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VOL. 1/ISSUE 44
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2013
Never forgetting Patrick McCallister For Veteran voice
patrick.mccallister@yahoo.com
Photo courtesy of Gerard Somerville Gerard Somerville stood with comrades by the last beam of the South Tower at the World Trade Center shortly before the Fire Department City of New York finished its task of seeking the dead. From left to right are Sal Torcivia, Glen Franke, Somerville, Dan Coleman, and an unidentified firefighter. Somerville said the FDNY never called the World Trade Center Ground Zero. ‘That was something the media made up,’ he said. The 62-year-old was at the peak of his career with the Fire Department City of New York. He was working the job he’d dreamed about since his Irish-Catholic childhood in Brooklyn. With that dream job came incomprehensible responsibility. After the Twin Towers collapsed, he had people to lead even as they faced death
and catastrophe on a scale none could have possibly trained for. Perhaps even imagined. Not even him. “There was a need to go into ‘command mode,’” Somerville said. As a wounded city reeled, fear — very reasonable fear — reared up. “We were hearing rumors left
and right,” Somerville said. “We didn’t know if there was another attack coming.” Fear and uncertainty were things the FDNY captain intimately knew. Back in ’71, Somerville took a test to become a firefighter. Time
See SOMERVILLE page 4
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PALM CITY — Gerard Somerville went to join his family in New Jersey on Monday evening after work. On Tuesday morning his wife, Irene, saw what everyone in America was looking at. She didn’t hesitate to wake Gerard. “I told him, ‘You better come look at this,’” she said. Their life was permanently changed. The afternoon Somerville gave his first press interview about Sept. 11 in about a dozen years, he was a somewhat shy, but still a robust and friendly man. He spoke softly most of the time. His smile was broad, inviting, but his eyes haunting. When he started discussing the World Trade Center — which he never calls Ground Zero — his voice dipped, the cadence audibly slowed. His haunting eyes got an unenviable firsthand look at history. At the top of a stairwell in his home is a room that’s more a small memorial museum than office. That’s where he gave the interview. It’s been 12 years since the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. A child born on that day is starting the seventh grade this year. One who’d been in kindergarten that day is now a high-school senior. Four presidential elections have come and gone. And a day that shook America perhaps like no other since the War of 1812 seems to be slipping from the collective mind. But it’ll never recede from Somerville’s.
2 • SEPTEMBER 6, 2013 • VETERAN VOICE • THE VOICE OF EXPERIENCE
anD our obJeCtIVe
Veteran Voice is a weekly publication designed to provide information to and about veterans to veterans and to the broader community. Veterans are an integral part of their Florida communities, which currently have individual organizations of their own, such as the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the American Legion, the Vietnam Veterans of America and many other groups with a narrow focus, but no convenient way to connect to a wider population of veterans and to the community in general within a limited geographic area, their community. The mission of Veteran Voice is to publish a weekly source of information that will provide, in one place, a listing of resources available to veterans, articles about changes in policies or organizations affecting veterans and events of interest to veterans as well as articles about veterans of interest to the general public. Veteran Voice LLC is organized as a partnership of experienced newspaper executives with an interest in veterans and in the communities of Florida veterans and friends. Veteran Voice is a start-up intended to address a perceived lack of information readily available to veterans on programs and policies affecting them and objective reporting of veteran affairs to the public. To our knowledge, and based on comments from leaders of local veterans organizations, there was no media or website currently meeting this need until the launch of Veteran Voice. We hope you agree, and will support this publication with your subscription. Without subscriptions there will be a limited number of people we can help, without which this mission will not be realized. As part of our commitment to supporting local veteran communities, we will donate 10 percent of our profits each quarter to qualified veteran charities recommended by you, our readers and subscribers. Please let us know what you think by emailing news@veteranvoiceweekly.com or mailing your comments to us at 1919 S.W. South Macedo Blvd., Port St. Lucie, FL 34984.
