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Wednesday, May 6
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Average family gave $50 to charities after terrorist attacks

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Though Sept. 11 fund-raising totals eclipsed any previous U.S. campaign, the funds amount to only a fraction of the total charitable donations for last year. Since Sept. 11, Americans contributed a hefty $1.88 billion to relief funds, according to Giving USA, an annual report for 2001.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU students worked through Pentagon crash

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The television inside Katie Flege's home will remain quiet today. She won't watch the hours of special programming and footage dedicated to the Day Our Nation Saw Terror. She says she can't. Her own memories are vivid enough. "It's important to honor the victims, but I don't want to watch the whole thing on TV," Flege says. "It would depress me too much. I just feel lucky to be here and alive."


The Indiana Daily Student

Searching for a sign

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At 10 a.m. Sept. 11, 2001, then-sophomore Jessie Moskal woke up to begin another day in Bloomington, unaware she would soon learn two airplanes had been hijacked and flown into the World Trade Center where her father had been working on a business trip. Earlier that week, Bill Moskal had been excited to travel to New York, telling his wife and daughter how happy he was to work in the World Trade Center. Bill last talked to his wife about an hour before the first plane hit, the last time any of his family would speak to him.


The Indiana Daily Student

Awakening to tragedy

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Students spent countless hours glued to television sets watching the events of Sept. 11, 2001, unfold. Many were trying to account for family and friends, others were just in shock. No one could believe what was happening. This story relives that day and those tense hours.

The Indiana Daily Student

Blood rush following Sept. 11 has slowed

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Soon after Sept. 11 many Americans were possessed by a spirit of giving. Students at IU and people around the nation rushed to donate time, clothing, money and, for a while, blood. "That entire week was amazing," charge nurse Nancy Ranstead said. "We were completely full. We had people sitting on the floor; we had people lined up out the door. We even had people coming out to volunteer."


The Indiana Daily Student

Students know where they were a year ago

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One year ago today, students awoke to a tragedy of a new kind. Many in the dorms, greek houses and off campus were still asleep when terrorists flew their first plane into the World Trade Center. But it didn't take long for the news to spread.


The Indiana Daily Student

Indiana limestone used to rebuild damaged Pentagon

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Two local limestone companies provided a helping hand this summer by putting their other work aside to help rebuild the damaged wall of the Pentagon. Dubbed the "Phoenix Project," the $700 million restoration makes use of over 2.7 million pounds of Variegated Clear limestone. Over 18,000 square feet of stone was cut into 700 pieces and then transported in 48 flatbed trucks. Since the original 1940 construction of the Pentagon used Indiana limestone, officials sought a company that could provide the same services.


The Indiana Daily Student

One badge binds Bloomington firefighters with New York counterparts

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Three days ago, as the anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks loomed before a jaded nation, the men and women of the Bloomington Township Fire Department took a moment of silence to honor two of their own. They assembled quietly, standing around a limestone marker flanked by an undulating American flag, lost in their own thoughts and memories. In an era of innocence lost, as a country turns its attention to the machines and mechanisms of a war against terror, these quiet heroes took a moment to remember their fallen brothers -- and reflect upon the level of courage their service commands. "People ask me all the time, 'Faron, with your years of experience, would you have gone inside that tower?'" Chief Faron Livingston said. "And I say yes -- of course -- absolutely. When you make a commitment to this life, you have to know you're going to see death and destruction. You just have to go in and do it."


The Indiana Daily Student

A day in a life now changed

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"You're goin,'" says firefighter Sal Aragono. Co-worker Vincent Geloso shakes his head no. "Yes, you awre," he repeats, this time more firmly. "No, I'm gonna be good tonight," Geloso declares. "I'm gonna be good -- I'm not drinking. I'm going to stay home and go to bed early."


The Indiana Daily Student

They deserve answers

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WASHINGTON -- Three thousand victims -- and 3 million questions unanswered. Such was the cry of the hundreds flooding the U.S. Capitol in June voicing support for an independent investigation into the Sept. 11 attacks. It haunted me then, as I watched, a spectator and Senate intern, from the back of the crowd, feeling naked without my tape recorder or piece of media apparatus. And it haunts me yet.


