By CBSNews.com's Christine Lagorio. On the fourth anniversary with the 9/11 attacks this weekend, New York City memorialized victims by ringing a bell at Ground Zero, reading names from the dead and offering countless prayer services — just like it did last year along with the year before that. But a whole new cavern of remembrance is apparently opening up as the public continues to heal and art relying on Sept. 11, 2001, is steaming out.Museums and galleries in Lower Manhattan are opening towards the public what seems to be the 1st major outpouring of 9/11-inspired print and satisfaction art. Much of this outpouring can be caused by the artistic community built through the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, a nonprofit arts-funding group that's housed in the World Trade Center and lost one of its artists when the towers collapsed. To rekindle memory and awaken ideas this season, the council hosted craft creativity summit over the Sept. 11 weekend and opened art shows in many major exhibition spaces."There are numerous ways of remembering a day — the reading of names, tributes, those are common important ways — but you can find cultural ways that make us remember and reflect enough to operate to make sure history doesn't repeat," Radhika Subramanian, director of cultural programs for your center, told CBSNews.com. Subramanian organized the weekend summit greater than 60 artists and cultural leaders.Among those featured in the center's exhibit "What Uses: Cities, Art and Recovery" is performance artist Pia Lindman. 4 years ago, on Sept. 11, 2001, Lindman saw from Lower Manhattan the horror of towering flames and mass death after terrorists flew planes into the World Trade Center. The attack competed like a movie, but then 9/11 ripped into her lifetime.Lindman, a downtown New York resident, was told hours following the attack that she would not be able to return to her apartment — indefinitely. Being an evacuee who lost a colleague that particular day, Lindman knew 9/11 was affecting her lifetime, and would, therefore, affect her art.So did singer Athena Masci. "Of course 9/11 affected me heavily," Masci said after using a song she wrote about the psychological stresses encountered by Iraq war soldiers. She performed included in the September 11 Musical Celebration. "I think any artist living in New York then would repeat the same."Lindman's Sunday performance was, like Masci's, not really a reflection on the terrorist attacks as being a singular event, but rather a discuss what she sees as global political and social repercussions of 9/11."Nothing has stopped. Suffering and trauma have never stopped," Lindman said. "The repercussions of 9/11 are very much greater than just that day, and so they affect all parts of the world — some even more than we feel here in New York." no previous page next 1/2
ugg.com.au The chest X-rays can detect nodules only once the reach the size of 25 % but CT scans can pick them up when they are the size of a tip of a ball-point pen when their cure rates are 80 percent or better. They get trained in a secret location, their identities classified. The team has been training for the past 3 years, but has been called on only once--September 11.
joslyn ugg boots Instead of finding stories as most reporters do, CBS News Correspondent Steve Hartman runs on the highly sophisticated piece of newsgathering equipment: a dart. He asks an individual on the street to throw a dart at the map to help him choose where he'll go next in search of a story. Once there, he picks an interest at random from the phone book. The idea is that "Everybody Has a Story." Despite his repeated get someplace warm, the dart chose Nebraska. This is where Robert Johnson told his fairly personal story and Hartman learned another simple truth - that people everywhere are looking for love. Johnson resides in Lewellen, Neb., in an old cafe. A carpenter by trade, he makes birdhouses that they sells from a roadside stand. He desperately would like to get remarried. Yet in the 20 years since his divorce, his longest relationship has become three days. "They weren't complete days either," according to him.Johnson wants to talk about this as they figures at this point, any publicity is good publicity. Yet eager as he is to rekindle something aside from his wood stove, he admits his lonely heart state is to some extent self-inflicted. Two years ago Johnson moved through the relatively thriving metropolis of North Platte, Neb., using a population of 25,000, to Lewellen, population, 300. During the time he thought since he loves the country, maybe he should meet someone who loves the country, too, he says.His mistake was not realizing what CBS News discovered when all of the middle-aged, unmarried women in town gathered to get a group discussion. "I think it's harder to locate somebody here because there's very little to choose from," one woman says.Still, you'll be able to only feel so sorry for Johnson. For the night of the big barn dance, with individuals visiting from all over the county, he was home watching his bad-reception TV, accompanied by his fish in the tank, The simple truth is, most folks around Lewellen do not know him. When individuals there were asked, they said never heard about him. "I have been a loner a large amount of my life. I probably still am," he says.He can't stand crowds and isn't comfortable approaching women, he states. So he continues to hope that someday an exclusive She will stop by maybe to acquire a birdhouse, and in the process discover his lonely heart to get everything she dreamed of.He could, for exampe, "show her how to run the tools without cutting her hands," he admits that.What more could a girl ask for?"Heck of a deal," he says.Next stop? Seminole