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Before Wednesday's ceremony, several family members met with Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, who reiterated his agency's commitment to push forward with plans to build a National Park Service memorial at the crash site, which is slated to open on the 10th anniversary of the attacks. The family also met with the National Park Foundation director, Neil Mulholland. They also stopped at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History to view an exhibit on American wars that includes a section on the 9/11 crash sites. As she left the museum, Sarah Wainio, 22, recalled receiving the news of her sister's death. She was 14 and came home to find news reporters in her yard and FBI agents inside her house. She since had her sister's first name tattooed on her wrist. "We are doing our best to still maintain ourselves in a very, very unique situation. There's no book on how to survive this aftermath, so we're writing it as we go," Sarah Wainio said. ___ On the Net: Flight 93 National Memorial: http://www.honorflight93.org/
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