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After the 2001 attacks, many declared, as Rabbi Eric Yoffie did, that "our world has irreparably changed." But even as Americans have grown accustomed to daily life in a more dangerous world, how much has really changed?
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New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg is banning clergy-led prayer at this weekend's events marking the tenth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks. The mayor's office says he wants to avoid disagreements over which religious leaders participate. Some religious groups are calling the ban a sign of prejudice against religion.
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The StoryCorps oral history project marks the anniversary of Sept. 11, 2001, with the voices of those directly affected by the attacks. Together with the National September 11 Memorial and Museum, StoryCorps is collecting stories about each person who died on that day. So far, more than 1,200 interviews have been recorded.
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After the twin towers fell and recovery operations progressed, the New York and New Jersey Port Authority began storing tons of rusted steel beams from…
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Just as Sept. 11 changed the U.S., so, too, did it change Saudi Arabia, an important ally as well as the place where some of the terrorist attacks' seeds were sown. A decade later, Saudi's royal family has disavowed religious extremism while staving off the popular "Arab Spring."
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Madeleine V. Leckie Elementary School in Washington, D.C., has a strong, painful connection to the terrorist attacks. A teacher and a student were aboard the jet that terrorists flew into the Pentagon. And two parents of student also died.
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Bev Marquez, a licensed professional counselor and the Operations Director at Metro Crisis Services in Denver, was one of a number of mental health…
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Numerous benefit concerts are planned both nationally and here in Colorado to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the September 11th, 2001 terrorist…
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It shows — from a distance — smoke rising above the hills of Shanksville, Pa., where the jet came down on Sept. 11, 2001. Thirty three passengers, five flight attendants and two pilots died.
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Ten years after Sept. 11, 2001, we consider other clandestine assaults throughout history, from the Greek myth of the Trojan Horse, to the Sack of Rome, to the Revolutionary War and beyond. Why the element of surprise may have special power to topple civilizations.