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Two buildings near the World Trade Center rubble appeared to partially collapse yesterday, causing rescue workers to run for cover and spreading fears that they may fall. The top 10 floors of 1 Liberty Plaza, a 54-story building on the south side of the World Trade Center, seemed to give way about 2 p.m., as the building loudly creaked and debris began to fly. "We were down in ground zero,ing to look for people. There was some sort of explosion and we got the hell out of there," said ironworker Sean Woods, 38, of the Bronx, a member of Local 197. "You could hear debris shifting and creaking. There was all kinds of stuff falling." But Brookfield Properties, the company that owns the building and others in the area, insisted that 1 Liberty Plaza was in no danger of collapsing, and that any necessary repairs would be cosmetic. "None of our properties have structural issues, including 1 Liberty Plaza," said Bruce Flatt, president of Brookfield. Richard Tomasetti, a structural engineer hired by the city's Department of Design and Construction, called reports of the buildings' imminent collapse "totally unfounded." Still, rescue workers took no chances and ran from the building. A short while later, rescuers working near the Millennium Hilton ran for cover as the gleaming glass tower began to falter. The 561-room hotel on Church St. that opened in 1992, has been listing dangerously to one side since sustaining heavy damage. Built by developer Peter Kalikow, the hotel offered spectacular views of the Hudson River and Brooklyn Bridge and features a $2,500-a-night presidential suite and glass-enclosed indoor pool. While the 110-story twin towers toppled soon after they were hit, other buildings in the area have fallen since then. Seven World Trade Center, a 45-story building, came down late Tuesday. On Wednesday, 5 World Trade Center fell. Formerly known as Merrill Lynch Plaza, 1 Liberty Plaza was built in 1972 and replaced the Singer Tower, the tallest building ever demolished in Manhattan. The building housed more than 200 businesses, including Prudential Securities Inc., Aetna International and the Bank of Indonesia. Yesterday, the building looked like a rickety skeleton with nearly all its windows blown out.
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Elated Arab-Americans took to the streets and others dropped long-held fears of Saddam Hussein's reach yesterday as they celebrated the collapse of his ruthless regime. In Dearborn, Mich., home to the nation's largest Arab community, Arab and Iraqi-Americans paraded past the Karbala Islamic Center waving American and Iraqi flags, as dozens of drivers honked their horns. People climbed on car roofs and screamed in Arabic, "Saddam is dead, long live Iraq" and "Hey, hey, Saddam, Saddam, where are you going to escape to?" At one point, the crowd pelted a large cardboard drawing of Saddam with pieces of candy, then jumped on it and eventually tore it in half. "Today is my birthday," roared Ali Al-Ghazali, 46, who was born in southern Iraq. "But it's also the birthday of all Iraqis." In Jersey City, Bashir Mohsen let his name be published for the first time, no longer fearful that the Iraqi dictator's ruthless police would harm relatives living in Baghdad. "This is great," declared Mohsen, who immigrated from Iraq 20 years ago and runs a computer business. "I'm glad troops] gave up and realized he is not what he said he was. I can't wait for them to put a new government in." In south Paterson, N.J., where many Arab-Americans live, Jabbar Al-Roumi, a former Iraqi soldier from Basra, said he was ready to go back. "The future is better now," he said. "I will go back, get married, work again and be in love. That's it. Very good." 'Killing for oil' Not everyone was so ecstatic. Hussein Al-Rikabi, a former Iraqi soldier who lives in Paterson, took no joy from Saddam's downfall. "They're killing everyone they see," he said of the coalition forces. "How can you be happy about killing? They're killing for oil and for money. Where is the liberation?" Hadi Jawad, vice president and board member of the Dallas Peace Center, agreed. "They have resorted to war, to violence, to killing thousands of Iraqi civilians," he said of the coalition. "The means they have resorted to to accomplish the removal of the regime is unconscionable. It's a criminal act." Other Iraqi-Americans, however, clearly enjoyed the television images of U.S. Marines and Iraqis toppling a 20-foot statue of Saddam in Baghdad's Firdos Square. "It's beautiful," said Dr. Ithaar Derweesh, 32, a Cleveland surgeon whose family left Iraq 23 years ago. "I cried tears of joy." Salah Flaih, who decorated his Manchester, N.H., convenience store with American flags and a life-size cardboard cutout of President Bush, hopped up and down with glee as he watched the television images. "Oh, the Iraqi people are happy now," said Flaih, 49. "It's my liberation day."
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The reputed head of a Brooklyn construction coalition was charged yesterday with fatally shooting a member of a rival group Wednesday, police said. Ernest White, 34, who police say leads a group called Brooklyn Fight Back, was picked up at his Canarsie home several hours after Eric Riddick was gunned down at a Queens construction site. White was charged with second-degree murder and illegal possession of a weapon, police said. Witnesses told police that White pumped six shots into Riddick's prone body. The clash that ended with Riddick's death began when the two minority coalitions squared off at a Queens Village site Wednesday morning over who had the right to demand jobs from the contractor. Harsh words led to a fistfight involving 15 to 20 coalition members and ended with White's shooting Riddick at close range, police said. Riddick, 23, of Brooklyn, belonged to a coalition called Queens Minority and also was affiliated with an outfit called Black Power, the source said. "They were fighting over who got the extortion money, who got the job," a police source said. Meanwhile, Queens detective Sgt. Michael Pascarelli of the 105th Precinct, who accidentally shot himself in the right thigh outside White's apartment building on Paerdegat 30th St., was in stable condition at Kings County Hospital and was expected to be released soon. One of the two groups that clashed early Wednesday at 214th St. and 91st Ave., where a city-hired contractor, H.H.M. Associates, is replacing water mains, is well known to cops. Brooklyn Fight Back was founded in the 1970s to battle discrimination in the construction industry but evolved into a thug organization whose sole purpose is to shake down contractors by threatening to disrupt their work, according to police and court records. Its founder, Edward (Calie) Harrison of White Plains, also ran a contracting business and is being sought by the feds for nonpayment of more than $100,000 in back taxes. White, who has prior arrests for robbery and gun possession, is a long-time coalition member, the police source said. Riddick also had a rap sheet, but the details of his prior arrests were not available last night.
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