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    Thousands grieve for terror attack victims

    MEMORIALS: In services held across the US, relatives, friends and the country's political elite paid respects to those killed in the terrorist strikes on New York and Washington

    AP, NEW YORK
    Monday, Sep 17, 2001, Page 5

    Anna Jager holds her grandson, eight-year-old Kevin Villa, as he cries over his mother's casket during her funeral at Mt Hope Cemetery in Yonkers, New York on Friday. Yamel Jager Merino was an emergency medical technician and was killed at the World Trade Center while trying to rescue others.
    PHOTO: AP
    In the heart of Manhattan, in Washington's suburbs, in saddened towns elsewhere, mourners grieved and reminisced Saturday at the first wave of services for the terror attacks' victims -- a fearless priest, a feisty TV commentator, parents and their preschool daughters.

    A Supreme Court justice spoke at one service, a US senator and former president attended another. Mourners for a three-year-old girl sang her favorite song, I Love You, from the TV show Barney.

    The wistful tributes from relatives, friends and civic leaders will be echoed over and over, at hundreds of churches across the nation, in the coming days, weeks and perhaps months.

    In New York City, at a Roman Catholic church across from a grief-stricken firehouse, bagpipers played the national anthem before the service for the Reverend Mychal Judge, chaplain of the city's fire department. Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, former president Bill Clinton and their daughter, Chelsea, were among the mourners.

    Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas delivered a eulogy in Arlington, Virginia, for Barbara Olson, a lawyer, conservative TV commentator and the wife of US Solicitor General Theodore Olson. She was aboard the jetliner that crashed into the Pentagon on Tuesday.

    "Barbara strode boldly through life, full of cheer and verve, shying from no challenge or obstacle," Thomas said. "She was irrepressible in the fullest sense ... ignoring all torpedoes and charging full speed ahead."

    "This is indeed a sad occasion," the justice added. "One to be repeated thousands of times by our fellow citizens across the country."

    Congressmen, federal judges and others from Washington's political elite were among about 1,500 people gathered for the memorial service at Arlington's St. Thomas More Cathedral.

    Judge, 68, died Tuesday as he was administering last rites to a firefighter mortally injured in the attack on the World Trade Center. The Franciscan priest had removed his fire hat to pray when he was hit by falling debris.

    "He was a saint, a wonderful man," said New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani.

    The funeral Mass for Judge took place at St. Francis of Assisi Church, across from the firehouse of Engine Co 1/Ladder Co 24, which lost seven firefighters in the disaster.

    Visiting the firehouse after the service, Bill Clinton said Judge's vocation was "a rebuke to the act of hatred" that killed so many Americans.

    "So all of us who were here this morning feel a special loss," Clinton said. "We should live his life as an example of what has to prevail."

    On any other day, a firefighter killed in the line of duty would draw hundreds of colleagues in dress blue uniforms and white gloves. But as a testament to the round-the-clock work proceeding in the disaster zone, the firefighters attending Judge's service numbered perhaps 200.

    The Fire Department's losses, estimated at 300, included many of its top leaders. Funeral services were held Saturday for William Feehan, the department's first deputy commissioner, and chief of department Peter Ganci.

    In California, family and friends held memorials for two men believed to have helped thwart hijackers aboard United Flight 93, the plane that crashed in Pennsylvania before reaching a target. Both men had called relatives to tell them of the danger, and to say goodbye.
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