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   Overcast, 57 °  Humidity: 93%

STORIES FROM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

  THE VICTIMS, THE KILLERS
 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
NEW YORK -- Missing. The word has lost its hopeful luster since the days when families plastered the city with photographs of those who didn't come home on the night of Sept. 11.

 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
Some of the Sept. 11 victims many Americans felt they got to know after their deaths:

 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
WASHINGTON -- Unidentifiable remains of victims of the Sept. 11 attack on the Pentagon will be buried in Arlington National Cemetery, the military says.

 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
WASHINGTON -- Among the human remains painstakingly sorted from the Pentagon and Pennsylvania crash sites of Sept. 11 are those of nine of the hijackers.

 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
A list of the Sept. 11 victims, from a database maintained by The Associated Press since the attacks.

  IMPACT ON AMERICA
 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
NEW YORK -- Drawing on lessons from Sept. 11, experts said Tuesday that high-rise building codes should be revised to require wider emergency stairways and stricter protections against collapse and heavy fires.

 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
A look at how the Sept. 11 attacks have affected the 50 states and the District of Columbia:

  IMPACT ON BUSINESS
 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
NEW YORK -- A year ago, planted in front of televisions, numbed by endless images of the World Trade Center's destruction, consumers froze - and briefly forgot to consume.

 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
NEW YORK -- For many journalists, Sept. 11 brought the immediate sense that they were covering the most important story of their lives and that the media landscape had changed forever.

 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
NEW YORK -- Since the days when Samuel Colt made a fortune peddling his Peacemaker revolvers to frightened frontiersmen and a budding U.S. Army, astute entrepreneurs have profited by selling to Americans worried about security.

  AMERICA PREPARES
 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
ANNISTON, Ala. -- Smoke fills the cafeteria as a piercing alarm sounds. Panicked voices scream. Help them.

 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
OAK RIDGE, Tenn. -- Thousands of Geiger counters and other radiation detectors that had been destined for the scrap heap or auction block are being recycled for the war on terrorism.

  AMERICAN SCENE
 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
PATERSON, N.J. -- When the FBI came knocking on his door, Malek Zeidan wasn't worried.

 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
NEW YORK -- Interrogations, body searches and suspicious stares are not the only sources of humiliation these days for air travelers with darker complexions and foreign names.

  9/11 AND THE MEDIA
 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
NEW YORK -- The last place Susan Ferugio wants to be Sept. 11 is in front of a television.

 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
NEW YORK -- It had already been a lousy day for "Sex and the City" columnist Carrie Bradshaw when she tried to get on the subway. The entrance was roped off - another terrorist alert in an already skittish city had shut it down.

  AFTER 9/11
 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
Chronology of some key events in U.S. relations with Islamic groups and with Osama bin Laden before Sept. 11, 2001, and of the Sept. 11 attacks and aftermath:

  EVENTS PLANNED
 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
LONDON -- Britain will plant a garden of native American and British flowers to commemorate the victims of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in the United States, the government said Tuesday.

 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
NEW YORK -- In deference to the first anniversary of the terrorist attacks, the New York Stock Exchange will delay the opening of trading on Sept. 11.

  LIFE GOES ON
 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
NEW YORK -- A romance that began with a Christmas Day massage at ground zero blossomed into marriage, with the couple tying the knot aboard a ship that transported terrorism victims on Sept. 11.

 
Web-posted 09/1/2002
BEIJING -- A Beijing motorist chose "USA 911" as a license plate number when Chinese drivers were allowed for the first time to pick their own numbers, a government spokesman said Tuesday.

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