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| Resources
| Airlines/Flights | World
Trade Center | Pentagon |
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| Updated:
Friday, Sept. 14, 2001 |
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Donate
blood to local blood banks run by the American Red Cross or
other nonprofit organizations.
Donate
money toward relief efforts:
Call 1-800-HELP-NOW
Contact
local Red Cross chapters
American
Red Cross
P.O. Box 37243
Washington D.C. 20013
The
Salvation Army
USA - http://www.christianity.com/salvationarmyusa
http://www.salvationarmy.org/
Contribue Here
People
wishing counseling services or who want more information
on how to help can call The Salvation Army at 1-800-SAL-ARMY
(725-2769).
Charitable
contributions can be sent to:
National Disaster Fund
The Salvation Army National Headquarters
615 Slaters Lane
Alexandria, VA 22313
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Chronology
of attacks
In the worst attack on American soil since
Pearl Harbor, the World Trade Center in New York City and
the Pentagon in Washington, D.C., were attacked Tuesday morning.
Four airplanes were hijacked and crashed during the attacks.
7:59
a.m.
American Airlines Flight 11, a Boeing 767, departs Boston
for Los Angeles with 92 people on board.
8:01
a.m.
United Flight 93 departs Newark International Airport for
San Francisco with 45 people on board.
8:14 a.m.
United Airlines Flight 175, a Boeing 767, departs Boston from
Logan International Airport for Los Angeles with 65 people
on board.
8:45
a.m.
American Airlines Flight 11 crashes into the north tower of
the World Trade Center in New York City.
9:03 a.m.
United Airlines Flight 175 crashes into the south tower of
the World Trade Center.
9:31
a.m.
President Bush calls the crashes an apparent terrorist
attack.
9:40 a.m.
American Airlines Flight 77, a Boeing 757, crashes into the
north side of the Pentagon in Washington, D.C., collapsing
a side of the building. It was en route from Dulles Airport
to Los Angeles with 64 people.
9:50 a.m.
Two World Trade Center the second tower hit
collapses.
10:29 a.m.
One World Trade Center collapses.
10:37
a.m.
United Airlines Flight 93 from Newark, N.J., to San Francisco
crashes 80 miles southeast of Pittsburgh, in Shanksville,
Pa.
10-11:30
a.m.
Government buildings around the country are evacuated, including
the Capitol and the White House. The Federal Aviation Administration
shuts down airports nationwide. The United Nations closes
down. The Securities and Exchange Commission closes all U.S.
financial markets for the day.
2:51 p.m.
The U.S. Navy sends missile destroyers and other equipment
to New York and Washington, D.C.
5:25 p.m.
A third building, 7 World Trade Center, collapses, damaged
from the mornings crashes.
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Precautions
taken in various U.S. states in the wake of the terrorist attacks:
- VIRGINIA:
Navy installations throughout Hampton Roads, home of the
world's largest Navy base, placed under an increased security
condition called Threatcon Charlie. Threatcon Charlie is
implemented when an incident occurs or when intelligence
is received that some form of terrorist action is imminent.
- NEW
JERSEY: Airports and river crossings to New York City
closed. Traffic reported snarled on the New Jersey Turnpike.
PATH commuter trains canceled. At Newark International Airport,
officers with shotguns blocked the road leading to Port
Authority offices and the air traffic control tower.
- MINNEAPOLIS:
Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport shut down. IDS
Center in downtown Minneapolis, the tallest building in
the state, evacuated.
- GEORGIA:
All flights at Hartsfield Atlanta International Airport,
the nation's busiest, stopped. The CNN Center, world headquarters
of Cable News Network, closed to the public, although journalists
at CNN and The Associated Press allowed to remain.
- MARYLAND:
Officials tightening security throughout the state. Extra
security measures instituted at Andrews Air Force Base.
- NORTH
CAROLINA: Military bases prepared for possible change
in status. At Raleigh-Durham International Airport, spokeswoman
Mirinda Kossoff said a strategy meeting was planned with
the Federal Aviation Administration.
- SOUTH
DAKOTA:
Commercial flights from Sioux Falls, Rapid City, Pierre
and other South Dakota cities grounded.
- PENNSYLVANIA:
Philadelphia International Airport closed. National Park
Service officials meeting to determine whether the city's
high-profile tourist attractions like the Liberty Bell and
Independence Hall would be closed.
- COLORADO:
City and state officials stepped up security around government
buildings. City opened an emergency preparedness office
in the basement of City Hall, where representatives of police,
fire and health agencies, public transportation officials,
Denver International Airport and utilities were gathering.
- NEW
YORK STATE: Security clamped down across New York state.
There were plans to increase security at border points.
Gov. George Pataki canceled his New York City events.
- CALIFORNIA:
State put on high alert. State's Emergency Council convened
as Gov. Gray Davis requested heightened security at all
state buildings.
- TENNESSEE:
Department of Energy's nuclear weapons and research complex
in Oak Ridge put under heightened security. All flights
from Tennessee's major airports grounded. Planes were allowed
to land.
- KENTUCKY:
Southern Governors' Association canceled annual fall meeting
so governors of Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi,
Tennessee, Kentucky and West Virginia could head back to
their states.
- WEST
VIRGINIA: Chemical plant security heightened. Flights
out of Charleston's Yeager Airport, West Virginia's largest,
suspended.
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AP-PREVIOUS
ATTACKS
By The Associated Press
Previous terrorist attacks on U.S. targets:
-
March 1, 1999: Congo-based Rwandan rebels kill two Americans
along with six other foreign
tourists in Uganda.
- February,
1999: Three Americans are abducted and killed by Colombian
guerrillas.
- August
7, 1998: Terrorists bomb U.S. embassies in Kenya and
Tanzania in Africa, killing 224
people _ including 12 Americans _ and injuring thousands.
- June
25, 1996: Terrorists attack the U.S. military complex
at Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia,
killing 19 Americans and wounding hundreds more.
- April
19, 1995 _ Bomb rips through the Alfred P. Murrah Federal
Building in downtown Oklahoma
City, killed 168 and injured more than 500. Timothy
McVeigh was convicted of federal murder
charges and executed in June.
- Feb.
26 1993: Bomb explodes two stories beneath World Trade
Center in Manhattan, killing six
and injuring 1,000.
Oct.
12, 2000: USS Cole was refueling in the Yemeni port of Aden
when a small harbor skiff pulled
alongside it and detonated explosives, killing 17 sailors,
injuring 39 others
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