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Regional News September 9, 2007
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We Remember 9-11
KAYLEA HUTSON GateHouse Plus
      Six years ago, the world changed for many when four planes, operated by terrorists, hit the World Trade Center, Pentagon and a Pennsylvania farm. Regardless of age, the date Sept. 11, 2001, remains ingrained into our collective memories. For adults, the aftermath and eventual war on terror are a...
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Looking at ripple effects
      On that September morning in 2001, Lyndsay Melancon, 17, was caring for her then 3-week-old daughter and finishing her senior year of high school studies. Her world began to change after the planes hit the World Trade Center.
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9-11 left life-long impact
      When Laura Daegling awoke in her parents' room on Sept. 11, she was recovering from an evening filled with night terrors. Little did the then-11-year-old realize the terror would continue - on her television set. Daegling, 17, said she flipped through the channels to see if something else was on...
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Made parents 'more protective'
      Taylor Gibson, now 16, remembers walking into the lunchroom of her elementary school on Sept. 11 and learning about the terrorist attacks. "We spent the rest of the day watching it in our different classrooms," she recalled. "It was disorderly. We watched TV all night and I didn't do my homework....
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Changing her world
      When the planes hit the twin towers, Cora Keller was a 7-year-old home-schooled student living in Texas. She mainly remembers her mother getting a phone call, telling her to turn on the television. "We aren't morning TV people," Keller explained. "We were just sitting there kind of just staring ...
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Chronology of terror
      8:45 a.m. (all times are EDT): A hijacked passenger jet, American Airlines Flight 11 out of Boston, Massachusetts, crashes into the north tower of the World Trade Center, tearing a gaping hole in the building and setting it afire.
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