Times Square Recruiting Station Back To Biz As Usual Today.

My favorite Times Square photo. We own Times square. Domestic terrorists do not, and they belong in prison.
Bash Note: This article is from the New York Times. You would not believe all of the biased bullshit I had to whack out of it. Read this article, then click the link at the bottom of this page and go read the article as it originally appeared.
Makes me sick:
The scene of the crime on Friday morning had no yellow “crime scene†tape blocking off the sidewalk, and no locks on the door. The door had been so badly shattered that it had to be removed.
A day after a small explosion shook the military recruiting station in Times Square, the station commander, Sgt. James V. Latella, 32, offered his assessment: The station has “absolutely gone back to normal, sir.â€
Outside the recruiting station, which is an 18-wheeler-size box of gunmetal gray, two New York City police officers walked in small circles. Several others patrolled surrounding streets.
Nearby, a television news truck was preparing for a broadcast. Passengers pointed at the station from cars stopped at the red light. Tourists milled around and took photographs of their friends with the damaged station in the background.
Perhaps the most famous photograph ever taken there, not far from the bombed station, is of a sailor planting a kiss on a swooning nurse on V-J Day in 1945. During Fleet Week every year, Navy officers and sailors in dress whites get hearty handshakes from admiring civilians.
The station reopened shortly after 5 p.m. on Thursday. On any given day, said Sergeant Latella — a 12-year veteran from Irwin, Pa. — the number of people who walk in depends on the weather. He said it could be about two dozen on a good day.
Of the six recruiting stations in Manhattan, the Times Square station — just below where the ball drops on New Year’s Eve — is the most successful, averaging 20 or more recruits a year for the Army alone, said Capt. Charles Jaquillard, 31, a 10-year Army veteran from Toledo, Ohio, who supervises the six stations.
By 6 a.m., Captain Jaquillard was at the station, watching as investigators combed the scene for evidence. “For whatever reason this was done,†he said, “there are other ways to get a point across. Whatever that point was, whether it was to stop our recruiting operations or something else, obviously it was a fruitless effort.â€
After the police left in the afternoon, Captain Jaquillard deployed two soldiers at the station because the shattered door had been removed. There were computers and other valuable equipment inside, as well as personnel records. The door was replaced in the afternoon.
Recruiting goes on, he emphasized, comparing the bombing to a spell of bad weather. The station is normally open Monday through Saturday, from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
“People come in because they’ve got interest in military service,†he said. “It’s like any other job interview — whether it’s raining or snowing, it doesn’t really matter, does it?â€
To volunteer for the United States armed forces, an applicant can be as young as 17, with a parent’s permission, but most applicants are in their early 20s, Captain Jaquillard said.
One possible recruit, who seemed barely in her teens, left the station and was immediately surrounded by reporters seeking comment. She smiled, said nothing and walked away.





