NYC to Light Eternal Flame on 9/11
      August 6, 2002 8:21 PM EST
      By: Timothy Williams
      Associated Press

      NEW YORK (AP) - World leaders will light an eternal flame,
      the governor will deliver the Gettysburg Address, and former
      Mayor Rudolph Giuliani will lead a reading of the names of 2,823
      victims during a day of "simple and powerful" observances marking
      the anniversary of the World Trade Center attack.

      "This will not be an ordinary day for anyone in New York,"
      Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Tuesday in announcing a plan
      that "honors the memory of those we lost that day and that gives
      New Yorkers, Americans and people around the world the
      opportunity to remember and reflect."

      Bloomberg said the daylong series of remembrances Sept. 11
      will start early in the morning with bagpipe and drum processions
      that will begin in each of the city's five boroughs and converge
      at the World Trade Center site.

      At 8:46 a.m., the time a hijacked airliner slammed into one of the
      twin towers, the city will observe a moment of silence.

      Giuliani, who was praised for his courageous leadership after the
      attack, will begin the reading of the names of those killed.
      "If anybody has a tie to those lost and is appropriate to start that
      out, it is Rudy Giuliani," Bloomberg said.

      A cross-section of New Yorkers and people from around the world,
      including those who lost family members and co-workers in the attack
      will follow Giuliani in reading the names, which is expected to take
      most of the nearly two-hour service.

      Gov. George Pataki will read Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address,
      which includes the line: "We cannot dedicate, we cannot consecrate,
      we cannot hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who
      struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add
      or detract."

      The service is expected to conclude with a moment of silence just before
      10:30 a.m., when the second of the twin towers fell.

      Houses of worship will be encouraged to toll their bells, and family members
      of the victims will be invited to descend a ramp seven stories to the footprint
      of the twin towers. Each family will pick up a rose and place it in a vase for
      an arrangement that will be preserved for a permanent memorial.

      "Sept. 11, that date, will live in people's hearts and minds for generations
      just as the date Dec. 7 will never be forgotten," Pataki said.

      At sunset, world leaders - possibly including President Bush, will light an
      eternal flame at a temporary memorial a few blocks from ground zero.

      Bloomberg said letters had been sent to several world leaders inviting them
      to the commemoration. Many will be in town for the annual U.N. General
      Assembly meeting, which begins Sept. 12. The Bush administration had
      requested the assembly meet earlier this year so the world leaders could
      attend the Sept. 11 remembrances.

      At candlelight vigils around the city, including Central Park, New Yorkers
      will be asked to reflect and listen to music from the city's orchestras.

      "Our intent," Bloomberg said, "is to have a day of observances that
      are simple and powerful."

      More than a dozen Broadway theaters will go dark that day, but
      Bloomberg said he expects that most businesses will remain open and
      that students will go to class. "We will carry on our responsibilities to
      our families and to our city," Bloomberg said.

      Bond brokerage Cantor Fitzgerald, which lost 658 employees, plans a
      private remembrance in Central Park. The Port Authority of New York
      and New Jersey, which lost 75 employees, plans an afternoon memorial.

      In May, when the city held a ceremony to mark the end of the cleanup
      at ground zero, city officials were criticized by family members for not
      scheduling the observance on a weekend, when more people could attend.

      This time, city officials were careful to seek the opinions of family members
      . They also solicited public opinion last month and received more than 4,000
      suggestions on how to mark the first anniversary.

      "The mayor and the governor saw to it that this morning belonged to the
      victims' families," said Christy Ferer, whose husband, Neil Levin, was
      director of the Port Authority when he was killed.

      Although some details remain to be worked out, Sept. 11 ceremonies are
      also planned at the Pentagon and the rural site near Shanksville, Pa.,
      where the other two hijacked planes crashed.





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