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The Twin Towers in NYC, pre 9/11

Twenty years after the attacks on the World Trade Center, we look back on September 11 through the lens of seven Occidental alumni who were witness to the events. This is a reprint of 鈥淣ew York Stories鈥 by Andy Faught, which first appeared in the Winter 2002 issue of Occidental Magazine.

At 8:45 a.m. on Sept. 11, 2001, Kevin Danni 鈥01 was one of hundreds of Morgan Stanley financial adviser trainees breaking for coffee on the 61st floor of the World Trade Center鈥檚 south tower. It was the politics graduate鈥檚 second day in New York, and he used his vantage point to gaze over the city he was visiting for the first time. Approaching the tower鈥檚 plate glass windows, he was surprised to see bits of paper blowing by. 鈥淢y first instance was, I thought there was a parade,鈥 Danni says. 鈥淚 thought it was confetti. As I got to the window, I started seeing balls of fire. Then I looked up and said, 鈥極h, my God.鈥欌 The north tower was on fire.

Kevin Danni '01.
Evacuating the building, Danni and the others had made it as far as the 55th floor when an explosion rocked the south tower 15 floors above them. United Airlines Flight 175 had just torn into the skyscraper. 鈥淲e had no idea what had happened,鈥 Danni says. 鈥淭he building shook violently, the walls cracked, and we knew that we had to get out.鈥

Danni spent the next 20 minutes running down flights of stairs in what he describes as 鈥渙rderly chaos鈥 with other WTC occupants. By the 15th floor, the stairwells were filling with smoke that had traveled down elevator shafts. By the 10th floor, Danni encountered a silent column of close to 50 hose-toting firefighters making their way upstairs. 鈥淭hey were so intent on getting to the flames, you could just see it on their faces,鈥 says Danni, who was 10 blocks away when the tower collapsed鈥30 minutes after his escape. Miraculously, all 285 Morgan Stanley trainees made it to safety.

鈥淚t seems like the whole world is going nuts.鈥

One block north of the Twin Towers, paralegal specialist Jean Won 鈥01 was girding for a long day with the U.S. Attorney鈥檚 Office. New York City鈥檚 mayoral primary was underway, and Won鈥攚ho was assigned to field voter complaints in the U.S. Attorney鈥檚 civil rights units鈥攁rrived at work an hour earlier than normal on Sept. 11, taking a PATH commuter train from her Jersey City, N.J. home to the World Trade Center鈥檚 convenient basement station. Won had been in her 18th-floor office for 45 minutes when the walls shook.

Jean Won '01.
Outside Won鈥檚 window, Lower Manhattan had exploded in a rain of fire and debris, bloodying pedestrians in the shadow of the World Trade Center. Many were pointing skyward, and Won immediately thought a bomb had exploded. Taking no chances, Won鈥檚 boss, the civil division chief, ordered his employees to clear out. Won made it outside, then felt a second concussion. 鈥淚 won鈥檛 forget the look of people running up the street in utter terror,鈥 Won says. 鈥淭hey were screaming, crying. It was like a horror movie.鈥 

High-heeled shoes littered the roadway as women ditched their pumps to flee the danger. Won helped one bleeding woman find shelter in a doorway, walked briskly for 30 minutes, and arrived in Soho with shin splints around the time the north tower crumbled. A chunk of the jetliner鈥檚 engine was later found on the roof of the U.S. Attorney鈥檚 Office.

