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Effects of terror attacks measured in lives changed
In some respects, the sun rises and sets on a familiar community one year after Sept. 11. Spooked calls about suspicious characters no longer flood police lines. Church attendance, which shot up in the weeks after the attacks, has settled back. Though far more prevalent than they were last year before Sept. 11, flags no longer flutter from every car and home as they did in the fall. Still, 12 months later, we're not the same.
By Chris Rosenblum / crosenbl@centredailiy.com
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'Honor each life'
The moments of silence - in New York City, the Pentagon, Pennsylvania - were filled with the grief of a world still mourning those who died a year ago today.
Ground Zero
New York struggles with the question of how to honor the past while moving toward the future.
Survivors reflect
For those who crawled from the Pentagon, often badly burned and scarred, every day is a reminder.
The mastermind
The flamboyant planner of Sept. 11 is called "the Forrest Gump of Al Qaida."
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