6B - The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 17, 2001 SEPTEMBER 11, 2001 4 The media coverage Networks end round-the-clock coverage For journalist in New York, this story really hits home BETH NISSEN CoL U MN NEW YORK (AP) - Aftef four days with round- the-clock coverage of the suicide attacks, broadcast networks resumed entertainment programmingalt and commercials - on Saturday. CBS' first prime-time entertainment show since the World Trade Center was toppled was "Touched By an Angel." With a somber tone, networks covered live a prayer service at the National Cathedral on Friday. The news media also received a request for greater care about accuracy Friday from New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani. Broadcasters will ease back into entertainment with lighter, inoffensive fare. NBC scheduled the "Brady Bunch" movie for Saturday night, and ABC will have the Sandra Bullock romantic comedy, "Hope Floats." Fox aired a two-hour "America's Most Wanted" focusing on the attacks Saturday, and the comedy "Mrs. Doubtfire" yesterday. Fox had scuttled plans yesterday to show the movie, "Independence Day," where aliens blow up the Empire State Building. Next week's planned premiere of a new television season has been pushed back a week. Sometime during the day Saturday, broadcasters carried their first commercials since the attack cover- age began on Tuesday. Network executives were reluctant to talk Friday about how many millions of dollars in advertising revenue was lost, saying they hadn't added it up. Some executives suggested privately that they'll eventually get those advertising dollars. Even if net- works wanted to run commercials during the attack coverage, few advertisers were interested in being a part of it. Advertising should get back to normal "within a short period of time," said Mark Morris, chairman of the advertising firm Bates North America. "Normal- cy is important for companies and for the economy." New commercials will probably be more sober, at least for a while, Morris said. "I am certain things will tone down in a way, par- ticularly the aggressive comipetition with other orga- nizations," lhe said. "''his is a time to pull together, not necessarily to denigrate others." Giuliani, in a briefing Friday, asked the news media to be more careful reporting about the World Trade Center rescue operation. He said false infor- mation "can be very dangerous and emotionally damaging." He cited false reports that a potential survivor had been in contact with people by cell phone, and that 10 or 15 people were trapped alive in a store. Media outlets reported Thursday that five firefight- ers trapped since Tuesday had been rescued from the trade center rubble. It later turned out that only two who were trapped in an air pocket for several hours Thursday were found alive. Not only does false information play with the emotions of people with missing friends and rela- tives, it can send rescue workers on dangerous fruit- less chases, he said. Ie urged news organizations not to report such details until confirmed by police and FBI. "if we could all be a little miore patient and verify information before we put it out, we wo't raise peo- ple's hopes unnecessarily," Giuliani said. CNN anchorwoman Paula Zahn, responding on the air to Giuliani's request, noted that it has been difficult to get accurate information out of the rescue Site. "We're all trying to heed this advice," she said. "Unfortunately, everybody is being given conflicting information." AIBC anchorman Peter Jennings said on Friday that many viewers had called or c-mailed to say they were troubled by television's repetition of video footage of die planes exploding into the World trade Center. "We are mindfuil of that," Jenniigs said, "and we have done our best ... to be really judicious with our use of images that seriously trouble a great many people." Long, emotional days and frayed nerves were starting to take their toll on some television reporters. CNN's Kelli Arena appeared flustered talking with anchor Leon Harris when she tried to quickly report on the names of 19 suspected hijack- ers released by the Justice Department. "They look an awful lot alike, Leon," she said. i NEW YORK -- What day is it? Thursday. No, Friday morning -it's 2 a.m. And even though I've put in a second - or is it third? - 18-hour day reporting for CNN, I can't sleep. It's thundering here in New York City. And the deep rumbles are pro- foundly unsettling - even for this veteran war correspondent, who has heard artillery barrages in Nicaragua and El Salvador and Liberia; explo- sions iii Panama City after the U.S. invasion, and Mexico City after earth- quakes. But this time, the ruin - the dan- ger and devastation and body count - is at home. And suddenly, the call cut off. Minutes later, the North Tower col- lapsed, Dissolved. A 110-story build- ing just ... gone. There were 38 people in that one office. 