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Michigan Marching Band’s illuminated 9/11 tribute wows fans at Michigan Stadium
The emotional performance included lasers, glowing orbs, high-powered flashlights, and more, as performers created memorable formations of the World Trade Center’s twin towers, an outline of the United States, and an American Flag.
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U-M’s David Turnley releases never-before-seen photos of 9/11
A new photographic documentary by the Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer and professor offers close-up encounters of the moments before both of the World Trade Center towers fell, and the immediate aftermath.
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Strangers when we meet
Patrick Anderson, BA ’91/MPP ’83, survived the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in NYC, thanks to a perfect stranger. Nearly two decades later, Ann Curry reunited them.
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9/11 + 10
On the 10-year anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks, U-M students, alums and faculty talk about how the world has changed.
- The eyewitness: “Suddenly, I knew I must run.”
- The Marine: “I wanted to be in combat.”
- The terrorism expert: “Today, al-Qaeda itself is dead.”
- The researcher: “The wars shrank the defense research horizon dramatically.”
- The student: “My teacher returned moments later, visibly shaken.”
- The lost: 18 Michigan alums were killed on 9/11.
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9/11 + 10: The Marine
Marine second-lieutenant Patrick Callahan serves in the University of Michigan’s Naval ROTC program. Michigan Today asked Lt. Callahan to describe the impact of the 9/11 attacks on his military experience.
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9/11 + 10: The eyewitness
Steve Fetter was working in the financial district of Manhattan on 9/11. What he saw that day transformed his life completely. Here is a pair of excerpts from his play about the day and its aftermath, “A Blue Sky Unlike Any Other.”
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9/11 + 10: The researcher
Stephen Forrest is Vice President for Research at the University of Michigan. U-M receives millions in research funding from the federal government, and some of that is for defense-related research. Michigan Today asked Forrest to describe some of the ways 9/11 and its aftermath have affected research in the US and at U-M.
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9/11 + 10: The student
Nell Gable was just 11 years old on 9/11/2001, but she remembers the day vividly, and continues to live today with the uncertainty it caused.
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9/11 + 10: The terrorism expert
Scott Atran is a world-renowned expert on terrorism and terrorists. His research and his book “Talking to the Enemy: Faith, Brotherhood, and the (Un)Making of Terrorists” derive from years in the field interviewing terrorists from around the globe. Michigan Today asked for his insights into the status of terrorism ten years after 9/11.