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VETERAN VOICE • THE VOICE OF EXPERIENCE • SEPTEMBER 6, 2013 • 3
Events honor America’s darkest day Nicole Rodriguez Staff writer
nrodriguez@YourVoiceWeekly.com
ST. LUCIE COUNTY — New York native Al Hickey remembers with stirring detail the day Earth was thrust off of its axis by forces much more sinister than a sonic boom. A Bronx homicide detective for the New York Police Department at the time, Hickey, 51, now a Port St. Lucie resident, heard the scanner chatter intensify sharply. A plane hit the north tower of the World Trade Center. “Even though we thought it was a small plane, our hearts (still) sank,” Hickey said. The minutes and hours following the collapse of the Twin Towers were nothing short of a bloody crime scene ripped straight from the big screen, Hickey recalled. “Everybody was just screaming,” Hickey said. “We thought we were at a full-out war.” For nine months following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, Hickey said he spent much of his days combing through rubble at Ground Zero and Fresh
“We sifted through every piece of debris,” Hickey said. “We found fingers, wallets and shoes. We found so many shoes.” Kills Landfill in Staten Island, where debris was delivered and searched for evidence. “We sifted through every piece of debris,” Hickey said. “We found fingers, wallets and shoes. We found so many shoes,” Hickey trailed off. Hickey, who said the memories from 12 years ago are vividly etched in his mind, wants to ensure area residents never forget the events of that history-altering day. Hickey will share his story alongside other first responders during a remembrance ceremony at Indian River State College and hosted by the Blue Knights Law Enforcement Motorcycle Club. “We have to live and we have to laugh. We can’t let terrorists keep us from living, but we have to remain vigilant,” Hickey said. The event is the first largescale ceremony held at the
See 9/11 page 6
Al Hickey, who said the memories from 12 years ago are vividly etched in his mind, wants to ensure area residents never forget the events of that history-altering day. Hickey will share his story alongside other first responders during a remembrance ceremony at Indian River State College and hosted by the Blue Knights Law Enforcement Motorcycle Club.
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4 • SEPTEMBER 6, 2013 • VETERAN VOICE • THE VOICE OF EXPERIENCE
SOMERVILLE from page 1
Photo courtesy of Gerard Somerville Gerard Somerville, (back), grew up in Brooklyn dreaming about being a firefighter. In this 1950s photo, he’s with his brother Tommy. Somerville went to work for the Fire Department City of New York just as 1978 started. He was forced out of his beloved profession in 2002, because of medical complications related to Sept. 11.
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passed; he didn’t hear anything back. Life moved on, and so did he. As 1977 was heading into the history books to the disco beat of “Saturday Night Fever,” he got a phone call. “Do you want to be a fireman?” Somerville heard through the receiver. He asked questions. How much was the pay? What were the benefits? When would he start? That sort of thing. The caller was impatient. “‘Look, if you want to be a fireman, you have to decide now,’” Somerville recalled hearing. “Yes,” Somerville responded. “Yes.” “I cut my hair off, cut my beard, and went to class,” Somerville said. On New Year’s Eve, he was sworn in, and quickly sent on calls without enough training in a tense city rife with violence. Routine calls sometimes become small riots. “I was terrified,” Somerville said. But he kept going back to work. By 1990, he’d made lieutenant. The father of five would pass along a lot of what he’d learned the hard ways to a younger generation. “I taught over 2,000 young men,” Somerville said. That had a downside in 2001. “I knew a lot of the guys that got killed,” he said. The department lost 340 firemen and a chaplain in the World Trade Center attack, along with two paramedics. That gave America the famous remembrance, 343. Irene thought, honestly thought, that the number might have been 344 as she watched her husband rush to a massive mayhem called New York City on Sept. 11. “When we said ‘Goodbye,’ I
