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| LET'S ROLL — More than
500 Sailors and Marines assemble on the flight
deck of the USS Belleau Wood to mark the one-year
anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks
on the U.S. Their formation spells out the now
famous Todd Beamer quote, “Let’s Roll.”
Beamer was on United Flight 93, which crashed
in western Pennsylvania, after he and several
other passengers attempted to regain control of
the plane from the hijackers. Photo by Chief Photographer’s
Mate Steven L. Cooke. |
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Hussein Has Chem/Bio
Options;
Aims to Acquire Nuke Weapons |
| By Jim Garamone/American Forces
Press Service |
| WASHINGTON,
Sept. 9, 2002 Iraq already possesses weapons of mass
destruction and is seeking more, Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld said on "Good Morning America" Sept. 9.
Broadcasting from the rebuilt Pentagon, show
co-host Charles Gibson pressed Rumsfeld on the "evidence"
of Saddam Hussein's chemical, biological and nuclear programs.
"(Saddam Hussein) certainly has chemical
and biological weapons," Rumsfeld said. "He's used
chemical weapons against his own people and against his neighbors."
Iraq used chemical weapons during its near-decade-long
war with Iran in the 1980s. Saddam Hussein also used chemical
agents against dissident populations within Iraq. He threatened
to use such weapons against the coalition opposing his invasion
of Kuwait in 1990, but he did not use them.
Rumsfeld said that with the absence of U.N. inspectors
inside the country, information about Iraq's nuclear program
"is not knowable." But Iraq's hunger for these weapons
is knowable, he said.
Prior to the Persian Gulf War, the best
estimates for Iraq developing a nuclear weapon was between
two to six years, Rumsfeld said. "When the Gulf War ended,
we were able to look where he was and it turned out he was
within six to 12 months of having a nuclear weapon,"
he said. "You know (the Iraqis) are getting closer every
day, every week, every month and therefore, time is not on
your side." Story |
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| Good Morning,
Pentagon |
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| Country
music star Alan Jackson performs at the Pentagon |
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Sep 09, 2002
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| Profile |
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| Staff
Sgt. Travis Hartzell |
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| Ask
most cops why they went into law enforcement, and
they will say it is about people helping
people, meeting people, even just talking with people.
For a people-focused cop, Staff Sgt. Travis Hartzell
has a dream job. As patrolmaster for the 376th Air
Expeditionary Security Forces Squadron, he has spent
the last 90 days walking the dusty streets and lanes
of villages near this forward-deployed location.
Story
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Memorial
Competition
Draws Global Response |
BALTIMORE — Nearly 2,500 individuals or teams
have registered for the competition to select an
artistic concept for the Pentagon Memorial, according
to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which is running
the worldwide, anonymous, two-stage competition.
"We are thrilled with
the global response," said Carol Anderson-Austra,
project manager. "People from all 50 states,
the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and about
50 countries on all six inhabited continents have
registered for the competition." Over
2,000 registrants gave U.S. addresses. California
and New York lead the way with 252 and 240 registrants
respectively, followed by Virginia with 205. Other
states range from one to several dozen. Entrants
must register to compete, but not all who registered
are expected to submit entries, corps officials
said. Competition consultant Reed Kroloff, former
editor of Architecture magazine, put the total number
of registrations in perspective.
"Typically, about one-third
to one-half of registrants send submissions to competitions,"
Kroloff said. "It's possible that we could
get higher participation in this competition, but
we are expecting at least 800 entries." |
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Quilters
Show Support
From Around the World |
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| Pentagon
Quilts on Exhibit |
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| Since
the Sept. 11 terrorist attack on the Pentagon, people
from around the United States and abroad have made
quilts to express respect for the lives lost, given
thanks for survivors and shown their appreciation
for rescue workers' heroic efforts. To date, more
than 60 quilts have been sent to the nation's military
headquarters. Because the Pentagon is in the process
of renovation, the "Pentagon Quilts" are
being exhibited to the public. Story |
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