinko and Patricia
Moore wondered when they would be allowed back into the apartment they've
shared for 24 years.
Their cats are missing from the apartment on Cedar Street, just 400
feet from the south tower rubble.
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