County, Okla. (C)2000 CBS Worldwide Inc. All Rights Reserved CBS News Reporter Charles Wolfson is a former Tel Aviv bureau chief who now covers their state Department in Washington. As part of his commentary, Wolfson takes a step back from your so-called road map to peace in the Mideast and considers what's been accomplished thus far. Asked about progress in efforts to bring peace between Israelis and Palestinians, President George W. Bush answered "...We're really satisfied with what we've seen so far." What Washington has witnessed "so far" are actions taken by either side suggesting an initial willingness to check out the latest peace plan - this one's called the "road map" - in which the Bush administration has invested so much effort. Israelis have pulled back from Gaza and Bethlehem and Palestinian terrorist groups have cut a deal with Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas, essentially saying for the time being they will not attack Israelis. More important, Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon held a meeting this week in Jerusalem and both leaders were more than pleased to publicly put their most hopeful rhetoric at risk for all to witness.Sharon, the Israeli official trusted least by Palestinians, said he envisioned some pot "future of hope…which seems to be - perhaps now inside your - within reach." Abbas, to not be outdone, spoke of the current opportunity as a time to "put the past behind us." "Enough suffering, enough death, enough pain," said Abbas, eerily echoing the sentiments of the late Israeli Prime Minister, Yitzhak Rabin, at the White House in 1993: " We're saying to you today in a loud and clear voice: motor blood and tears. Enough." One hopes Abbas and Sharon will make it happen Rabin not only failed to realize but in addition lost his life striving to acquire.In the short run, more nice thing about it seems to be in the offing. The Israelis seem willing to release more Palestinian prisoners and could allow Yasser Arafat to leave his compound in Ramallah and go to Gaza. The Palestinians have pledged to break into down on Hamas and Islamic Jihad and now that they have security control over Gaza and Bethlehem the Israelis - and American monitors in this area - will be looking for results.Meanwhile, Israelis brace for further expected terrorist bomb attacks.One American official who's followed the pros and cons of Middle East peacemaking for years said "it's nice to have hope and it's really nice to have a plan available but there's no way in hell it'll work." Yes, everyone is breathing a sigh of relief the fighting of the past 33 months has stopped and, yes, everyone is hoping for the best. But even the optimistic and suddenly focused White House knows that peace is not exactly just about to happen. Officials know all that's happened is they've managed to call an occasion out in this round of violence. Surely no mean feat and clearly an attempt deserving of praise."…We're realists on this administration," Mr. Bush said. "We recognize that there's been years of hatred and distrust, and we'll keep the process moving forward."By Charles Wolfson
ugguk They were by all accounts hostages in their own personal homes, who today, developed a break from Basra. But in a few hundred yards of freedom their punishment originated from the sky. As CBS News' Lee Cowan reports, paramilitary forces were firing on their own people."Two or three hundred created a move across the bridge and also at that time they started being shelled with the Iraqi forces," said one British soldier who witnessed case. Members of Britain's 7th Armored Brigade shot back, wedging themselves between your Iraqis who were fleeing, and the ones have been firing. In the end only a handful got, the rest were forced to turn back the into a city they seemed so needing to leave."We are all suffering," one woman angrily screamed. "Only God will help us now."Coalition troops are looking for help too, after surrounding the city for 5 long days, they're hoping for more supplies, but even which is proving difficult. Crowds make supplying the troops up north just crazy. In one of the first towns just through the border in Iraq, there's already a large group chanting pro-Saddam slogans. And with the many unfriendlies outside of the walls of Basra, coalition troops could only guess how many are inside, where only a few pin-point bombs have gotten up to now. Rather: Fair or unfair to convey it's the modern version of the ancient bubonic plague?
fur ugg boots The U.S. Senate race between Hillary Rodham Clinton and Rep. Rick Lazio is a dead heat, according to a new poll. The survey of registered Ny voters by the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute showed Lazio and Clinton each with 44 percent. The past time Quinnipiac checked the New York Senate race was in a poll released on May 16, when it found Clinton with 44 percent and Nyc Mayor Rudolph Giuliani with 43 percent. 3 days later, Giuliani dropped out of the race to address prostate cancer and Lazio, a Long Island congressman, declared his candidacy the same day. Maurice Carroll, director of the Quinnipiac institute, said the poll is "surprising good news" for Lazio. "New for the Senate race, he's within a dead heat with Mrs. Clinton and already comparable to the Republican he replaced," Carroll said. The poll was conduced on the phone from May 30-June 5 and it has a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points. In the first case, the FTC says the corporation Hoechst-Marion Roussel, makers of the best-selling heart drug Cardizem CD, paid the organization Andrx, makers of a generic version of the drug, $10 million a quarter for one year to keep their product in the market.
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