thought that might be it,” she said. Somerville, too, had questions about his life expectancy that morning as he hurried to the massive scene of destruction. “I kissed (my wife and children) goodbye,” he said. “I didn’t know if I was coming back.” Somerville doesn’t remember exactly when he got to the Trade Center on Sept. 11. It wasn’t a casual drive that day. He doesn’t remember many details about the next few days. He once thought he got back home on Friday, Sept. 14. It turned out he got home Saturday. What he remembers in painfully great detail is helping to find the dead for the next eight months. Somerville remembers firefighter fathers carrying sons who’d followed in their footsteps from the massive wreckage. He remembers giving families police badges instead of family members. He’d work for the fire department until Nov. 22, 2002. Medical complications related to Sept. 11 and its aftermath forced him out of the work he obviously loves. After that, a friend let Somerville use a condominium on Hutchinson Island to look for a home in Florida. He found a spot and moved the family to Palm City with one thing in mind. “I saw this is the perfect place to be,” he said. “I can raise my kids here.” His youngest is now 16. Somerville wants people to remember, really remember, Sept. 11. Oh, not for his sake. “I’m not into this ‘pat yourself on the back, hero (expletive),’” he said. No, he said Sept. 11 showed him how much small acts of kindness mean. Somerville said as he
Kelly Delprete Advertising Consultant Patrick McCallister Staff Writer Nicole Rodriguez Staff Writer Shelley Koppel Staff Writer Mitch Kloorfain Chief Photographer Eric Macon Graphic Designer Phil Galdys Director of Operations Donna Marinak HR/Accounting Manager
Photo by Patrick McCallister/staff photographer Fire Department City of New York Capt. Gerard Somerville rushed from where his family was staying in New Jersey when planes struck the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. He spent the next eight months helping find the dead. As he was leaving, he picked up Barbara Mohan’s WTC identification. Her name wasn’t on any fatality lists. He hoped to return it to her one day. Her former employer told Your Voice News & Views/Veteran Voice she’d died in 1994. Why her identification was at the Trade Center is unknown. The former employer speculated it was part of an employee file that hadn’t been discarded. Your Voice News & Views/Veteran Voice told Somerville about its discovery before going to press.
VETERAN VOICE • THE VOICE OF EXPERIENCE • SEPTEMBER 6, 2013 • 5
In Rememberance of September 11, 2001 The Brennity at Tradition is hosting a Patriot’s Day Rememberance Luncheon in honor of all those effected by the September 11, 2001 tragedy. Join us as we pay respect to the heros of our nation with New York inspired foods.
Wednesday, september 11 11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.
Barbara Nicholas Steinfeld, Ph.D. Paperback 355 Pages
Ted Wilson
Veteran voice PUBLISHER
“Reverie” is an interesting collection of 51 stories, each one by a different author. The writers include military personnel from all branches of the service, their wives (the author’s words, not mine) and military brats, their children. The stories do not follow a theme or preconceived notion: in fact, they are alphabetical by author, so it really is a potpourri. This tends to make it a perfect bedside reader, as the reader doesn’t have to remember characters or follow a plot. Each story stands on its own
See REVERIE page 8
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6 • SEPTEMBER 6, 2013 • VETERAN VOICE • THE VOICE OF EXPERIENCE
9/11 from page 3
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college to commemorate the attacks. “With the events of Sept. 11 a generation removed from today’s college student, this event provides an excellent opportunity to remember the sacrifice of so many,” Evan Berry said in an emailed statement. Berry is the school’s assistant dean of public service education. “It will also serve as a solemn reminder to all who attend of the commitment made by public service professionals and first responders to protect and serve.” The city of Port St. Lucie will also hold a remembrance service of its own at the civic center, where a permanent Sept. 11 memorial was erected last year. The ceremony, now in its fourth year, will honor the nearly 3,000 who died in the attacks in New York, Washington, D.C., and Shanksville, Penn. “It was all Americans that were attacked that day,” city spokesman Ed Cunningham said of the importance of holding a local remembrance event.
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Event details: 9/11 Memorial Tribute at Indian River State College Doors open at 8 a.m. with the program beginning at 8:30 a.m. Event focuses on first responders hosted with Blue Knights Law Enforcement Motorcycle Club. The event will feature retired New York Police Department detectives and first responders Al Hickey and Steve Confino. Hickey’s wife, Christine Hickey, and others will also share their experiences from that day. Items and photos from Ground Zero will also be on display. Event will be at the Bailey Auditorium of the Frank and LeVan Fee Physical and High Liability Training Building at the Treasure Coast Public Safety Training Complex, 4600 Kirby Loop Road, Fort Pierce. For more information, call (772) 462-7150.
