Please Note:
This profile was automatically generated using 3 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 3 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
Web References
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1. WTC Brings Nation Together
www.ehrbar.com/9-9-02.html - [Cached]Published on: 9/9/2002 Last Visited: 9/7/2007
Joe Carsky, chief engineer of Tully Construction Co. Inc., Flushing, NY, one the four prime contractors for the initial work at Ground Zero, told CEG:
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"Joe [Johanna's boyfriend] is down there looking for her," John, who had called me from his office, continued.
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After emerging from a subway exit shortly before 9 a.m. on Sept. 11, Joe had seen the first plane exploding into the North Tower. He had called Johanna on his cell phone, but there was no answer.
10:30 a.m. - I drove to John's home about four miles away. Ruth met me at the door. She was alone and very calm.
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But Joe, searching and questioning everywhere he could during the chaos, called during the afternoon that he had been unable to find Johanna or anyone who had seen her. She had been wearing a white T-shirt, gray slacks, and a black sweater around her shoulders.
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Johanna's younger brother John, 21, as well as Joe, his parents, and Johanna's three roommates, joined us. -
2. WTC Brings Nation Together
www.ehrbar.com/9-26-01.html - [Cached]Published on: 9/26/2001 Last Visited: 9/7/2007
"I call the footprint where the towers fell the Heart of Darkness," said Joe Carsky, chief engineer for Tully Construction Co. Inc., Flushing, NY, one of the prime contractors on the excavation and demolition for the New York Department of Design and Construction (DDC).
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Carsky said at least 1,000 construction and rescue personnel, plus at least another 2,000 support people, are at Ground Zero.
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Carsky said contractors have proceeded forward from north, south, east and west until equipment reached the former faces of the towers, where heavier cranes can begin lifting material from the huge piles.
Engineers carefully studied the structural elements beneath the perimeter, particularly on the East face, to be sure heavier cranes don't collapse the supports. Carsky said this has required building some structural steel support platforms. -
3. fe.pennnet.com
fe.pennnet.com/News/Display_Ne - [Cached]Published on: 6/8/2002 Last Visited: 6/8/2002
"It was very emotional," said Joe Carsky, the chief engineer for Tully Construction.
The steel column will remain at Ground Zero until tomorrow, when it will be removed as part of the final ceremony to commemorate the end of the recovery work.
The column will be stored in a field at Kennedy Airport with other WTC artifacts for eventual inclusion in a memorial or museum display.
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