鈥淚t seems like the whole world is going nuts,鈥 says Won, who can鈥檛 believe her own good fortune that day. 鈥淗ad I gone in at my normal time, I would have been down in the WTC basement when that first plane hit. Someone was looking out for me.鈥

鈥淎ll I could hear was my heart pounding. I was focused on getting out.鈥

Fifteen minutes into his second day of work with American Express鈥檚 strategic planning division on West Street, Derek Leonard 鈥96 felt an explosion that sounded like a sonic boom: 鈥淚t went right through my chest鈥攁 big pulse.鈥 Across the street he saw smoke, fire, and a gaping hole in the north tower of the World Trade Center. What could have happened? Leonard asked himself. Is the building going to fall down on me like a tree? Most of us were standing there asking if this could really be happening.鈥

Derek Leonard '96
Derek Leonard '96.
Security told all employees to remain in place. After the second explosion, Leonard and his fellow workers decided to leave, 鈥渘o matter what security was saying,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here was no value in staying around.鈥

Outside, debris was falling. Documents and rolls of toilet paper settled among shards of burned glass and metal. Leonard watched a charred body fall out of the black void of one of the burning towers. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 probably the image I鈥檓 trying to get rid of,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t was hard to take my eyes off of it.鈥 Running alongside thousands of other workers (鈥渓ike the New York City Marathon鈥), Leonard fled to escape the carnage. 鈥淎ll I could hear was my heart pounding. I was in harm鈥檚 way and had to get back to my wife. I didn鈥檛 even look back. At that point I was focused on getting out.鈥

Leonard called his wife, Alexis Kays 鈥06, after the first explosion, but wouldn鈥檛 speak to her again until 90 minutes after the second plane struck, because cellphone service was down. As dusty workers walked out of Lower Manhattan along the West Side Highway that night, Leonard took an unusually quiet ferry ride across the Hudson River to his home in Jersey City. On arrival, he was sprayed down to wash away potential asbestos fibers.

Coincidentally, Leonard had spent the previous weekend in Manhattan admiring the skyline. On Saturday, Sept. 8, he and Alexis watched a ballet performance in the plaza adjoining the towers. Today, Leonard doesn鈥檛 want to work in a tall building and he鈥檚 troubled by the sound of jetliners. Meanwhile, New York casts a painfully different shadow. 鈥淭he sky is empty,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a hole.鈥

鈥淧eople jumped. Buildings collapsed. I turned away and cried.鈥

Weeks after the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, Ben Swire 鈥95 still expects the worst when he hears the roar of jet engines above. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 look up,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 just wait a beat for an impact.鈥 Swire, an English and comparative literary studies major, was on his way to his marketing job at Morgan Stanley when United Flight 175 plowed into the World Trade Center鈥檚 south tower. The impact pierced the 70th floor鈥擲wire鈥檚 floor. Had he not been out late the night before at a birthday party, Swire knows, the story would be different. 鈥淚 woke up and ended up listening to NPR for an extra five, 10 minutes.鈥

Swire was inside the building en route to his office when the north tower was struck. He saw the explosion, then watched as the scene grew increasingly nightmarish. Helpless workers tried to climb down the towers but fell because there was nothing to cling to. As the fire continued to rage, Swire witnessed six people鈥攁ll holding hands鈥攋ump to their deaths. 鈥淚t was stunning, it was baffling. I noticed three hours later that that whole morning I had my hand over my mouth.鈥

Swire lost more than his partially completed dissertation in the tragedy; he also lost a co-worker who was a close friend. Feeling a need to help, Swire cooked food for support crews manning a Manhattan ice rink that was being used as a morgue. Now that streets have been reopened in portions of the city, Swire misses the quiet of residents walking the streets exchanging salutations in hushed tones.

As days go on, he still struggles to talk about what happened that day. 鈥淚鈥檝e been on emotional autopilot the last few weeks. My own descriptions of what happened and how I鈥檓 feeling have been strictly fact-oriented鈥擨 stood, I ran, I cried, people jumped, the building collapsed, I turned away and cried more. For a while I haven鈥檛 really felt much on my own. I seem to be getting that from other people. They fill in the emotion for me that I can鈥檛 access on my own. They cry and it makes me cry. They feel sad and it lets me feel sad. Their stories, their pictures, their terror, their loss鈥攖hat gets to me. But I have nothing on my own, I鈥檓 still a bit down here.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 easy to forget how much you can help people.鈥