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VETERAN VOICE • THE VOICE OF EXPERIENCE • SEPTEMBER 6, 2013 • 7
Treasure Coast to remember Sept. 11 Patrick McCallister For Veteran voice
patrick.mccallister@yahoo.com
Few remember that it’s called Patriot Day and National Day of Service and Remembrance. But everyone knows what Sept. 11 is. Some will gather along the Treasure Coast on the anniversary of the 2001 terrorist attacks on New York City, the Pentagon and Shanksville, Pa., to remember the almost 3,000 known victims who died that day. Perhaps one of the most visible remembrance will be a lighted display planned for the Roosevelt Bridge — Northwest Federal Highway, Stuart — from sundown until about 11 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 11. USA 911 First Responders founder Dennis McKenna said the lights will especially honor those who lost their lives at the World Trade Center. “You can drive through the two lights that represent the Twin Towers,” he said. This is the second year for the lighted bridge display. McKenna said the lights will be at the center of the bridge on the road shoulder. Some Sept. 11 first responders now living in the area
See MEMORIALS page 9
Photo courtesy of LT Benjamin Addison U.S. soldiers, sailors and airmen with the Farah Provincial Reconstruction Team assemble at a 9/11 memorial as they prepare for a nine-mile rucksack march to commemorate Patriot Day at Forward Operating Base Farah in Farah province, Afghanistan, Sept. 11, 2012. Terrorists hijacked four passenger aircraft Sept. 11, 2001. Two of the aircraft were deliberately crashed into the World Trade Center in New York; one was crashed into the Pentagon; the fourth crashed near Shanksville, Pa. Nearly 3,000 people died in the attacks.
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8 • SEPTEMBER 6, 2013 • VETERAN VOICE • THE VOICE OF EXPERIENCE
SOMERVILLE from page 4 waded through the morbid task of finding fragments of humans, one thing helped him through. “We knew there were a lot of people who cared,” he said. “We knew a lot of people cared.” In the four attacks that day, 2,977 victims died. In the North Tower at the World Trade Center, about 1,360 are believed to have died. The South Tower — which was struck by a hijacked plane about 51 minutes later — had about 630 deaths. The smaller death toll is attributed to people pre-emptively evacuating. Additionally, 147 victims died on the two hijacked planes. Attempts to match located human fragments to known dead continue. As Somerville left the World Trade Center when FDNY operations there closed, he picked up a woman’s identification badge. Her name, Barbara Mohan, wasn’t on fatality lists. Somerville hoped to find and meet her. “I want to hand it to her and say, ‘Here, you left this,’” he said.
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REVERIE from page 5 and is complete in itself. Steinfeld says that these are the authors’ own stories in their own way, and that is certainly reflected in the various tales that are told, with interesting variations in style, spelling and grammar. Such a collection could easily have been skewed toward one branch of the service, or toward action stories, “feel good” tales or sentimental recollections, which this anthology happily manages to avoid. Steinfeld provides a collection that encourages reflection on the sacrifices of enlisted men and women, their spouses and their progeny, while painting vivid pictures of their lives and making for good bedtime short stories. The stories in the collection run the gamut of emotions. Some are humorous, at least in retrospect, as in the case of Lt. Col. Les Merritt, who was with a company that wanted to go to Vietnam, and “After a while complained to our higher headquarters that everyone else was going to Vietnam, except us.” Finally they got the orders and were “loaded for bear and ready to fight (and win) the war.” Finally arriving in Vietnam after five very rigorous days and nights of travel, they had to wait another night and day to meet with their commanding officer, where they got the bad news. “As the Colonel put it, ‘You are AWOL from your duty station in the states.’ ” Other stories tell of half-track and dog sled rides to school in Newfoundland, tracking Soviet missile tests, a shopping spree in East Germany before the wall fell, life in Korea and Japan, and
Your Voice News & Views contacted Mohan’s former employer in hopes of finding her for Somerville. She’d died years before the Sept. 11 attack. Why her badge was at the Twin Towers is a small mystery. The employer was unable to identify her family members. The newspaper informed Somerville of its findings before going to press. Somerville expressed gratitude for the newspaper’s help looking for Mohan. He may join other area Sept. 11 first responders at a lighted display on the Roosevelt Bridge — N.W. Federal Highway, Stuart — from sundown until about 11 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 11. This is the second year for the lighted bridge display sponsored by USA 911 First Responders. The lights will be at the center of the bridge on the road shoulder. The bridge has a blocked walk area for pedestrians. Parking is available at Flagler Park, 201 S.W. Flagler Ave., on the southern end of the bridge over the St. Lucie River. a few harrowing escapes, such as one from a 125-foot Coast Guard cutter on a training cruise that is rammed by a loaded 550-foot coal freighter. Or of an Army second lieutenant in the infamous Nevada Test Site Area 52, who encounters “the largest, maddest rattlesnake I had ever seen.” Yet other stories are from those involved in historic events, such as the Normandy invasion from the perspective of a Naval officer rather than the Army and Marine stories one normally hears; flying SAC planes during the height of the cold war; other planes that are equipped to deliver nuclear weapons, but have “little to no chance of making it home”; a NASA astronaut; a pilot of one of the planes carrying some of the first atomic bombs after the hydrogen bombs had been dropped on Japan, and many others of military personnel involved in some of the most memorable events of the past 75 years. As the introduction states, “It was the book author’s purpose to give honor to all those who have served and/or supported the military …” That it does, as well as providing some interesting stories in an unusual format. The difference in the stories ranging from WW II to the war in Afghanistan reflect the ages of the authors and the nature of the wars themselves, the commitment of the country and of the types of enemies being fought against. “Reverie” highlights the similarity of military life in different times and places while also chronicling the changes in society and in warfare for the United States over roughly half a century.
