12A - The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 12, 2001 The early morning sun lights the sky behind the damaged section of the P terrorists crashed a hijacked airliner into the Pentagon. One month later,. Center and created tons of the same in Afghanistan. Smoke spires from r FRIDAY.Focus One month later September 11, 2001 ica remembers The Associated Press At a still-smoking ruin, before a still-ravaged military headquarters, in far-flung places still reeling from unthinkable acts, they stopped to commemorate a a milestone yesterday: A month had passed since terrorists made their indelible mark. 'w ,e .'x,. aAt the Pentagon service, there was a s= red rose on the seat of each relative of t' ~each victim - the 125 people in the building and the 60 passengers and crew whose plane was taken over and crashed by four hijackers. "On Sept. 11, great sorrow came to our country, and from that sorrow has come great resolve," said President Bush. At the World Trade Center, there was a moment of silence at 8:48 a.m., the time of the first attack on Sept. 11. Workers at the massive grave paused from the cleanup duties, took off their helmets and joined arm in arm. "Don't look at the ter- rorism over there, look at the heroism over here," said Rabbi Joseph Potasnik, a Fire Department chaplain. At St. Paul's Cathedral in London, AP PHOTO British firefighters mourned their fallen Pentagon two days after the attack as rescue work continues after brethren in New York. There was an inter- Americans have removed 260,000 tons of rubble from the World Trade faith commemorative service at the Roman uins in both lands. Catholic Cathedral of St. John the Evange- hree people list in Cleveland ("My attitude is people the through need to find more hope;' said 36-year-old is they walk Valeria Philmon) and a mentrial Mass at rough lower Boston's Cathedral of the Holy Cross. ttan several This was the way it was on Thursday, er terrorists Oct. 11, 2001 - groups of people com- stroyed the ing together to remember something that ade Center is unforgettable, to commemorate the hor- rific events even as smoke continued to rise from the smoldering rubble of sky- scrapers. AP PHOTO "The fire is still burning, but from it One month after the terrorist attacks on the World Trade has emerged a stronger spirit," said Mayor Center, New York City firefighter Kevin Bohan pauses at Rudolph Giuliani, with the city's fire and MARSHALL/Daily a memorial service near Ground Zero yesterday. police commissioners in front of a black- ened building. "Sometimes, it feels like yesterday, sometimes it feels like a year ago or more," he said. The terrorists, he said, "attempted to break our spirit - instead they have emboldened it." Fire Department bagpipers played "Amazing Grace" on instruments decorat- ed with small American flags. Prayers were offered first for the 343 firefighters and 23 police officers lost in the attack, and then for all the dead. So far, there are u 422 confirmed dead and 4,815 listed as missing. In addition, 157 people on the two trade center jets were killed. It was a brief service, just 15 minutes long; the idling engines of the heavy con- struction machinery could be heard in the background. The 23rd Psalm was read, and prayers were offered. At the end, the bagpipes played "Americathe Beautiful." The same song was sung at the Penta- *"C . gon, along with "God Bless America." Thousands listened as taps was played; the names of the 189 victims scrolled on computer monitors. "Their deaths, like their lives, shall have meaning," said Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld. Gen. Richard DAVID KATZ/Daily Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of S Comfort moves up the Hudson River along the west side of lower Manhattan several days after terrorists flew two planes into the Staff, said the victims were heroes, "not ers of the World Trade Center in this view from Jersey City, N.J. Smoke rises from the site where the 110-story buildings used to stand, because they died, but because they lived tinues to do today.beasthyddbtbasety id in service to the greater good." ^- "One life touches so many others. One death can leave sorrow that seems almost unbearable;' said Bush. "But to all of you who lost someone here, I want to say: You are not alone. The American people will never forget the cruelty that was done here and in New York and in the sky over Pennsylvania. We will never forget all the innocent people killed by the hatred of a few." He decried the terrorists as a "cult of I evil." He pledged that America would be relentless in seeking them out. Everywhere, there were memorials of different sorts. Restaurants nationwide pledged to give part of the day's proceeds to funds for the victims. At the New York u Stock Exchange, representatives of New York's uniformed services rang the open- ing bell, and were cheered. At Boston's Logan Airport, United and H ~American Airlines employees began a AP PHOTO monthlong "flag run" to Los Angeles, Workers pause to watch a memorial service through broken windows of a damaged pedestrian symbolically completing the planned bridge yesterday at the site of the ruins of the twin 110-story World Trade Center towers In New flight paths of the two jets that were York. hijacked out of Logan and crashed into 4 the trade center. Employees have lined up Peruvian 1,400 volunteers to relay an American hters stop flag cross country, running 24 hours a day. yestery t It is scheduled to arrive in Los Angeles on Lima, Peru to Nov. 11, Veterans Day. observe a moment of "This is a beautiful day for a beautiful silence for the cause. How could I say no?" said Curt one month Detzer, an American Airlines pilot and anniversary of one of the first runners. the terrorist In Denver, hundreds gathered for a ser- ataks that vice organized by the United Airlines' MARJORIE MARSHALL/Daily Firefighters spray water on a fire in the rubble at Ground Zero In Manhattan several days after the twin towers were brought down by terrorists. MARJORIE MARSHALL/Daily New Yorkers pause to view one of the many sidewalk The USN memorials In Manhattan in memory of the thousands who twin tow lost their lives in the Sept. 11 attacks. as it con x J _