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Dont Ever Forget.. 9/11

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  • Dont Ever Forget.. 9/11



    NEW YORK (AP) -- Family members clutching roses and bearing photos of the relatives they lost on September 11 fell silent early Saturday to mark the third anniversary of the World Trade Center attack.

    The moment of silence at the trade center site was observed at 8:46 a.m., the time American Airlines Flight 11 slammed into the center's north tower on Sept. 11, 2001.

    Similar moments were planned for 9:03, 9:59 and 10:29 a.m. -- the times of the second plane crash and of the collapse of each tower -- as the city began a day of remembrance.

    The names of the 2,749 people lost in the trade center attack were to be read by their parents and grandparents, part of services across the country to remember the attacks.

    Nancy Brandemarti, who has never attended the ground zero remembrance, will read a poem for her son, Nicky Brandemarti, a financial analyst who died just weeks before his 22nd birthday.

    "Every day is hard, but this day is a little bit harder," she said. "This day is just a day to think about him."

    At the Pentagon, where 184 people were killed that day by another hijacked plane, officials were to lay a wreath and observe a moment of silence. In Pennsylvania, bells will toll across the state at the minute the fourth plane went down, killing the 40 passengers and crew killed aboard Flight 93.

    Nationwide, communities will observe September 11 in their own ways, with services at local firehouses, memorial dedications, bell-ringing events and flag ceremonies.

    On the first anniversary of the attacks, dignitaries, community leaders and relatives of victims stood at ground zero and gave voice to the names of the dead. Last year, the children of victims took up that task.

    New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who was scheduled to participate in the ground zero remembrance, said parents and grandparents were asked to lead the ceremony this year because the city wants to "acknowledge their great sacrifice and thank them for helping all of us to shoulder the loss."

    His predecessor, Rudolph Giuliani, New York Gov. George Pataki and New Jersey Gov. Jim McGreevey were also expected to deliver readings.

    During the ceremony, families will be able to walk down a ramp to the footprints of the towers. The area, seven stories below street level, is considered sacred ground by many. It was there that rescue workers combed the debris with rakes, painstakingly searching for the tiniest fragments of human remains.

    Three years later, work still continues to identify the 20,000 pieces of human remains that were recovered. The medical examiner's office has identified about 1,570 victims, or just 60 percent. They do not expect to match the remains of every victim because some remains were too badly damaged to yield readable DNA, and some people were essentially vaporized in the fiery collapse.

    Meanwhile, much has changed at the 16-acre site.

    By the first anniversary, the debris of the 110-story towers had been cleared, but there was little activity there other than construction that had begun to replace commuter train tracks. By the second anniversary, the train station was nearly complete, and it opened last November.

    The redevelopment of the site has seen another major step in the last year -- the laying of the cornerstone for the 1,776-foot-tall Freedom Tower, the skyscraper expected to be completed by 2009. The 20-ton slab of granite was laid at the site in a July 4 ceremony this summer.

    Victims were to be honored at several other events in New York City on Saturday, including a Mass at St. Patrick's Cathedral for fallen firefighters and the dedication of a memorial to Staten Island victims at the ferry terminal across the harbor from the trade center site.

    At sundown, light beams that evoke the twin towers will be projected upward from a lot near the site, to remain on through the night. The memorial lights were first seen on March 11, 2002, to mark six months since the attack, with a plan to light them each year for the anniversary.

  • #2
    :usa:

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    • #3
      Its a shame. They will all be remembered though.

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      • #4
        :usa:

        LD

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        • #5
          Every time I think about 9/11 I feel the same emotions...in the same order

          --Anger


          Then


          --Fear


          Then


          --Sorrow


          But finally and most of all...

          --Pride

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          • #6
            Yesterday I listened to a 6 minute thing on the radio as I was driving to Home DePot that went through some of the radio/tv news blurbs from 9-11 and I cried. I remember exactly how scared I was for the people in the WTC that day. I used to work in the WTC and still knew many people who were there on 9-11, some made it out, some did not including the company I used to work for.

            I was homeschooling my daughter at the time and she had a horseback riding lesson scheduled that day which we didn't show up for. Her teacher decided to take that hour to work on a horse who was young and a bit on the wild side. She got thrown from the horse and broke her arm in several places, had multiple surgeries and it's still not right. I spoke with her yesterday and she invited us over to visit the horses. We stopped my daughters lessons after the accident because we felt it was too dangerous for her. Funny how 9-11 affected so many people in different ways.

            September 11th will never be forgotton by me.

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            • #7
              "The 'Tribute in Light' marks the third anniversary of the attacks on the World Trade Center, as it towers above the Brooklyn Bridge in New York, September 11, 2004."
              Attached Files

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              • #8
                Originally posted by blm
                "The 'Tribute in Light' marks the third anniversary of the attacks on the World Trade Center, as it towers above the Brooklyn Bridge in New York, September 11, 2004."
                this pic is from my deck, taken about 10 minutes ago. http://www.superiormuscle.com/vbulle...threadid=19672

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                • #9
                  lol... I saw it and posted right before this

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                  • #10
                    !

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