Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Santa Cruz Sentinel from Santa Cruz, California • Page 1

Location:
Santa Cruz, California
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SPECIAL REPORT SERVING THE COUNTY SINGE 1856 Eraz Mm. U)IQ) 50 CENTS AtTiik Nkusstwd St GViz, Cmjkokma Mii-m Ykk. Vol. 254 Svr Cw Skntinki. I'l IU.ISIIKNS C(l.

www.santacruzsentinel.com SC1290466 091501 01 8601 BAY MICROFILM, INC. 1115 ARQUES AVE SUNNYVALE, CA 94086 zvv J-J President vows to be tough on terrorists President Bush visited injured Pentagon workers Thursday and said he would carry the nation's prayers to terror-stricken New York. Aviation system reopens under tighter security There was tension and confusion as the aviation industry inched back into service for the first time since Tuesday's terrorist attacks. Amid search for terrorists, U.S. struggles for normalcy THE SEARCH FOR SURVIVORS 7 just want to find my Joanne IAN RUBINO One family's plight: to find a loved one More inside Local links to New York chaos.

PAGEA2 Santa Cruz residents grapple with emotions. PAGE A2 Memorials planned around the county. PAGE A2 Experts face a grim task when identifying bodies. PAGE A5 Authorities ID hijackers. PAGE A6 Right recorder from Flight 93 found.

PAGE A6 Evacuations, bomb threats plague D.C. PAGE A7 Pentagon death toll at 190. PAGE A7 NFL and MLB cancel weekend games. PAGE D2 Attacks take toll on nation's spending psyche. PAGE D4 Stock market trading to resume Monday.

PAGE D4 By THOMAS FARRAGHER and MATTHEW BRELIS T1IU BOSTON HLOUE Passenger jets warily returned to the nation's skies Thursday, even as the FBI arrested a man who allegedly tried to use a false pilot's license to evade security at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City. Police Commissioner Bernard Kerik said five or six people, some of them of Arab descent, were detained at New York airports and officials feared that the terrorists who struck Tuesday may not be finished. The detentions prompted the closure of New York's airports just hours after they had reopened. The man accused of having a false pilot's license had been been booked Tuesday for a Los Angeles-bound flight that was canceled after the attack jn the World Trade Center, the Press reported.

Meanwhile, authorities analyzing a (light-data recorder i ecovered from an 8-foot-deep ill assy field outside i'nr critical clues in the nation's wcrst terrorist attack. "We have taken every precaution to make sure it ic -site fly in America." President si'id earlier the day. "There ar I'eetv i up ity in our airports TheieV i' presence on the all planes." president, who vowed to win a pV.lial wai terrorism, planned lead a national day of prayer today in New York City, where 4,763 people were missing and 30,000 body bags were ordered. With the death toll from Tuesday's assault almost certain to surpass the 2.390 killed at Pearl Harbor, the country struggled toward normalcy without complete success. The stock market remained closed and is not scheduled to open until Monday.

Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld is considering asking Bush to activate thousands of U.S. military reserves. Pentagon officials said. Professional football, whose games went on two days after President Kennedy's assassination in 1963, scrubbed its 15-game schedule this Please see ATTACKS on BACK PAGE By BETH DALEY Till: BOSTON Cil.OUl: NEW YORK Day three of the search for Joanne Rubino began a I a.m. in Brooklyn's Canarsie Neighborhood.

Her fiance. Ian Rubin, jumped into a relative's car in front of the couple's apartment and set out for Manhattan, determined to track down the World Trade Center tax accountant. "We must bring her home," Rubin said as his journey began. "I'll tend to her if she's sick; I want to find her alive. Today, I have all day to look for her.

I won't stop until I bring her home." His journey, a grim circuit in search of information, epitomized those of hundreds, perhaps thousands, Thursday in New York City. Accompanied by his uncle, Frank Corso, Rubin headed straight for Belle-vue Hospital in Manhattan, arriving in time to see camera crews setting up and the first few photographs of missing people being taped on a nearby construction wall. After a short consultation, the two gave several television interviews, hoping someone would recognize the two photographs of Joanne he had patiently held up for cameras. "Maybe someone, somewhere, has seen her," Rubin kept saying. "I'll do this all day." Once inside Bellevue, the news was not good.

Patient lists were two or three pages long and Joanne's name was not there. They looked twice. A worker helped Rubin look at four other lists from the day before. "There's nothing here, nothing," said Rubin, shaking his head. He walked out while Corso had hospital workers photocopy Joanne's pictures, including one of her and Rubin sitting on a couch smiling together.

Using masking tape, the two placed the picture on the outside wall next to the pictures of others still missing. Then they made a decision. "We are going to the morgue," Rubin said. "I need to know." On the way, he told Joanne stories. How the two had been engaged for 12 years "we kept postponing it because our parents got sick." How she once gave her scarf to a homeless person in the middle of winter.

Joanne cared passionately about her work as a corporate tax accountant for Marsh McLennan, he said, often working long hours. The two had just celebrated their birthdays last week she turned 45 and Rubin, 43. They Please see RESCUE on Page AS lrmM -V' "iH N. 4 A If I Jvfj Lkh '1 'J'JS, 1 One-year-old Daniel Brahah lays a bunch of flowers near the Franklin D. Roosevelt statue in Grosvnor Square near the American Embassy in London.

Brahah's mother is awaiting news of friends she has not heard from since the attacks on the World Trade Center. Associated Press photos I.NDE SCO toaay Keeley hires lawyer to battle voting district changes Boulder Creek Assemblyman Fred Keeley has hired a well-known voting-rights attorney in his campaign against new legislative lines. LOCAL NEWS, PAGE A3 A HER Morning cloud cover will give way to afternoon -4 sun. Highs are expected to be in the low 70s. BACK PAGE At the fair With so much happening at the Santa Cruz County Fair in Watsonville, it's possible that some of the more obscure exhibits may be passed over.

Don't forget to take a look at everything from the funny to the truly bizarre. STYLE, PAGE Bl Ann Landers, B6 Best BetsBl Business; D4 Classified. C2 Comics, B7 Crossword, B7 Local newsA2 ObituariesAlO OpinionAll SportsDl State newsDS StyleBl TV listingsB6 WheelsCl -o LotteryAlO National news07 World newsD6 tqstiiMwHeMt.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Santa Cruz Sentinel Archive

Pages Available:
909,325
Years Available:
1884-2005