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Japan's top telecommunications company, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp., set up an emergency phone line and a special Internet site for people to leave messages for family and friends. Up to 90 percent of calls were being restricted to prevent telecom equipment from being overloaded, NTT spokeswoman Mai Kariya said. The company was checking on damage to towers and cables. Osamu Akiya, 46, was working in the office of a Tokyo trading company when the quake sent bookshelves and computers crashing to the floor and opened cracks in the walls. "I've been through many earthquakes, but I've never felt anything like this," he said. A handful of subway lines resumed service after a six-hour outage, and officials said they would run all night, past their usual hours. When Tokyo trains suffer rare problems, they usually are running again within an hour. So, many people initially waited at stations. But when the railway company announced a suspension of nearly all service for the day, crowds poured into the streets.
City officials offered more than 60 government offices, university campuses and other locations for stranded commuters to spend the night. The Tokyo suburb of Yokohama offered blankets for people who wanted to sleep at the community's main concert hall. "There has never been a big earthquake like this, when all the railways stopped, and so this is a first for us," Yokohama Arena official Hideharu Terada said. "People are trickling in. They are all calm."
[Associated
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