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Show SpecTeaiures The Utah StatesmiiT Friday, Sept 12006_ Poll: Sept. 11 fears continue in NYC, DC Privato Rooms Snack Bar Party Packages WASHINGTON (AP) - Fear of another terrorist attack remains real for many Americans. For people who lived in the two cities struck by the terrorists on Sept. 11, 2001 — New York and Om 6,9X1 Video Karaoke Songs Washington — the fears are intensely personal and vivid. They're nervous about public transportation, take note of suspicious people and think back often to the horrors of Sept. 11, an AP-Ipsos poll found. Well over half of New Yorkers and Washingtonians are worried their communities will be attacked again. Nationwide, a third worry they will be attacked. On your first hour room rental! Five years after the attacks, the terGood for up to 12 people. Onlyone rorist threat is still evolving. Britain's coupon per group, per day with student ID, foiling of what authorities called a multiple hijacking plot in early August was a Off* expires Octi, 2006. stark reminder. Al-Qaida leader Osama Laden, who claims to have ordered Reservations Suggested bin the Sept. 11 attacks, remains free, probably in the mountains near the PakistanAfghanistan border. And the only person convicted in the U.S. for the Sept. 11 massacre is Zacarias Moussaoui, a Frenchman who was in jail when it happened. (Behind Kinkos) Such factors contribute to the persistent high anxiety, particularly in New 752-5525 ish Lit Prof oodd be 345 North 1st East Logan, Ut. York. "It's just a constant worry," said Micky Diaz, a medical office manager who lives in the Bronx and works in Manhattan. "Now you have to worry about the subways, you have to worry about the tunnels, you have to worry about the highways," she said. "It's nerve-racking." Among the poll's findings: —59 percent approved of President Bush's response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks while less than half in New York and Washington felt that way. —35 percent nationally were worried they'd be victims of terrorism, a number that spiked to 43 after the alleged terrorist plot in Britain was announced. The stress people experienced soon after the attacks fades with time, but can be renewed by such events as news of terror plots and the anniversary of the attacks, said Anthony Ng, a psychiatrist who has worked with 9/11 victims. Differences between the city that suffered the worst attack and the rest of the country can be found in the strength of Sept. 11 memories. About six in 10 New Yorkers say they've thought back recently to that day five years ago with its horrifying images MEX of planes used as missiles, crumbling skyscrapers and fleeing victims. That s more than the half nationally who said they've thought recently about it. The findings are based on national polling Aug. 7-9 and Aug. 15-17 of about 1,000 in each survey and polling of 402 adults in the Washington area and 402 in the New York City areafromAug. 6-10. The margin of sampling error for the national polls is plus or minus 3 percentage points, and 5 percentage points for the city polls. New Yorkers were more likely than people in Washington and the rest of the country to have concerns about being in open spaces and using public transportation. Women were more likely than men to have such fears. Much like the bombing of Pearl Harbor during World War II and President Kennedy's assassination in 1963, Sept. 11 has become one of the nation's defining days. When asked whether the attacks changed their lives, half the people around the country said it has. They were most likely to say they are more aware of their surroundings now, and more cautious. Some are more afraid of flying. GRILL IUV 1460 No. Main Street • Logan GOOD UNTIL SEPT. 30-f,SHOW USU STUDENT ID • LIMIT ONE DRINK k ^ " : ' . : • : ' PER STUDENT PER DAY..: :^, ? : "..' : |