-I AMERICA IN CRISIS The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 12, 2001- 9 Americans watch in horror as TV captures attacks NEW YORK (AP) - Television became a national gathering place on a terror-filled day, replaying unimaginable scenes of a plane crashing into the World Trade Center and its skyscrapers collapsing. Newspapers rushed out special editions. Many headlines said simply: "TERROR." When the first of two planes hit the Man- hattan landmark shortly before 9 a.m., it set in motion an extraordinary effort by the media to tell the story. Catastrophes unfolded as fast as televi- sion could detail them: a plane plunging into the Pentagon, a crash in Pennsylvania, buildings evacuated across the country. Commentators tried to keep calm. "This; is the most serious attack on the United States since Pearl Harbor," said NBC's Tom Brokaw. Newspapers across the country put out extras. For The Morning Star of Wilming- ton, N.C., it was the first special edition since the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy. The Wall Street Journal evacuated its headquarters four blocks from the World Trade Center, but planned today's edition, with staffers, working from home or a technical center in New Jersey. Internet traffic slowed under the demand of people seeking information online. The Internet search engine Google directed news seekers to get off the computer and turn on radio or television. With television cameras trained on a smoking tower of the World Trade Center Sept. 11, 2 after the first attack, viewers were able to see the chilling sight of the second, plane crashing into the other tower and exploding in a fireball. Television also carried, live, the collapse of both towers into a pile of rubble. As the morning progressed, networks showed footage of New Yorkers running from the scene, some bloodied or covered with ash. Streets looked white with ash and soot, a scene Brokaw likened to "a nuclear winter." A victim was seen hurtling through the air from the World Trade Center in footage shown on CBS. The landing was obscured. CNN showed a flight-path simulator that detailed how a plane headed west from Boston took a sudden, sharp turn south near Albany and headed down the Hudson Valley toward New York City. Don Dahler, an ABC News correspon- dent, was in his apartment four blocks from the World Trade Center when he heard the first plane hit. He called "Good Morning America" and was immediately put on the air. , "It sounded a lot like a military missile," Dahler said. "There was a high, shrieking sound followed by a roar then a huge explosion. I knew immediately something terrible had happened." The major television networks suspended competition, agreeing to share all footage gathered during the terrorist attacks and their aftermath, on suggestion of "60 Min- 001: A tim utes" creator Don Hewitt. A shaken Ashleigh Banfield on MSNBC described debris showering around her. CNBC correspondent Ron Insana, his suit smeared with gray ash, told how he ran for cover and hid in a parked car when a tower collapsed. "I've never seen anythinglike this," a breathless and sobbing Banfield said. "This whole place looks like a war zone. When the cloud came out I could feel the force of it. CBS News correspondent Carol Marin was a block away from the World Trade Center when the second tower collapsed. A nearby firefighter grabbed her and they ran away, Marin kicking off her heels. She was thrown against a wall, the firefighter pro- tecting her with his body as smoke and debris blinded them. "I am grateful to be alive and am awestruck at the people who are down there," Marin said. A Fox News Channel producer who is trained as an emergency technician, Dan Cohen, said he rushed to the scene and twice had to run for his life as the towers collapsed. He was later stationed at a makeshift hospital at Chelsea Piers, on the television set where the NBC drama "Law & Order" is produced. . "It now looks like the show 'M.A.S.-I.,"' Cohen said.' One expert on terrorism suggested that the second plane to hit the World Trade eline ofth< Center was timed deliberately to be cap- tured by television cameras already focused on the buildings after the initial attack. "It was meant to be right before our eyes," said Joan Deppa, a Syracuse Univer- sity professor and author of "The Media and Disasters: Pan Am 103." "This was staged like it was a TV show." Most local New York TV stations, except for WCBS, were knocked off the air when their transmitters atop the World Trade Center were destroyed. All the stations' signals, however, could be seen over cable systems in the New York area. It was not immediately clear how many New Yorkers were blocked from television coverage of the events. Roughly two-thirds of the nation's television homes get cable or satellite. CNN aired videophone pictures yester- day