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The Pantagraph from Bloomington, Illinois • Page 47
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The Pantagraph from Bloomington, Illinois • Page 47

Publication:
The Pantagraphi
Location:
Bloomington, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
47
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

www.pantagraph.com Pantagraph Sunday, September 10, 2006 G7 PantagraphPiizzle REVIEW ft a- -V 110 Annoy 114 Hoarse voice 118 "And you won't believe this 120 Take stripes from 122 Football variety 123 It may be in blocks 124 Hoover Dam's lake 125 Muse of astronomy 126 Stereotypical animal name 127 CPA's data 128 El 129 Martin's costar in "The Jerk" Down 1 "That's break" 2 Classroom drilling 3 Toe woe 4 Pyramus's love 5 Promise of repayment 6 Figures 7 Animals with pinkeyes 8 Composer Porter 9 Stepped 10 Part of Caesar's boast 11 Electric razor brand 12 from far country Housman 13 Male hormone 14 Volcanic dross 15 Central America's largest nation, area-wise 16 Low joint 17 Sister in "The Color Purple" 18 Massage 25 Dullea of "2001: A Space Odyssey" 26 Mega- times a million 29 Costa 32 Remainder 34 Hindu wonder-worker 36 Rugby tussle 37 Plane angle symbol, in geometry 38 Isolated, with "off" 39 Speedway event 40 Mediation agcy. 41 DDE's command 43 Actresses Gyllen- haal and Smith 46 Big name in motion 48 Tolled 49 Wagner's Earth goddess 50 Dutch cheese 52 Cartel acronym 54 Canine command 55 Enthusiasm 57 Stage disaster 58 Low-fat meat choice 62 Most promising 63 Drops 64 Rocky follower: Abbr. 65 Mr. 68 Duma denials 69 March time 70 Conduit corner 71 WB sitcom about the Hart family 72 Closed to some extent 73 93-Across-seeking org. 74 Since 78 "I Love Trouble" costar 79 Not yet realized 80 "Superman Returns" actress Parker 82 Detaches 83 Explosive stuff 84 Door opener 85 "American 88 Become less appealing 89 E-mail address ending 90 Skipped 91 "SportsCenter" tidbit 95 Sitcom family name 96 Exam that includes a Biol.

Sciences section 99 Old place in oaters? 100 Persian fairy 101 French mathematician Pierre de 102 Post-op program 103 Sporty Olds 104 Loses steam 106 Lowlands protectors 109 "Indeed!" 111 Yukon's only law enforcers: Abbr. 112 Company founded by Ingvar Kamprad 113 They may be blended 115 Top-notch 116 Barely move 117 Shooter ammo 119 Antipollution prefix 121 Before, to the bard Phaidon Press JOEL MEYEROWITZ Phaidon Press provided this assembled panorama of the plaza at the World Trade Center looking south and west, made on Sept. 26, 2001. Photographer shares his Views of Sept. 11 aftermath ft Answer: "PIGSKIN PARADE" Across I Like some of Scandinavia 7 When Richard III dies II Win nose 14 Soda go-with 19 Mock cry 20 Actress Singer 21 "Apollo 13" director Howard 22 Kind of closet 23 Public room bright-ener 24 Hoisting contraption 27 Places of shelter 28 Pew feature 30 Trappings of royalty 31 Bean Town skater 33 About to undergo 35 Swamp thing 36 Traffic light site 42 Brightly, colored lizard 44 Comedian Margaret 45 Condiment produced via evaporation 46 Presidential nickname 47 Match 51 Transplants, in a way 53 Traffic stopper 56 Conference USA team 57 UK network, with "the" 59 It can cover a lot 60 Sudan neighbor 61 Scooted over, say 64 Kid's cry 65 "It's just thought" 66 Pinup highlight 67 Local meeting place 72 Fresh-daisy connector 75 Short relative? 76 Down marker units: Abbr.

