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Show Page Two Monday, September 11, 2006 All stories and photos from The Associated Press ^-DAY WEATHER OUTLOOK Today £ \ 83/59 Sunny Tuesday Suiiny 85/64 Wednesday Suiiny 85/64 Thursday 83/63 Mostly Sunny Friday 76/59 Partly Cloudy WWW.WEATHER.COM At the u Today • Bleed Red: 9 a m to 5 p.m. @ Union "" Building, Business Building ; • Free Speech 101: the Utah Valley Uproar over Michael Moore: 11:45 a.m. to 1 p.m. @ Hinckley Institute of Politics Caucus Room: OSH, 255 • Info Session: University of Nevada •School of Dentistry: 2 p.m. to 3 p.m @ :Alfred Emery Building, Room 320 • In Remembrance of 9-U, An Interfaith Prayer Vigil: 5:30 p.m. @ Heritage Center RoomlA/lB •. ..%>' Tuesday • Bleed Red: 9 am. to 5 p.m. @ Union Building, Business Building • The War that Nobody Won: Israel, Hezbollah and Iran: Noon to 1 p.m. @ Women's Resource Center (Union, Room 293) • Grant-Writing Workshop: The National Institutes of Health: 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. @ HSEB, Room 1730 p.m. • Biology Seminar Series: Evolutionary relationships in the nightshade family: views from the trees: 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. @ Skaggs Biology Building, Room 210 • College Democrats meeting: 8 p.m. @ Hinckley Caucus Room (OSH, Room 255) Wednesday 13 • • Bleed Red: 9 a.m to 5 p.m. @ ; Union Building, Business Building • Study Abroad fair 10 a m to 2 p m @ ^.Union Patio Meteorology Graduate Seminar "En• i*£ironmentalflluidDynamics; Traris^orJ/ and Dispersionin the Atmospheric •*" Surface Layer": 2 p.m. to 330 p.m. @ JNSCC, Room 110 • Info Session; Dr. Wayne Samuelson, Associate Dean for Admissions, UUSOM: 230 p.m to 330 p.m @ ASB, Room 220 Thursday • Bleed Red: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. @ Union Building, Business Building • Understanding Mexico's Election Crisis: 10:45 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. @ Hinckley Caucus Room (OSH, Room 255) • Purchasing and Procurement: 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. @ HSEB, Room 1730 • Biology Seminar Series: Sea otters serve as sentinels for protozoa! pathogens transmitted from the terrestrial hosts to marine mammals: 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. @ Aline Skaggs Biology Building, Room 210 ^v\<'->---;;. " Friday ^ : TAMPA, Fla.—The lyst with the National largest earthquake to Earthquake Informastrike the eastern Gulf tion Center who said of Mexico in the last the quake was unusu30 years sent shock ally strong. waves from Louisiana "I wouldn't expect to southwest Florida any substantial damSunday, but did little age; but it is possible more than" rattle resi- 'there will be some'midents. nor damage." The most prevalent The magnitude 6.0 earthquake, centered vibration, which lasted about 260 miles south- for about 20 seconds, west of Tampa, was was felt on the gulf too small to trigger a coast of Florida and tsunami or dangerous in southern Georgia, waves, the U.S. Geo- Blakeman said. logical Survey said. But residents in AlaThe USGS received bama, Mississippi and more than 2,800 re- Louisiana also called ports from people in reports. who felt the 10:56 a.m. "It rattled our trailer quake. pretty good/' said Dan Scientists said it was Hawks, who lives near the largest and most Ocala in the small cenwidely felt of more tral Florida community than a dozen earth- of Pedro. quakes recorded in "The house started the region in three de- shaking. We could accades. tually see it moving. "This is a fairly We looked at each stuunique event," said pidly and said, 'What's Don Blakeman, an ana- the deal?'" nearly 24 hours of observances at the three sites where terrorists wrought death and destruction and transformed his presidency. On