Las Vegas Sun

April 25, 2024

Rubble is seen Friday, March 14, 2014, two days after a natural gas explosion leveled two apartment buildings in New York. Using sound devices to probe for voices and telescopic cameras to peer into small spaces, workers searching a pile of rubble from a gas explosion in the East Harlem section of Manhattan continued to treat it as a rescue operation, holding onto the possibility of finding survivors from a blast that brought down two apartment buildings and killed at least eight people.

Julio Cortez / AP

Rubble is seen Friday, March 14, 2014, two days after a natural gas explosion leveled two apartment buildings in New York. Using sound devices to probe for voices and telescopic cameras to peer into small spaces, workers searching a pile of rubble from a gas explosion in the East Harlem section of Manhattan continued to treat it as a rescue operation, holding onto the possibility of finding survivors from a blast that brought down two apartment buildings and killed at least eight people.