77 Get ready to play 81 Order founded by St. Ignatius of Loyola 83 Formerly called 84 Pottery oven 86 Former Palm Springs mayor 87 Out of ideas 90 Bible book with 150 parts 92 Jazz melodies 93 Infiltrators among us, some say 94 Hardly the assertive type 97 Improper attire at most golf clubs 98 In combat 100 Police concern 102 "Phooey!" 105 Eat into 107 Social level 108 Persnickety sort Title: "Aftermath: World Trade Center Archive" Author; Joel Meyerowitz Publisher: Phaidon Press Price: $75 ing in the place and to give the feeling of what it looked like to all who couldn't go there." When asked about his first reaction to being on the site, he noted that TV and newspaper pictures made everything look so distant. "But once you're next to it, it's riveting and awesome like standing next to a mountain," he said. "I was shaking involuntarily and felt I had lost some control." Even though he eventually became "familiar" with the place, he said, "I never got used to the emotional jolt. I couldn't turn away from the emotional-physical connection.

I felt that if these photos were going to be historical, that visceral connection was necessary I didn't need to make art, just to make pictures that spoke to viewers and that viewers could connect to." The photos, now part of the permanent collection of the Museum of the City of New York, had been displayed nationwide in a traveling exhibition in 2002. "I am shocked when people call them Meyerowitz said. "I was just documenting what was there. If there was beauty, the place had it and it was there." Besides the images of piles of rubble and twisted wreckage, and of dust and dirt and scraps, are those of people: firefighters and police officers, ironworkers and security guards, mechanics'and welders. There are mourners and clergy, and volunteers from the Red Cross and Salvation Army, and emergency medical technicians including "Miss September" from the EMT calendar.

By Ron Berthel ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW YORK "I'm no historian," claimed Joel Meyerowitz. But five years ago, the longtime professional photographer created a valuable historical document like no other. Twelve days after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, Meyerowitz ventured into the vast pit of debris that was once the World Trade Center to photograph the rubble and the recovery. He took thousands of pictures during the nine months of his daily mission, 400 of which are reproduced in his hook, "Aftermath: World Trade Center Archive." Interviewed in his llth-floor studio on the Upper West Side, Meyerowitz, 68 and a Bronx native, said he immediately realized the importance of documenting this historic event.

His attempts to gain access to the site met with bureaucratic roadblocks and dead ends; even when he managed to enter with the help of a friend in city government, he was sometimes ejected by authorities who told him they were "just following orders." j. But bumping into literally a group of eight officers from the New York Police Department's Arson and Explosion Squad changed things. When they heard about his mission and saw his quaint little wooden camera, they became his protectors and his ticket to free access to the site. I "Meeting them made this rjook possible," Meyerowitz said. "I owe this book to them." Meyerowitz pays tribute to them also in the selection of the dust jacket photo, an assem- 1 2 13 14 lb lb Ft' la TT I'2 I13 I'5 I16 I17 I16 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 29 30 "T3T 32 CiibiiZmiI fjj 36 37 38 39 40 41 jT2 43 jjjjJ 44 yj4S jjl46 4S 49 SO 51 52 54 55 56 ill, jb fb9 p60 61 62 63 fJ" II bnaa mm ham 68 69 70 71 81 82 "'lia ICiT" 85 "Jab 87 66 89 90 tt1 92 yl94 95 96 99 pOO 101 102 103 104 "lTo6 106 TJToT 108 1 09 'jjllO 111 112 113 "5 118 119 120 121 122 T24 125 126 127 128 129 bled panoramic view of the site taken from the roof of a neighboring building at night.

The officers led him with flashlights up the stairs of the blacked-out building and to its roof, where he made the image. The color photos in the large-format volume it measures 15 by 11 inches and has 347 pages are arranged chronologically, from Sept. 23, 2001, Meyerowitz's first day on the site, to June 21, 2002. Meyerowitz also provides text that explains the circumstances of some images or relates his thoughts, anecdotes or background information. Meyerowitz said he used no photography tools to create special effects.

"Every picture was taken with a 1-to-l lens," he said. "I wanted authenticity. I wanted to give viewers the sense of be Answers to today's puzzle will be in Monday's Classifieds section New attlie library Recent additions to the Sept. 11 bookshelf an NYPD detective when the police commissioner assigned him to take photos of the destruction at ground zero in the days immediately following Sept. 11.

This large-format' book contains 130 black-and-white images. "Closure: The Untold Story of the Ground Zero Recovery Mission" (Touchstone-Fireside) by Lt. William Kee-gan Jr. with Bart Davis. Kee-gan, an officer with the Port Authority Police, describes his experience as one of four Operations Commanders during the nine-month rescue and recovery operation at the World Trade Center.