evening of explosions in Kabul, Afghanistan. A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the U.S. was not attacking and that the fighting appeared to be rocket attacks by Afghan rebels opposing the ruling Taliban. With so many events happening at once, Fox News Channel ran a continous crawl of news bulletins summarizingthe series of events. C-SPAN took phone calls from shaken citizens. One caller from California said: "This is a sign to America: We think we are the strongest country and they hit us; they knew where to hit us." "It was meant to be right before our eyes. ... This was staged like, it was a TV show." - Prof. Joan Deppa Syracuse University, author of "The Media and Disasters: Pan Am 103" Other networks suspended normal pro- gramming. The ESPN sports networks showed ABC News reports, VH I showed CBS News programming, TNT and TBS showed CNN coverage.-News networks dis- pensed with commercials for continuous coverage. The shopping networks QVC and ShopNBC network went dark. "We share with our customers and employees, our sadness as well as our thoughts and prayers," ShopNBC said in a rnessage on the screen. CNN lost its main transmitters. Aaron Brown anchored the network coverage from Penn Station, his back to where the World Trade Center had been. MSNBC's Brian Williams took note of the city's tragically altered skyline: "As it was more than 30 years ago, the Empire State Building is.once again the city's tallest structure. terrorism that shocked the nation NEW YORK (AP) - This is how yesterday's mayhem unfolded: At about 8:45 a.m., a hijacked airliner crashed into the north tower of the trade center, the 25-year-old, glass-and-steel complex that was once the world's tallest. Clyde Ebanks, an insurance company vice presi- dent, was at a meeting on the 103rd floor of the south tower when his boss said, "Look at that!" He turned to see a plane slam into the other tower. "I just heard the building rock," said Peter Dicer- bo, a bank employee on the 47th floor. "It knocked me on the floor. It sounded like a big roar, then the building started swaying. That's what really scared me." The enormity of the disaster was just sinking in when 18 minutes later, the south tower also was hit by a plane. "All this stuff started falling and all this smoke was coming through. People were screaming, falling, and jumping out of the windows," said Jennifer Brickhouse, 34, from Union, N.J. The chaos was just beginning. Workers stumbled down scores of flights, their clothing torn and their lungs filled with smoke and dust. John Axisa said he ran outside and watched peo- ple jump opt of the first building; then there was a second explosion, and he felt the heat on the back of his neck. Donald Burns, 34, was being evacuated from the 82nd floor when he saw four people in the stairwell. "I tried to help them but they didn't want anyone to touch them. The fire had melted their skin. Their clothes were tattered," he said. Worse was to come. At 9:50, one tower collapsed, sending debris and dust cascading to the ground. At 10:30, the other tower crumbled. Glass doors shattered, police and firefighters ush- ered people into subway stations and buildings. The air was black, from the pavement to the sky. The dust and ash were inches deep along the streets. Giuliani said it was believed the aftereffects of the plane crashes eventually brought the buildings down, not planted explosive devices. Hyman Brown, a University of Colorado civil engineering professor and the construction manager for the World Trade Center, speculated that flames fueled by thousands of gallons of aviation fuel melt- ed steel supports. "This building would have stood had a plane or a force caused by a plane smashed into it," he said. "But steel melts, and 24,000 gallons of aviation fluid melted the steel. Nothing is designed or will be designed to withstand that fire." At mid-afternoon, Giuliani said 1,500 "walking wounded" had been shipped to Liberty State Park in New Jersey by ferry and tugboat, and 750 others were taken to New York City hospitals, among them 150 in critical condition. Well into the night, a steady stream of boats con- tinued to arrive in the park. "Every 10 minutes another boat with 100 to 150 people on it pulls up," said Mayor Glenn Cunningham. "I have a feeling this is going to go on for several days." Bridges and tunnels were closed to all but pedes- trians. Subways were shut down for much of the day; commuter trains were not running. Meanwhile, at about 9:30 a.m., an airliner hit the Pentagon - the five-sided headquarters of the American military. "There was screaming and pan- demonium," said Terry Yonkers, an Air Force civil- ian employee at work inside the building. The military boosted security across the country to the highest levels, sending Navy ships to New York and Washington to assist with air