50,000 worked in the two tow- ers of the World Trade Center. For three days now, everyone has been doing this grim math problem. None of us wants to factor it out, but all of us know the answer somehow: Thou- sands of people - individual people, with middle names and pet peeves and petty worries; people who liked their coffee black or with milk and two sugars; people who read "Green Eggs and Ham" to their kids, and knew how to give great kisses, and left their smelly socks on the floor; people who had plans for this week- end, and for the mark they hoped to leave on this world someday - all WhenI was a kid-I'm a '50s kid-one of the Big Questions was: Where were you when you heard that John F. Kennedy had been assassinated? One of the Big Questions from now on will be: Where were you when you heard that terrorists attacked the World Trade Center, and the Pentagon? I've lived in Manhattan for almost 20 years now. I don't live anywhere near the World Trade Center. My apartment is safely north - 123 blocks north, according to a city map I've just looked at, and realized is a sad relic of a New York City forever changed. Still, it all hits me where I live. It hits all Americans where they live. When I was a kid - I'm a '50s kid - one of the Big Questions was: Where were you when you heard that John E Kennedy had been assassinat- ed? One of the Big Questions from now on will be: Where were you when you heard that terrorists attacked the World Trade Center, and the Pentagon? Me, I was in my Upper West Side apartment, reading the New York Times just before 9 a.m. on the newest Historical Date To Remember: September 11, 2001. The mother of my long-time boyfriend telephoned from Dallas, Texas. "Oh God, is Cas in New York?" she asked. Cas is a financial industry consultant whose primary client has, for three years, been a company with offices on the 93rd floor of the World Trade Center north tower. Cas was safe at home in Dallas. His World Trade Center clients were among the thousands who were not safe: All 38 of them were killed in the attack. How can anyone be sure'? After the first hijacked airliner hit the North Tower, one of this company's employ- ees called a relative on his cell phone. Everyone else in our offices is dead, he said, in a voice broken by static and fear. A few of us are here in a windowed conference room - one vith a spectacular view of the city on a clear day like Tuesday - trying to shield ourselves from the hellish jet- fueled flames. those people were just ... gone. And for those legions of the lost - each one of them -- there are net- works of people who knew them and loved them, or met them once and thought they were nice. People who will now have holes in their lives, in the shape of a person who never came home from work on Tuesday. The New York Daily News head- line on Thursday read: "10,000 Lost." I've never been all that good at math, but how many holes does that leave in how many lives'? I have to close this now - the alarm is set to ring in four hours. And when it does, I'll jar awake and sit up, startled and disoriented. Until I remember: Oh, yes. The world has changed. I'll get up, get dressed: a pressed shirt that will look passably good on camera; sturdy jeans and hiking boots for walking through Ground Zero dust - dust that, after tonight's rains, will have turned to unholy mud. Officials say another several down- town buildings are on toothpicks; may fall in the overnight storm. For three days now, I've looked at the faces of people on Manhattan's side- walks, buses, subways. So many spir- its seem close to falling, too. The "Are You OK?" e-mails help, profoundly - they're getting through, when telephone calls do not. Suddenly, prayers matter. For many of us, they're somehow getting through, too. I'll try to write again soon. In the meantime, tell the people you love that you love them. And go about liv- ing. Those of us in New York City will try to join you soon. Beth Nissen is a CNN correspondent and aformer reporter for The Michigan Daily. She has also been a visiting professor at the University of Michigan. Walk-On Try-Outs For the Michigan MEN'S BASKETBALL TEAM Tuesday, October 16,2001-8:00 RM at Crisler Arena You must be a full-time student registered for a minimum of 12 credits. You must register with the basketball office in Weidenbach Hall. You must also submit a physical to the same office. For further information, please contact the basketball office at 734-763-5504. 4 DATE/TIME: 09/19/01, 9am-fpm DATE/TIME: 09/20/01, 10am-3pm DATE/TIME: 09/21/01, 11am-4pm LOCATION: STUDENT UNION, ANN ARBOR, MI LIVE AND LEARN JAPANESE! DATE: 9/22/01 TIME: gam-Som _I