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...Dawn Lee. I work in lower Manhattan and witnessed the attack on the World Trade Center (WTC) last week. As you read this account of the coincidences that let me escape unscathed, I urge you to think of the victims who are not so lucky, and who are not alive to tell their stories today...

Author: By Dawn Lee, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: From One of the Lucky Ones | 9/21/2001 | See Source »

...Dawn Lee ’01 is a former Crimson executive. Financial assistance can be given to the attacks’ victims and their families through several charities that have been established, including the United Way’s September 11th Fund (http://september11fund.org...

Author: By Dawn Lee, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: From One of the Lucky Ones | 9/21/2001 | See Source »

...trading Monday was also arguably the most breathlessly anticipated session of all time. Three thousand traders crowd the floor of the NYSE every day, but as we all milled around outside in the hours before the reopening bell - breathing air still gray and bitter with smoke and dust and dawn - they were easily outnumbered by the professional gawkers who had descended on the Big Board from all over the world, panning for soundbites, owing copy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Down on Wall Street for Day One | 9/18/2001 | See Source »

...Rockford Files, Rockford never had feelings. He only solved crimes," says Dawn Prestwich, who created Bickford (8 p.m. E.T., debuts Sept. 23) together with Nicole Yorkin. "Until now, that's been the traditional male role on television." Few men in TV dramas have been so explicitly defined in terms of their maleness as Professor Max Bickford (Richard Dreyfuss). He describes himself as a man who "always surrounded himself with women." He teaches American culture at a women's college, has a female boss and believes that women are "more thoughtful, maybe even a little smarter, than most...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Manly Pursuits | 9/17/2001 | See Source »

...problem for anyone trying to make what Bob Marley once called "rebel music" today is not that there's too little rebellion out there but, by Western pop culture's liberal definition, that there's way too much. Since the dawn of rock 'n' roll, popular music has been de facto rebellious, at least insofar as the term is defined by record labels and soft-drink ads. All it takes to be a rebel in America, it seems, is to be young and loud. In a music culture where a rebel is the Backstreet Boy with a goatee...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Africa: Get Up Stand Up | 9/15/2001 | See Source »

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