Seventy blocks from the World Trade Center, Dr. Ricardo Gonzalez 鈥94 was treating patients in New York Presbyterian Hospital鈥檚 urology clinic on the morning of Sept. 11. When he first got word of the attack from a teary-eyed nurse, Gonzalez and dozens of other doctors suspended their schedules. 鈥淚nstinctively, I went down to the emergency room, where just about every physician in the hospital was,鈥 he says. Hallways became general supply areas and each bed in the ER had been readied with ventilators, monitors, and numbered packets to mark unidentifiable patients. An hour passed and few victims arrived. Gonzalez, an SA国际传媒 psychobiology major who graduated from Stanford Medical School, then made his way to the hospital鈥檚 burn ward, the largest and best equipped unit in the country. There was no shortage of activity there.

Ricardo Gonzalez '94.
All 40 beds were in use, some third-degree burn victims whose gender couldn鈥檛 be determined because of the extent of their injuries. Gonzalez was assigned to five victims burned inside a World Trade Center elevator. The severity of their injuries required Gonzalez to insert IV鈥檚 directly into patients鈥 jugular or femoral arteries. Some of the patients took 10 liters of saline during their first 12 hours of care. 鈥淎s their bodies receive more and more fluid they tend to swell, but burned skin doesn鈥檛 have the same elasticity as healthy skin, and it can鈥檛 stretch,鈥 Gonzalez says, adding that doctors had to slice vents in the skin鈥攃alled escharotomies鈥攖o ensure that blood flow wasn鈥檛 cut off.

He checked pulses every 15 minutes. The injuries were massive: burned eyes, seared lungs, nerve damage. Two of his patients died before Gonzalez finished his 24-hour shift, half of which he spent in the burn ward. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 help but wonder, if I was in their situation, whether I would rather expire or live with the definite limitations that they will have,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 sad, but unless we know what a patient鈥檚 desire is, it鈥檚 our obligation to do as much as possible to help them live.鈥

Everyone, from doctors to nurses to custodians, made an extra effort that day. 鈥淚t was one of the most coordinated orchestrations of people that I could have ever imagined at such a big institution,鈥 Gonzalez says. 鈥淓very single person was willing to help. Even the patients who were feeling well enough were volunteering to go home to be treated for their illnesses. It鈥檚 easy to forget how much you can help people and the kind of impact you can have during times of crisis.鈥

鈥淚 was trying to convince myself that what I was seeing wasn鈥檛 real.鈥

A rush of heat hit the back of Sam Kang 鈥01鈥檚 neck as he emerged from the red line subway at Chambers Street in Lower Manhattan. United Flight 175, the second hijacked airliner, had just struck the south tower of the World Trade Center. A Coro fellow who arrived in New York in mid-August to begin a nine-month study of how the city conducts business in a social, political, and economic context, Kang was beginning his first day of work at the New York City Department of Health鈥檚 needle exchange program. When he arrived at the department, the doors were locked. Kang then saw a caravan of fire engines and ambulances making their way to the Twin Towers several blocks away. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 when I realized there was something terribly wrong,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 turned around and quickly got back on the subway to get back home.鈥

But before boarding his train, Kang turned his head and caught a horrifying glimpse of the Twin Towers鈥 upper stories. 鈥淚 could see people waving what looked like white shirts and white flags,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 think I was trying to convince myself that what I was seeing wasn鈥檛 real. I don鈥檛 think that image or what happened to those people has really sunk in, even now.鈥

Instead of working at the needle exchange program, Kang was reassigned to the Red Cross鈥檚 New York headquarters in Brooklyn. 鈥淭here are new jobs, new tasks, and new needs that come up every hour,鈥 he says. 鈥淩ight now we鈥檙e all focused on disaster relief.鈥 Among those Kang worked to help are undocumented immigrants who work in Lower Manhattan as custodians and restaurant workers, many of whom are out of jobs because of the tragedies. 鈥淎 lot of them are afraid to seek assistance, even though Red Cross policy does not give any regard to documentation status,鈥 he says. 鈥淎 lot of people don鈥檛 know that. We鈥檙e trying to find a way to do some outreach.鈥 That means working closely with ethnic community groups to spread the word that help is available.