The Indiana Daily Student

Selling out Sept. 11

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NEW YORK -- While "collateral damage" typically refers to additional, physical destruction, the definition has to be expanded to include the major thorn jabbing into New Yorkers' psyche -- street vendors who have set up a cramped camp along the outskirts of Ground Zero. "(Sept. 11) definitely still affects a lot of people in a lot of ways," said Linda Neu, a resident of Woodstock, N.Y. "I feel sad for the people that were there -- people that could even now be in ashes under the stones."


The Indiana Daily Student

New York different this time around

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As our airplane made the gradual turn to the north toward LaGuardia Airport in Queens, it gradually came into view -- the void that used to be the World Trade Center, windows formerly glistening brilliantly in the midday sun. That's when the reality sunk in -- the city I had grown to love had been wounded and was no longer the same. Visiting New York City before Sept. 11, 2001, always brought a great deal of excitement. I would go to visit family and friends, and I would take friends from home to share with them the many wonders of "The City that Never Sleeps." But this visit was different. I boarded an airplane in Indianapolis early one Wednesday morning with two fellow journalists, neither of whom had ever been to NYC. Since I was familiar with the city, I was the designated navigator for our trip.


The Indiana Daily Student

'In times of struggle, art forms reach higher levels'

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NEW YORK -- Union Square Park is nestled near the heart of New York City's Greenwich Village. Students, skaters, bums and executives can be found talking, sleeping or reading the paper all within this acre-and-a-half of green space.


The Indiana Daily Student

Future of Ground Zero remains in question

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NEW YORK -- They come from all over the world to prove to themselves that it's real. Day after day, thousands of tourists shuffle along the viewing platform on the edge of Ground Zero. It's a perpetual wake to mourn the dead and quantify the chaos.


The Indiana Daily Student

This wall does speak

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NEW YORK -- "If tears could build a stairway, and memories a lane, I'd walk right up to heaven and bring you home again." These words are engraved on a gray slab of rock, along with the initials "ASD" scratched into the bottom right-hand corner. It's propped up against a memorial aptly named the "Wall of Tears," located in Battery Park. The wall is hard to miss because it's marked by a police department, fire department and U.S. flag, which are all secured to a tall pole that sways in the breeze but is weighed down by giant, cream-colored concrete blocks with law enforcement emblems painted on the sides.


The Indiana Daily Student

You could never imagine until you've been there

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Ground Zero takes up two city blocks. This statement lacks meaning until you understand the term "concrete jungle" is the most accurate description of New York City you will ever have. In a city where trees are a rare commodity, space is nonexistent and you're more likely to look up and see a skyscraper than the sky, it's a punch in the gut to round the corner to see -- emptiness.


The Indiana Daily Student

How the IDS chronicled 365 days of living in a different world

As journalists, we're always looking for the big story. It seems each year at the Indiana Daily Student brings at least one. In the past few years, those big stories have included the death of Herman B Wells, the installment of a new chancellor and the Final Four. And for Hoosiers, how could a story be any bigger than the firing of Bob Knight?


The Indiana Daily Student

Taking you there and back again

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This story has touched everyone, and we knew it would from the moment we began covering it one year ago. Circled around our tiny television, we were paralyzed like the rest of the IU community. We worked on the story -- one eye on the computer screen, one peering at


The Indiana Daily Student

Blowout is cause for concern

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They're baaaaack. It's unfortunate to say, but the IU football team that has so famously self-imploded in the past made its comeback debut on Saturday against Utah 40-13. That's not even close to being a competitive game. For the Hoosiers that showed so much potential in the win against William and Mary, they certainly showed that giving IU the benefit of the doubt only causes heartache. So without further adieu, here is this week's awards.


The Indiana Daily Student

Switzerland to join U.N.

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GENEVA -- Handing out chocolate and special-issue Swatches, the Swiss kicked off ceremonies Monday to end decades of splendid isolation and follow the rest of the world into the United Nations. But in a final gesture of independence, they made it clear they would not change their flag.