VETERAN VOICE • THE VOICE OF EXPERIENCE • SEPTEMBER 6, 2013 • 9
Honor Flight notice Part 1: Escort our Greatest Generation from Stuart to Palm Beach International Airport for their Flight to Washington, D.C. These men and women are being treated for the trip of a lifetime to see the memorials that were built to honor them. Please bring your 3 x 5 American flags to stand in honor for those who stood for us. Location: Martin County Administration Building. 2401 S.E. Monterey Road, Stuart. https://maps.google.com/ maps?q=2401+SE+Monterey+Rd,+Stuart,+FL&hl=en& ll=27.187845,-80.228777& spn=0.028668,0.038581&s ll=26.926716,-80.118337& sspn=0.114941,0.154324& oq=2401+Se+Monterey+Rd+Stuart&hnear=2401+SE+Monterey+Rd,+Stuart,+Martin,+Florida+34996&t=m&z=15 Staging: 0400 hours (4 a.m.) Busses will load: 0420 (4:20 a.m.)
MEMORIALS from page 7 may be present to meet with the public. The bridge has a blocked walk area for pedestrians. Parking is available at Flagler Park, 201 S.W. Flagler Ave., on the southern end of the bridge over the St. Lucie River. Additionally, USA 911 First Responders will have a memorial earlier in the day at Martin County High School, 2801 S. Kanner Highway, Stuart. It’ll be in the auditorium. That memorial will be from 7 to 9 a.m. More about the USA 911 First Responders is at its website, usa911fr.com Also in Martin County, The Prayer House of the Treasure Coast will hold its Special 9/11 Prayer Day Tribute from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Trinity United Methodist Church, 2221 N.E. Savannah Road, Jensen Beach. For more about that event, call (772) 486-3230. In St. Lucie County, there’ll be a 9/11 Memorial Tribute at Indian River State College hosted by the Blue Knights Law Enforcement Motorcycle Club. That’ll be at 8:30 a.m. on Sept. 11 at the Bailey Auditorium of the Frank and LeVan Fee Physical and High Liability Training Building at the Treasure Coast Public Safety Training Complex, 4600 Kirby Loop Road, Fort Pierce. That event will feature former New York detectives and first responders Al Hickey and Steve Confino, along with items and
Depart for PBIA: 0430 (4:30 a.m.) Bikes will park on the lower level; arrivals park at the direction of sheriff. Cars will have to use the shortterm lot and pay. Flag line will form at upstairs departure area. Ride Captain: Joe Romanelli JosephCRomanelli@bellsouth.net (561) 632-9103 Part Two: Sept. 7 Location: PBIA Staging: PBIA arrivals, lower level 1930 hours (7:30 PM) Parking is the same as in the morning Flag line to follow, Upper level 1945 hrs. (7:45PM) Flight arrival is scheduled for 2020 hours (8:20 PM) Ride Captain: Alan “Outlaw” Cole outlw3@hotmail.com (561) 310-8920 Jim “Nopockets” Kamen Patriot Guard Riders Assistant State Captain (561) 748-5889 jim@nopockets.com
photos from the World Trade Center. Among other events at the memorial, IRSC criminal justice and fire academy students will lay a wreath at the eternal flame in the complex to honor the public-safety workers killed in the terrorist attacks. At 9:30 a.m., there’ll be a separate memorial at Veterans Memorial Park, 600 N. Indian River Drive, Fort Pierce. In Indian River County, the American Legion, Charles L. Futch - Post 189, Sebastian, will have its annual Patriot Day Observance at 8:30 a.m. That’ll be at the Veterans Memorial in Riverview Park. The city park is at the corner of U.S. Highway 1 and Sebastian Boulevard in Sebastian. Patriot Day and National Day of Service and Remembrance is not to be confused with Patriots’ Day, a civic holiday in some states commemorating the battles of Lexington and Concord in April, 1775. In those states, it’s on the third Monday in April. Florida law encourages its recognition, but it’s not a public holiday in the Sunshine State. Patriot Day, which was later renamed Patriot Day and National Day of Service and Remembrance, was created by a congressional joint resolution in 2001. President George W. Bush signed it into law in December that year. The resolution requests that all Americans display flags at half staff, along with recognizing a moment of silence at 8:46 a.m., on Sept. 11.
