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...Lutnick and the majority of Cantor's 1,200 employees have worked hard not to lose sight of the victims' families. On Oct. 1, 2001, each family received a $5,000 check and promised continuation of health benefits. Today, Lutnick's sister Edie runs the Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund, which has donated $185 million to the victims' families. "What we've found is it's not the money, it's that they feel that we know they exist, that we care about them, that we love them," he says. And September 11 is "charity day" - all of that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cantor Fitzgerald's CEO Five Years Later | 9/8/2006 | See Source »

Howard Lutnick had a daunting road ahead of him after Sept. 11, 2001. The chairman and CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald, which lost 658 employees in the terrorist attacks, had to manage his grief for his lost coworkers, including his brother, Gary, but at the same time rebuild his company. Lutnick was taking his son to school for his first day of kindergarten when the planes hit the World Trade Center, where Cantor Fitzgerald occupied floors 101 and 103-105 of the North Tower. Since that day, he says he's made it his mission to help the victims' families...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cantor Fitzgerald's CEO Five Years Later | 9/8/2006 | See Source »

...five years, Lutnick transformed a company that had lost more than half its employees into a success. The company has now become two - Cantor Fitzgerald, an institutional brokerage company, and Bernard Gerald Cantor, a wholesale brokerage business. In August, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York added Cantor Fitzgerald as a primary dealer permitted to trade U.S. Government Securities with the New York...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cantor Fitzgerald's CEO Five Years Later | 9/8/2006 | See Source »

...away from the big cities and reveal other facets of the nation's character. Tom Dusevic met Peter Burton, who turns grass into T-bones in the Kimberley; Elizabeth Keenan visited the kitchen of Warrant Officer John Benstead, 22 years an Army cook and now based in Townsville; Michael Fitzgerald tracked down Doug Pekin, a dogger who maintains 500 km of dingo-proof fence on the Nullarbor; Daniel Williams joined hands at a Sunday service with the dwindling faithful of Darnum, Victoria; and Rory Callinan met the crocodile-shooting, yarn-spinning "Wolf" Arneth of Normanton, Queensland. Our stories are brought...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Continental Drifters | 8/7/2006 | See Source »

...away from the big cities and reveal other facets of the nation's character. Tom Dusevic met Peter Burton, who turns grass into T-bones in the Kimberley; Elizabeth Keenan visited the kitchen of Warrant Officer John Benstead, 22 years an Army cook and now based in Townsville; Michael Fitzgerald tracked down Doug Pekin, a dogger who maintains 500 km of dingo-proof fence on the Nullarbor; Daniel Williams joined hands at a Sunday service with the dwindling faithful of Darnum, Victoria; and Rory Callinan met the crocodile-shooting, yarn-spinning "Wolf" Arneth of Normanton, Queensland. Our stories are brought...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Continental Drifters | 8/7/2006 | See Source »

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