l""- I - - "M Ar 11 7, Wednesday September 11,2002 ©2002 The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan abeliflk iguu i aiIg Weathr TrODAY: Mostly clear and cool throughout the day, getting partly cloudy at night. HI: 75 LOW: 48 Tomorrow: 77153 Vol. CXIII, No. 7 One-hundred-eleven years of editorialfreedom ---------- - ------- ---------------------- --- - -- ---------------- - - - - i sitors stiliflock to Ground Zero to pay respects a year later By Elizabeth Kassab and Shannon Pettypiece Daily News Editors NEW YORK - The first sight for visi- tors when they arrive at Ground Zero is the sight of scorch marks on buildings, which still bear the scars from the devastation of last year's terrorist attacks but are adorned with American flags and messages of sup- port for the victims and rescue workers. As visitors travel down the quarter-mile- long walkway next to Ground Zero the rumble of New York City's busses, car horns and voic- es dissolve into silence. Some visitors privately weep as they look at the vacant hole, others wrap their fingers around the chain-linked fence that separates them from the final resting place of thou- sands. Flags, toys, firefighter memorabilia, flow- ers, T-shirts and many other personal tributes are entwined in the yards of fences surround- ing the site. Thousands of people from across the world visited the site yesterday as a way to feel like they were experiencing and contributing to history. "I gave my pint of blood, I donated my $20, but I just needed to be here. It was something I couldn't miss" said Chicago resident Pete Petropoulos. Visiting Ground Zero has brought out many of the initial emotions people felt one year ago. "Coming back here kind of brings back the pain and the anger," said Stalin Flores, a 27- year-old from Boston. But Flores said the terrorist attacks also brought out a sense of pride for his adopted country. "I came here when I was 18 years old with no idea what it meant to be a citizen of any country," the Honduran native said. "I had never ever been so proud to be an American." On Sept. 11 last year, Rummel Flores, Stal- in's 24-year-old brother, was in a training exercise for the U.S. Marines when it was interrupted. Those with family in New York, Washing- ton and Massachusetts were given cell phones to call their families. "They told us we might be heading to war," he said. He was transferred shortly after Sept. 11 to Camp Wilson in Twenty-nine Palms, Calif., and that was when he started feeling apprehensive. "I saw a lot of Marines that had all their bags packed like they were going to war. I called my mom and told her I didn't know what was going to happen." On Dec. 1, Rummel left with about 1,000 other Marines to patrol the waters around Afghanistan. "We were ready to do whatever we could to protect our country," he said. His return to the site of the World Trade Center was marked by a memory of going up the towers the last time he was in New York. "I kind of expected to go up there again," he said. Some of those most closely touched by the attacks have been unable to return to the site. Josiah Sliverstein, who attended high school close to the World Trade'Center site and whose father was working in the Chrysler Building on the day of the attack in 1993 and the attacks on Sept. 11, has not been able visit the site after Sept. 11. "It would just be like seeing my high school memories gone," Silverstein said. "There are times when it strikes me though. I remember seeing the skyline and seeing the empty space." See GROUND ZERO, Page 5 Students recall emotion, a termath ofSept. II By Maria Sprow Daily Staff Reporter For most students, Sept. 10, 2001, had been like any other day: Classes, some homework, time with friends. Going to bed that night, nobody had any reason to believe the next 24 hours would be any different from the last. Then Sept. 11 happened. A mostly shocked campus was forced to cope with the things they had seen over and over again that day on TV - planes crashing into the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and a Pennsylvania field; the accusations and questions of who was responsible; the phone calls made to fam- ily and friends. Though the emotions felt that day are fad- ing for some, one year later the details are still there. "It seems like it was forever ago, but I remember some of those conversations very vividly," LSA senior Steve Lund said. "I prob- ably will remember it my whole life." At 8:46 a.m., some students were sleeping soundly in their beds. Others were woken by ringing phones or anxious roommates. Some were getting dressed for the day or were on their way to class. LSA sophomore Amanda Gomez walked into her 9 a.m. class late that morning, expect- ing a normal lecture. She hadn't heard about what had happened and when she heard her classmates and professor discussing the plane crash and canceling classes, she said she thought it was part of the class material, or that it was just a story. "I thought they were discussing something fake," Gomez said. "I just remember the teacher was talking about canceling the class See MEMORY, Page 7 EMMA FOSDICK/Daily New York City offers a pathway for pedestrians to walk past Ground Zero. One year after the tragedies, people are still descending on the site where the Twin Towers fell. Bush increases security alert levels after threats By Louie Melzllsh DadiStaff Reporter Local officials have revved up their secu- rity apparatuses for today's anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks as the Bush administration put the nation on the second highest level of alert for domestic terrorism yesterday. In ratcheting up the alert from "elevated" (yellow) to "high" (orange) for the first time since the color-coded alert system was put in place after the attacks, governmental agencies have been informed that there is a "high risk of terrorist attacks" and they should take "additional precautions" at nu-ir pevnts or evienancel them .accrtd- and law enforcement agencies said they have already taken precautions with today's one- year anniversary and the presidential direc- tive does not greatly affect their actions. "We are already at a heightened state of security around here," said Barbara Hogan, a spokeswoman for the Wayne County Air- port Authority. "The airport is one of the securest places you can be." Wary of giving help to potential trouble- makers, most officials gave out little infor- mation about the actions they have or will be taking. "All we can say is we'll continue to main- tain a higher level of security at all points of entry," said Cherise Miles of the U.S. Cus- toms Service. "All we can say is we'll continue to maintain a higher level of security at all points of entry. - Cherise Milesk U.S. Customs Service Prime Minister Jean Chretien. FAST, or "free and safe trade," allows security-cleared fre- quent border crossers to install transmitters on their cars and thus avoid the wait for an inspection at U.S.-Canadian borders. On the surface, security seemed no tighter than usual at two governmental offices in Ann Arbor. Building, during today's commemoration events is as tight as possible given the city's resources. "We really can't do anything more than that unless we start paying cops overtime to stand in front of buildings and we're not at that stage," Oates said. "We're doing all types of extra patrols I centers given the current tensions in the Middle East. "They might become symbols and therefore targets for people who have become upset." "You can expect to see a stepped-up and highly visible security presence," said Lou Stock, a supervisory deputy marshal with the U.S. Marshal's Service for the Eastern