SEPT9

Page 1

INSPIRATION AFTER TRAGEDY

INCREASING AGGRESSION

Husker offensive line looks to improve performance before Fresno State game PAGE 10

Events of Sept. 11 push UNL student to become volunteer fireman PAGE 2

friday, september 9, 2011

volume 111, issue 015

DAILY NEBRASKAN dailynebraskan.com

memoriam 10 years later, memories of the terror attacks on the US continue to shape American psyche The south tower of the World Trade Center collapses in New York on Sept. 11, 2001. This weekend marks the 10-year anniversary of the terrorist attack.

P

eople are running, racing down the stairs to the elevators. Many are screaming, and sirens are going off in the distance. Security personnel have their guns drawn. “The fear was real,” said Christopher Garneau, a sociology graduate student at the University of NebraskaLincoln. Garneau wasn’t in New York City on Sept. 11, 2001, when terrorists flew two commercial planes into the World Trade Center’s Twin Towers, or near Washington, D.C., where another plane crashed into the Pentagon, or Shanksville, Penn., where United Flight 93 crashed after being hijacked. Instead, he was interning at the U.S. Senate in 2004. On this particular day, the alarm was raised because a pilot flying a plane toward Washington, D.C., forgot to radio into air traffic control. It was an accident, but the memory of 9/11 — the deadliest terrorist attack on the United States — immediately came to the forefront of everyone’s minds,

Mark Lennihan | ap

Story by Daniel Wheaton and Dan Holtmeyer

Jim Collins | ap

demonstrating the power of that day over the American psyche. This Sunday marks the 10th anniversary of that attack, which killed nearly 3,000 people.

have the initial numbing and sense of disbelief. Then you later get other reactions: anger, sadness, things like that.” The psychological reactions were very real for those directly affected by the atInstant impact tacks. Robert P. Gallagher of Ten years ago, today’s the University of Pittsburgh college students were still analyzed the psychological in elementary school, but response of those where the attack’s impact on a were the generation hardest hit. can still be Counseldetected. ing centers “This was were esone of those tablished to events that help peoshape the ple cope way people and pubview the lic schools world,” said had to find Mario Scaloways to ra, a psyconsole Mario Scalora those afchology proPSYCHOLOGY PROFESSOR fessor who fected. has worked “These with the FBI and other gov- students exhibited anxiety ernment agencies on threat attacks, nightmares, fears assessment. The threat of of additional attacks, fears terrorism moved from a of anthrax and fears of atvague, unlikely possibility tending public events, goin the nation’s conscious- ing through tunnels, crossness to something very ing bridges or riding on real. subways,” Gallagher wrote “I remember people be- in his research report. ing stunned (on campus),” Garneau, the sociology Scalora said. “I think with graduate student, said one any trauma … you first benefit of the 9/11 tragedy

This was one of those events that shape the way people view the world.

was how it forced society to confront new problems, creating an opportunity for cross-cultural understanding. “Fear isn’t new,” Garneau said. “Societies have dealt with this kind of fear before and they will do it again.” Lasting effects of fear Zenebe Beyene, a doctoral candidate in political science whose Ethiopian origin gives him an international perspective, agreed with Scalora on the impact of 9/11. “9/11 has affected everybody, regardless of citizenship, origin, religion and social status,” he said. The way the public thinks, either about war or something as mundane as airport security, was changed, Scalora said. Universities felt that change in several ways, including more attention to research in his field of expertise, threat assessment, he said, adding that universities in general became friendlier to ROTC programs and

Construction of One World Trade Center continues in Manhattan on Aug. 4, 2011. When completed, the new skyscraper will stand adjacent to the National September 11 Memorial & Museum.

2001 GDP (World Bank)

$10.23 trillion

NOW $14.58 trillion (2010 most recent year available)

about $24 on 9/11

$86.45

UNEMPLOYMENT (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics)

5.0% in September

9.1%

DEPT. OF HOMELAND SECURITY BUDGET

(created 11 days after 9/11)

N/A

$43.2 billion

PRICE OF OIL (per barrel)

(WTRG Economics)

TUITION AT UNL

POPULAR SOCIAL MEDIA

WORLD CONFLICTS

(whitehouse.gov)

$101.25 in state $198.25 in state $288 out of state $588.25 out of state (2002-2003 undergratuate bulletin)

(Institutional Research and Planning)

StumbleUpon AIM MSN Deviant Art

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Second Congo War

War in Iraq

(1998-2003)

UN Weapons Inspections in Iraq

9/11: see page 3

(NYSE)

War in Afghanistan The Arab Spring

BEA HUFF | DAILY NEBRASKAN

Students, faculty reflect on 9/11 PHOTOS OF PILLE, EIGBRETT, VRIES BY MATT MASIN | PHOTOS OF SEEFELDT, STEINACHER, LUCAS BY RYAN KOPELKE

Before 9/11 I didn’t even know what a terrorist was; it really made me realize how something that is miles, even hundreds of miles away, can really affect you and just how quickly your life can change.

I don’t think 9/11 had a huge impact on me. It highlighted what I already knew. My parents explained to me what was happening, but it never really impacted me that hard.

Gretchen Pille freshman music major

It has affected me in that growing up, you know, I hated the AlQaeda and the Taliban.

Tony De Vries junior psychology major

Being around students that were primarily from D.C., there was a palpable sense of fear. The fear that no one knew who had done this, or if it would happen

Doug Seefeldt

Ben Eigbrett

When I turned on the TV and saw the picture, I was horrified.What kind of perverted fantasy, what kind of perverted people, could fathom using civilian planes as a weapon?

assistant history professor

Gerald Steinacher

sophomore environmental studies major

history professor

point/counterpoint page 4

DOWNTOWN page 5

Volleyball page 10

Sex, lies and croissants

They come in peace

Sweeping start

american and french response to scandal problematic

Roger Clyne and the peacemakers bring twang to lincoln

Huskers begin Players Challenge with three-set win

@dailyneb | facebook.com/dailynebraskan

It was strange. Just the night before I had been showing my friend a picture of me and my boyfriend on top of the World Trade Center. To think that something so big, so iconic, could just be gone.

Kristen Lucas assistant professor of communications

Weather | sunny

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