"The One Percent Doctrine: Deep Inside America's Pursuit of Its Enemies Since 911" (Simon Schuster) by Ron Suskind. This account of the first three years of America's war on terror begins on Sept. 12, 2001. ASSOCIATED PRESS "Aftermath," Joel Meyerowitz's huge volume of photos taken at the World Trade Center site, isn't the only new book about the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

It's not even the only one called "Aftermath." Here's a rundown of some rjew books relating to Sept. 11: "Aftermath: Unseen 911 Photos by a New York City Cop" (Regan Books) by John B.otte. Botte, now retired, was Loomis, Lighthouse Seeds by Pamela Love, Music for Alice by Allen Say Fairbury: My Mom's Wedding by Eve Bunting, Fluff'y's Valen-r tine's Day by Kate McMullan, Ju-nie B. First Grader: Aloha-Ha-Ha! by Barbara Park, Hand the Cow-dog: The Case of the Monkey Bur. glar by John R.

Erickson Eureka: The Best time to Read by Debbie Bertram, Have You Seen My Cat? by Eric Carle, Mildred and Sam and Their Babies by Sharleen Collicott, Peter and the Shadow Th ieves by Dave Barry Hudson: Jack by Patricia Finney, Clarice Bean Spells Trouble by Lauren Child, Don't Forget I Love You by Mariam Moss JUVENILE N0NFICTI0N Pontiac: Bone Detective by Lor-! raine Jean Hopping, Children's Guide to Insects and Spiders by Jinny Johnson, Dinosaurs by Howard Zimmerman, Five-Minute Bible Stories by Lois Rock Fairbury: The Boy Who Burped Too Much by Scott Nickel Eureka: A Picture Book of Harriet Tubman by David A. Adler, The Remarkable Benjamin Franklin by Cheryl Harness, The Story of Money by Betsy Maestro, Mummies and Ancient Egypt by Anita Ganeri Hudson: Who Were the Beatles? by Geoff Edgers, Talladega Super-speedway by A.R. Schaefer, Pet Science by Veronika Alice Gunter and Rain Newcomb ca Patrick, Storm from the East by Milton Viorst Bloomington: How Nashville Became Music City USA by Michael Kossler, Preserving Nature's Bounty by Frances Bissell, Ghost Hunters by Deborah Blum, Real Mosquitoes Don't Eat Meat This and Other Inquiries into the Oddities of Nature by Brad Wet-zler Pontiac: The Defining Moment by Jonathan Alter, Fix-it and En-joy-it "Cookbook by Phyllis Pell-man Good, Is It Me or My Meds? by David A. Karp, The 10 Best of Everything by Nathaniel Lande Fairbury: Betty Crocker One-Dish Family Favorites by Betty Crocker, The March Up: Taking Baghdad with the 1st Marine Division by Bing West Major General Ray L. Smith, The Ice Cave by Lucy Jane Bledsoe, Chronic Heatburn by Barbara E.

Wendland Lisa Marie Ruffolo Hudson: Mayflower by Nathaniel Philbrick, Audrey Hepburn: An elegant Spirit by Sean Hepburn Ferrer JUVENILE FICTION Normal: Swimming with Dolphins by Lambert Davis, Hunter Stripe and the Soccer Showdown by Laura Malone Elliott, The Hair Scare by Jeffrey Fisher, Mooseki-tos: A Moose Family Reunion by Margie Palatini Bloomington: Manny's Cows the Niagara Falls Tale by Suzy Becker, Hattie Hippo by Christine' ADULT FICTION Normal Public Library: The Actor's Guide to Greed by Rick Copp, The Keep by Jennifer Egan, Color of the Sea by John Hamamu-ra, Lethal Justice by Fern Michaels Bloomington Public Library: Six-Gun Gamble by D.B. Newton, Twelve Sharp by Janet Evanovich, House of Childhood by Anna Mitgutsch, The Judas Field A Novel of the Civil War by Howard Bahr Pontiac Public Library: Break No Bones by Kathy Reichs, The Measure of a Lady by Deeanne Gist, Winter's Bone by Daniel Woodrell, The Bishop's Daughter by Wanda E. Brunstetter J.T. and E.J. Crumbaugh Library, LeRoy: Angel Falls by Nora Roberts, Break No Bones by Kathy Reichs, Dead Wrong by J.A.