One World Trade Center employee came in and explained that he lost 12 friends in the tragedy. Suddenly without work, he also lost all means to pay his mortgage or provide for his wife, two children, and 96-year-old mother. The Red Cross gave him a list of community resources that Kang helped to compile. 鈥淚 was overwhelmed that the document that I helped create had helped thousands of people,鈥 he says. Kang often finished a day emotionally drained, albeit empowered: 鈥淚t seems like we鈥檙e much more needed than I previously thought.鈥

鈥淚t was hard to look down and not be horrified.鈥

Betina Pavri 鈥89鈥檚 first view of the devastation visited on New York came from 12,500 feet in the air. After getting extraordinary flight clearance from the Federal Aviation Administration, Pavri, an experiment coordinator at Pasadena鈥檚 Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and a team of two pilots and an instrument engineer circled the rubble Sept. 16 in a turbo-prop Twin Otter equipped to measure potential asbestos contamination. The state-of-the-art AVIRIS sensor, designed in the 1980s to conduct remote sensing in space, also used its infrared capabilities to help locate hot spots for firefighters on the ground. From the air, the ruins were no less wrenching. 鈥淵ou could smell a really acrid smoke that stuck in the back of your throat,鈥 Pavri says. 鈥淚t was hard to look down and not be horrified. I hope to never see anything remotely like it again.鈥

From Sept. 16-23, Pavri and her team flew four aerial surveys lasting two hours each, making some passes as low as 6,500 feet. The team typically maps toxic waste flows for geological and ecological studies, and on Sept. 11, Pavri and her colleagues were in Atlanta conducting research for the Environmental Protection Agency. After the attacks, Pavri鈥檚 airplane was grounded along with the rest of the country鈥檚 commercial and private air fleets. That was until the Federal Emergency Management Agency negotiated with the FAA to fly the AVRIS team to New York. Pavri operated the 1,000-pound device, which peers out of the bottom of the airplane and collects its data from reflected sunlight.

鈥淲e all felt honored to be able to do something to help rather than feel helpless and angry and sad,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t was our way of dealing with it and feeling like at least we were contributing something to make a difference.鈥 Pavri and her colleagues stayed in Manhattan during their missions, which allowed them to view the devastation at ground level. At Union Square, the air was thick with the fragrance of burning candles that served as a memorial to the thousands of casualties. The facade of Saks Fifth Avenue, meanwhile, was draped in black and covered with American flags and floral arrangements. 鈥淢issing鈥 posters were plastered wherever there was an open surface. 鈥淭here was a strange mixture of people trying to get back to normal and signs that people weren鈥檛 getting back to normal,鈥 Pavri says. 鈥淓veryone was looking for some way to process this.鈥

鈥淚 love New York and I love my job. There鈥檚 no other place I want to be.鈥

In the days preceding Sept. 11, Jean Won ate bagel sandwiches and drank fresh squeezed orange juice in the eateries housed on the World Trade Center鈥檚 plaza. Her new routine is anything but convenient. The U.S. Attorney's Office has moved to temporary digs in Brooklyn, and Won鈥檚 30-minute commute now takes an hour and a half. But the tragedy hasn鈥檛 deterred her. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if I can ever necessarily accept what happened., but we have to go back to work and deal with it,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 love New York and I love my job. There鈥檚 no other place I want to be.鈥

After returning home to California, Kevin Danni, who works in Morgan Stanley鈥檚 Burbank office, visited South Pasadena firefighters and heaped praise on their profession. 鈥淚 look at each day differently now,鈥 Danni says. 鈥淓very day is a great day. I feel really blessed that I was able to come back and embrace my family. A lot of life鈥檚 little problems seem so miniscule now. I really do have such a new, positive outlook. I wake up and think, 鈥楬ow can I not give 110 percent today?鈥 It鈥檚 not even a question.鈥

Alumni photos by C. Taylor Crothers.