The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 16, 2003, Image 14

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NATION
THE BATTALION
Thursday, October 16J
Staten Island ferry crashes
at least 10 reported killed
By Michael Weissenstein
THE BATTALION
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NEW YORK — A Staten
Island ferry slammed into a pier
as it was docking Wednesday,
killing at least 10 people, tearing
off victims’ limbs and sending
passengers leaping into the
water, officials said. At least 34
people were injured.
The 310-foot ferry, carrying
about 1,500 passengers, plowed
into the enormous wooden pil
ings on the Staten Island end of
its run from Manhattan, reduc
ing the front of the mighty boat
to a mass of shattered planks,
broken glass and twisted steel.
The crash happened on a
windswept afternoon, with gusts
over 40 mph and the water in
New York Harbor very choppy.
“Everyone just jumped for
their lives,” rider Bob Carroll
told TV station NY1. “It was
like an absolute horror. ... The
whole side of the boat looked
like an opener on a can.”
The ship’s captain fled and
was tracked down by police at
his Staten Island home, said a
high-ranking police source,
speaking on condition of
anonymity. The ferry’s crew will
be interviewed and tested for
drugs and alcohol, Mayor
Michael Bloomberg said.
At least 10 people were
killed and 34 injured, the mayor
said, making it New York’s
worst mass-transit accident in at
least a generation. Some bodies
were accidentally counted
twice, leading to an initial report
by city officials that 14 people
were dead.
Firefighters picked their way
through the debris aboard the
ship, the Andrew J. Barberi,
looking for victims, and Coast
Guard divers searched the water.
At least one body was recovered
from the water.
The cause of the crash was
not immediately known,
although Bloomberg suggested
the heavy wind as a possibility.
The National Transportation
Safety Board convened an acci
dent investigation team, which
will look at the weather, among
other possible factors.
“The ferry was coming too
fast,” said witness William
Gonzalez, who lives in a nearby
apartment complex. “They had
no control to stop the boat.”
Commuters were trapped in
piles of debris aboard the 22-
year-old ferry, and victims
screamed and dove for cover as
metal crunched into wood just
before the start of the evening
rush hour, tearing girders, splin
tering planks and ripping a huge
hole in the right side of the
three-level, bright-orange ves
sel, which has a capacity of
6,000 passengers.
“People who were sitting
there as the ferry docked were
hit by the pilings that came
through the side of the boat," the
mayor said. The pilings hit on
the ferry’s main deck, crashing
into the windows that ordinarily
afford a postcard view of the
Statue of Liberty.
The five-mile trip between
Deadly feny crash
A Staten Island passengerfen)
slammed into wooden pilings
along the side of a dock as it
arrived at the St. George Ferg
Terminal after crossing NewYoii
Harbor before the start of the
evening rush hour Wednesday
Passenger
ferry crashed
into dock; at
least 12 killed
NEW
NEW
JERSEY
WhiteM
■ Feny
Teimni
Staten
Island
Brooklyn
Lower
Mew York
Buy
SOURCES: Associated Press: ESRI tf
Staten Island and Manhattan nor
mally takes 25 minutes. A fa
ride on the Staten Island Ferry
one of the city’s most beloved
attractions to New Yorkers and
tourists alike, giving visitors i
Holly wood-style view of
Manhattan's skyscrapers.
The seven boats that
the Staten Island Ferry
carry 70,000 commuters a day
between Staten Island and lower
Manhattan. The boats make KM
daily trips between the two bor
oughs. The Andrew J. Barben
travels at about 18 mph.
Service was suspended on all
Staten Island ferries after the
accident.
Talk to a Mentor. They’re here for you.
Call (979) 845-6900 or visit http://mentors.tamu.edu.
Retail sales dip by 0.2 percent
in September as buyers refrain
Volume
Sti
By Jeannine Aversa
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Retail sales
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TEL: 979-764-0601, Dominik Location
11-31-03
Offer Valid
Through
WASHINGTON — America’s
shoppers took a bit of a breather in
September, dropping sales at the
nation’s retailers by 0.2 percent.
Although the dip in retail sales
reported by the Commerce
Department on Wednesday was
the first since April, it came after
consumers, aided by President
Bush’s third tax cut, went on a
buying binge in July and August.
Retail sales went up by a
strong l.4 percent in July and
then by 1.2 percent in August,
according to revised figures.
The increase in August’s sales
turned out to be two times big
ger than the 0.6 percent rise that
the government first reported a
month ago, and the advance in
July also was slightly larger than
previously estimated.
The Federal Reserve’s survey
of business conditions in
September and early October
found that the economy picked
up speed.
“Consumer spending gen
erally strengthened, though
most districts report a recent
pullback in auto sales,” the
Fed survey said. Eight of the
Here is a look at retail
sales, seasonally
adjusted.
$320.6
billion
320 billion
300
280
260
240
220
200
ni
Change from
previous month
j Sept. -0.2%
August 1.2%
A M JIA S O N IF JW A MJ AS
2002 2003
SOURCE: Department of Commerce AF
Fed’s 12 regions reported
improving sales trends. Those
eight regions were: New York;
Philadelphia; Chicago; St.
Louis; Minneapolis; Kansas
City; Dallas; and San
Francisco. Retailers, the Fed
said, are generally anticipating
modest sales gains for the hol
iday shopping season.
President George W. Bush
said the tax cuts are helping the
economy. “We’re overcoming
the challenges we have faced,”
he said in California. “Our
economy is growing.”
On Wall Street, thougli,
stocks moved lower. The Dow
Jones industrials lost 9.93 points
to close at 9,803.05.
In the monthly retail report,
economists were predicting that
the brisk performance registered
in July and August just couldn’t
be maintained in September;
they had forecast a sales dip of
0.1 percent.
Excluding sales of automo
biles, which fell by 1.6 percent
in September, sales by all other
merchants went up by a modest
0.3 percent — close to econo
mists’ forecast for a 0.4 percent
increase in that category.
“I actually think this isavei)
encouraging report. It certainly
doesn’t show consumers
pulling back in any material
way,” said Bill Cheney,
economist at John Hancocl
Financial Services. “It pretty
much says that despite all the
gloom in the job market, con
sumers are still spending."
Consumers have kept theii
pocketbooks and wallets suffi
ciently open since the 2001 reces
sion to keep the economy g
And, they will play an important
role in determining the strength of
the economic recovery.
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While m
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