defense and medical needs. A half-hour after the Ventagon attack, a United Airlines Flight 93, a Boeing 757 jetliner en route from Newark, N.J., to San Francisco, crashed about 80 miles southeast of Pittsburgh. Airline officials said the other three planes that crashed were American Airlines Flight 11, a Boe- ing 767 from Boston to Los Angeles, apparently the first to hit the trade center; United Airlines Flight 175, also a Boeing 767 from Boston to Los Angeles, which an eyewitness said was the second to hit the skyscrapers; and American Airlines Flight 77, a Boeing 757 en route from Washing- ton-Dulles to Los Angeles that a source said hit the Pentagon Felix Novelli, who lives in Southampton, N.Y., was in Nashville with his wife for a World War II reunion. He was trying to fly home to New York when the attacks occurred. "I feel like going to war again. No mercy," he said. "This is December 7th happening all over again. We_ have to come together like '41, go after them." The attack on Pearl Harbor claimed the lives of 2,390 Americans, most of them servicemen. UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN PLATTEVILLE Study Abroad Programs *One of the "Top 25" in The Students Guide to the est Study Abroad Programs Learn Your Way Around The World " Study abroad in England, Italy, Japan, or Spain* " Courses in liberal arts and international business " Fluency in a foreign language not required " Home-stays with meals " Field trips " Financial aid applies (except for summer session) Program Costs: For tuition, room, partial board and field trips per semester (for Wisconsin residents/non-residents) " In London, England: $5,675/$5,975 " In Rome, Italy: $8,3(.X/$8,600 " In Nagasaki, Japan: $5,875/$6,175 " In Seville, Spain: $6,900/$7,200 Application deadlines: " April 1 for summer session * April 30 for fall semester " October 15 for spring semester Toll free: 1-800-342-1725 E-mail: StudyAbroad@uwplatt.edu Web: www.uwplatt.edu/-studyabroad Learn Taekwondo at The University of Michigan the michigan daily MI FOOTBALL (8 tixs) AT WISCONSIN. 11/17. $50 each. 608-298-9181. 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Help paying tuition costs? Call toll free for info 1-888-757-1833. DO YOU LOVE BASKETBALL? Do you miss playing? We need basketball players! Wanted: 3-5 men to practice and scrimmage with the U of M women's basketball team. High school experience is best, must be enrolled at UM. If interested call Eileen at 763-1443. GET A VISA CARD that earns you FREE Airline Tickets, Clothes, Music, etc. Online approval in 30 sec.; www.get-creditcard.com THE MICHIGAN WOMEN'S Basketball Team is having walk on tryouts October 17th, 2:30 p.m. at Crisler A-ena. To participate you must be a U or M student and must bring a signed physical. For more info call Angela Jackson at 647-4219. VOLUNTEER MANAGERS NEEDED for women's basketball. For more info. contact Moll^ urray at 647-1272. -AMR 4 1 L z IDI I We welcome men and women of all ages, from total beginners to experienced martial artists. Students will learn the basic motions of Taekwondo (stances, footwork, blocking, punching, kicking), partner exercises, sparring, self-defense, and forms, which are memorized combinations of blocks, punches and kicks. Students may test for their next belt rank at the end of each semester. Class may be repeated indefinitely. " Walk-ins receive 20% discount with valid U of M student I.D. (non-organiza- tional, non-business ads only) " All ads must be prepaid unless prior billing privileges have been established. " The liability of TMD for failure to publish an advertisement for any reason, or for publishing incorrect ads in a specified issue shall be limited to publishing in a subsequent issue and not for more than the cost of one incorrect inser- tion. TMD will be responsible for classified advertisement errors only if noti- fied by 5:00 p.m. on the first day of publication. - No personal checks will be accepted from April 1ito May 1. Classified Advertising Rates - $3.70/line for the first day, $1.25/line for each additional, consecutive day - Frequency/Bulk contracts available 1 day 2 days 3 days 4 days 5 days 2 lines 7.40 9.90 12.40 14.90 17.40 3 lines 11.10 14.85 18.60 22.35 26.10 M .. wA AOn da "n7A O oan_ AA 8 I CLASS LOCATION: 2275 CCRB (Central Campus Recreation Building) Class Schedule: Div. 884/Course 145-167/001 (BEGINNER) TUE/THU 5:00-6:00pm Div. 884/Course 145-168/001 (INTERMEDIATE) TUE/THU 6:00-7:00pm Here's how to join the Taekwondo class: REGISTER IN PERSON with the U-Move Fitness Office (1271 CCRB) from 8:30am until 4:30pm, Monday through Friday. (Web registration is not available.) 2 ROOMMATES NEEDED, Male or female. 4 bedroom house. Available immediately. Near Hill St. $350/month + utilities. Call Judith 323-1523. FOUR FEMALES want roommate for Hill apartment. Available now. $340/mo. plus