Jance, The Messenger by Daniel Silva Dominy Memorial Library, Fairbury: Cold Pursuit by T. Jefferson Parker, What is Mine by Anne Holt Hudson Area Public Library: Found by Karen Kingsbury, Glass Books of the Dream Eaters by Gordon Dahlquist, Talk Talk by T.C. Boyle ADULT N0NFICTI0N Normal: Flavor of the Month: Why Smart People Fall for Fads by Joel Best, And You Know You Should Be Glad by Bob Greene, Danica: Crossing the Line by Dani- Bestsellers Everyday Guide to Understanding and Correcting Common Dog Problems" by Cesar Millan, Melissa Jo Peltier (Harmony) 7. "The World Is Flat (Updated and Expanded): A Brief History of the Twenty-first Century" by Thomas L. Friedman (Far-rar, Straus and Giroux) 8.

"Freakonomics" by Steven D. Levitt, Stephen J. Dubner (William Morrow) 9. "Guinness World Records 2007" by Guinness World Records (Guinness) 10. "The Purpose-Driven Life" by Rick Warren (Zondervan) From Publisher's Weekly kind (Tor) 10.

"The Messenger" by Daniel Silva (Putnam) N0NFICTI0NGENERAL 1. "Lies at the Altar" by Robin L. Smith (Hyperion) 2. "I Feel Bad About My Neck: And Other Thoughts on Being a Woman" by Nora Ephron (Knopf) 3. "Marley Me" by John Gro-gan (Morrow) 4.

"State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and Con-guest of America" by Patrick J. Buchanan (Thomas Dunne) 5. "Fiasco" by Thomas E. Ricks (Penguin) 6. "Cesar's Way: The Natural, HARDCOVER FICTION 1.

"Rise and Shine" by Anna Quindlen (Random House) 2. "Judge Jury" by James Patterson and Andrew Gross (Little, Brown) 3. "Ricochet" by Sandra Brown (Simon Schuster) 4. "Armageddon's Children" by Terry Brooks (Del Rey) 5. "The Afghan" by Frederick Forsyth (Putnam) 6.

"Hunters of Dune" by Brian Herbert, Kevin J. Anderson (Tor) 7. "The Emperor's Children" by Claire Messud (Knopf) 8. "Into the Storm" by Suzanne Brockmann (Ballantine) 9. "Phantom" by Terry Good- Dan Craft's Movie Reviews EVERY THURSDAY IN GO! AND FRIDAY IN THE ENTERTAINMENT SECTION Bookmar 5-12" by Edward L.

Schor "The Family Nutrition Book" by William Sears Bill Lamb Pontiac Public Library National Assisted Living Week 1 BroMenn Healthcare Heritage Enterprises celebrate National Assisted Living Week by congratulating Evergreen Place on five years of service to the community. Your success is a reflection of the professionalism, compassion, and care that you provide! 10 books Books on keeping our kids healthy: "The Children's Hospital Guide to Your Child's Health and Development" by Children's Hospital Boston "Healthy Child, Whole Child" by Stuart H. Ditchek and Russell H. Greenfield "Family Guide to Emotional Wellness" by Patrick Fanning and Matthew McKay 1 "Children's Health for Dummies" by Katy Holland and Sarah Jarvis "Your Baby and Child: From Birth to Age five" by Penelope Leach "Taking Care of Your Child: A Parent's Illustrated Guide to Complete Medical Care" by Robert H. Pantell "The No-Cry Sleep Solution" by Elizabeth Eantley and William Sears "The American Academy of Pediatrics Guide to Your Child's Symptoms" by Donald Schiff "Caring for Your School-Age Child: Ages A pick for kids "Seven for a Secret" by Laurence Anholt and Jim Coplestone; 2006, 36 pages, recommended for ages 4-8 This story is told primarily through a series of letters exchanged by Ruby and hef ailing grandfather.

The story itself is bittersweet, but it provides abundant opportunities for sharing between young children and adults. The contrast between Ruby's life in the city and Grampa's life in the country will interest many children. This book is best when read by adults and children together. Bill Lamb Pontiac Public Library Evergreen Place RESIDENTIAL ASSISTED LIVING 801 Gregory St. Normal 309-451-9355 www.EvergreenPIaceAssistedLiving.com.

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Pages Available:
1,649,342
Years Available:
1857-2024