Monday, he was to visit with* firefighters at a firehouse in lower Manhattan; attend a ceremony at the field in Shanksville, Pa., where one of the hijacked planes hurtled to the ground; and participate in a wreath-laying ceremony at the Pentagon. lost their lives on Sept. nth, 2001," Bush told reporters outside the firehouse, which was destroyed in the attack and rebuilt. Bush also called Monday's anniversay "a day of renewing resolve." "I1 vowed that I'm never going to forget the lessons of that day," he said, still clutching his wife's hand. "There is still an enemy out there who would like to inflict the same kind of damage again." They were the first stops of %e jNctu Jjork Simejs Crossword ACROSS 62 Dweebs 1 House In Spain 63 Like 5 Keach of Lhe smaJI screen 64 10 Potor the Great, lor one 1 15 Machine shop lool 16 River to the Seine 2 3 • 4 not messaging (mooem communication) 14 •_ 7 11 13 12 1/ 65 Judgo the value 'to ol. as ore I I 18 Place lor sketches 20 Introduction m 3 Or. Souss book 22 Go on ail (outs 23 Coflee dispenser 24 Computer data holders 28 Order that may be scrambled or sunny-side up DOWN ^ H | — fee 3 1965 Alabama march site 4 r 30 Passed, as laws 32 Onetime Illinois governor 5 Door-dosmg sound 6 Set ot lool bones 35 GoHer Ernie 36 Introduction in "Moby-Dtck" 7 Perfume from petals 41 6 on a phono pad 42 Answer 9 "Can" opener? Ductiamp's "Mona Lisa" 46 Berlin's land. Abbr. SO Showbiz twin Mary-Kale or Ashley 54 Introduction in an NBC sitcom 57 Cleans up financially \\ 10 "Uke wow, man5 11 Fivo-dig.it number on an 46 Jolt provider In a car 47 Typical Court TV programming H^^H ^^^H 57 W lark 13 Ketchup-colored 19 Took, 1 did iir 21 Like pond scum 25 Stainless [44 45 _L H 49__lj !•_" 11 59^ I II • ••b2 ^M 60 100% "American MoT 51 • • r 52 53 n ^•__ 27 Radical 60's grp. 45 Tarzan player Ron and others 29 Hand it over, busier r 46 Starr ol the comics 31 First P.M. of modem India 49 Mtdeasl leaders 32 Thespian 51 Cook, as onions 33 52 Swashbuckler Ftynn Lama 34 Lfo story 53 Mels and Cubs, for short 37 Choss finales 55 "Peter Pan* dog 38 Office messages 56 39 Wrth mom, symbol of 57 SmaJI rug Americanism 26 Oarkson who won thB Trsl 26 127 • envelope 12 Happy —p- 137 i4 0 Paasagoways (or San la 43 Like Marcel P^\ L__l__ r3 1 24 J~ _• —LJ— • • 1 1 _ 1 • _ l IM I _L __• ^ V ^ A3 dunce cap ^^^L_ ^H36 2 '... partridge in ^ ^ B 1 Shaped I1K0 a I• • 66 Congers 17 Little ' , Dickens girl 40 U.SJGr. Brit, separator 40 15-percenler: Abbr. -bitsy 58 Logger's tool 59 General Mills cereal 44 Leasl w id 61 Lino ol rotation Advertising 801 581.7041 DAILY UTAH CHRONICLE Edited by Will Shortz 14 European auto 34 "See yal* 2 4 3 8 5 6 8 4 7 9 6 4 5 2 "3 4 9 8 7 9 3 1 1 5 2 6 8 9 6 1 trend in violence had begun. Last year, there were two violent gun crimes for every 1,000 individuals, compared with 1.4 in 2004, according to the department's Bureau of Justice Statistics. There were 2.6 robberies for every 1,000 persons, compared with 2.1 the year before. "This report tells us more the serious events—robbery and gun crimes increased and the FBI already told us homicides increased," said criminal justice1 'professor James Alan Fox of Northeastern University. WASHINGTON—Americans were robbed and victimized by gun violence at greater rates last year than the year before, even though overall violent and property crime reached a 32-year low, the Justice Department said Sunday. Experts said these increases buttress reports from the FBI and many mayors and police chiefs that violent crime is beginning to rise after a long decline. Bush administration officials expressed concern but stressed that it was too soon to tell if a new upward Stevenson do ku \ The policy of The Daily Utah Chronicle is fo correct any error made as soon as possible. If you find something you would like clarified or find unfair, please contact the editor at 801-581-8317. President Bush and first lady Laura Bush lay a memorial wreath in a reflecting pool at the footprint of the south tower on the eve of the fifth anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, Sunday. 