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Honor Flight, Saturday, Sept. 7 Martin County Administration Building, Stuart
10 • SEPTEMBER 6, 2013 • VETERAN VOICE • THE VOICE OF EXPERIENCE
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AUGUST August 4 August 11 August 18 August 25
OCTOBER October 6 October 13 October 20 October 27
SEPTEMBER September 8 September 15 September 22 September 29
NOVEMBER November 3 November 10 November 17
10824 SW Village Parkway Port St. Lucie, FL 34987
DECEMBER December 1
Event subject to change without notice.
Property managed by Inland Diversified Real Estate Services LLC
The Inland name and logo are registered trademarks being used under license.
www.ShopATTrAdiTionS.com
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MAY May 5 May 12 May 19
CLUES ACROSS 1. Academy of Country Music 4. Company that rings receipts 7. An explosion fails to occur 10. Bleats 12. Opening 13. European sea eagle 14. River in Florence 15. St. Petersburg river 17. Longest forearm bone 18. Proper or original position 20. Epileptic spasm 22. Snakelike fish 23. Highest card 25. Blood-sucking African fly 28. Coats a porous surface 31. A layer or level 32. Kittiwake genus 33. Digs up in a garden 34. Freestanding cooking counter 39. Incline from vertical 40. External occipital protuberance 41. ____, MI 48749 42. Feed to excess 45. Pointed teeth 48. Fishing implement 49. Express pleasure 51. Grew choppers 54. 1916 battle 56. San __ Obispo, CA 58. Halo around the head of a saint 59. Cain and __ 60. Behave in a certain manner 61. Hits the ball in various games 62. Get out of bed
63. Director Michael ___ 64. Midway between S and SE 65. Cardboard box (abbr.) CLUES DOWN 1. Lower in esteem 2. Decays of a bone or tooth 3. Baseball legend Mickey 4. Words having no meaning 5. Rocky Boys Reservation tribe 6. __ Shankar 7. Removal by striking out 8. Vase with a footed base 9. Carries our genetic code 11. Small coin (French) 16. AIDS antiviral drug 17. Ethyl Carbamate 19. Of Salian Franks 21. We 24. Ready money 26. Plant egg cell
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VETERAN VOICE • THE VOICE OF EXPERIENCE • SEPTEMBER 6, 2013 • 11
Lest we forget
MISCELLANEOUS
‘On Sept. 11, 2001, 19 militants associated with the Islamic extremist group al-Qaeda hijacked four airliners and carried out suicide attacks against targets in the United States. Two of the planes were flown into the towers of the World Trade Center in New York City, a third plane hit the Pentagon just outside Washington, D.C., and the fourth plane crashed in a field in Pennsylvania. Often referred to as 9/11, the attacks resulted in extensive death and destruction, triggering major U.S. initiatives to combat terrorism and defining the presidency of George W. Bush. Over 3,000 people were killed during the attacks in New York City and Washington, D.C., including more than 400 police officers and firefighters.’
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12 • SEPTEMBER 6, 2013 • VETERAN VOICE • THE VOICE OF EXPERIENCE
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