6.0 Gulf quake felt Nation's crime rate hits 32-year low from La. to Fla. SU Corrections NEW YORK—President Bush WASHINGTON—The United States is safer now than it and his wife Laura stood in somwas before the Sept. n attacks, ber silence on Sunday after laying but must not relent in fight- wreaths at the site where the twin ing terrorism in Iraq and else- towers of the World Trade Center where, Secretary of State Con- once soared. doleezza Rice said Sunday. He later pledged to make the "I think it's clear that we are anniversary "a day of renewing safe—safer—but not really yet resolve" to remember the lessons safe," said Rice, who was Presi- of the Sept. 11 terror attacks. The Bushes set floral wreaths dent Bush's national security adviser when al-Qaida master- adrift in reflecting pools that minded the attacks of Sept. n, mark the former locations of the north and south, towers at the 2001. Yet Democratic leaders said beginning of a two-day fifth-anthe Bush administration has niversary tour that will take them gotten the U.S. bogged down to all three sites of devastation. They made: a slow procession in Iraq when there was no evidence of links to the Sept. n down a long ramp lined with a attacks* detracting from efforts flag-bearing horior guard made against al-Qaida and other ter- up of firefighters and policemen, making their way four or five stororist groups. "I think we're in trouble," ries below ground level. Uttering no words, the Bushes said Howard Dean, chairman of the Democratic National Com- walked hand-in-hand on the floor mittee. A poll released Sunday of the cavernous pit with bagpipes found that 55 percent of those wailing in the background. surveyed think the country is Afterward, the Bushes attended safer from terrorism than it a service of prayer and rememwas before Sept. 11, 2001, while brance at nearby St. Paul's Chapel, greeted firefighters at a fire37 percent do not. The ABC News poll also said house overlooking ground zero 38 percent think the govern- and toured a private museum ment is. doing all it can to pre- next door that is dedicated to 9/11 vent another terrorist attack, families. while 60 percent say it is not. "Laura and I approach tomor. Vice President Dick Cheney row with a heavy heart. It's hard defended the invasion of Iraq. not to think about people who © Puzz es by Pappocom • Bleed Red: 9 am. to 5 p.m. @ Union Building, Business Building • Immigrants Transforming Utah: . Entering a New Era of Diversity: Noon to 1 p.m. @ Hinckley Caucus Room (OSH, Room 255) . . . • Volleyball vs. Colorado State: 7 p.nx @ -Sutherland Moot Court Room • Flashback: The Best of 2005/6: @ Fine Arts Auditorium ^ j i v - : -j-&'.&\ : ••XlTevents located oh campus. Bushes lay wreaths at trade center site Rice: Do not relent in fighting Iraq News 801 581.NEWS Fax 801 581.FAXX Editor in Chief Danyelle White d. white@chronicle, Utah .edu Asst. News Editor Dustin Gardiner d.gardiner@chronicle.utah.edu Sports Editor Chris Bellamy c.bellamy@chronicle.utah.edu Copy Editor Shalyn Roberts s.roberts@chronicle.utah.edu Online Editor James Lancaster j.lancaster@chronicle.utah.edu Managing Editor Jenni Zalkind j.zalkind@chronicle.utah.edu A&E Editor Ben Zalkind b. zalkind @chronicle,utah. edu Photo Editor Lennie Mahler l.mahler@chronicle.utah.edu Copy Editor Scott Curtis s.curtis@chronicle.utah.edu General Manager Jacob K. Sorensen j.sorensen@chronicle. 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