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"Got that?" one videographer asks on the video showing the explosion of the second tower when it's hit by the jetliner. "What kind of crazy person would .... kill themselves?" another asks as the camera points at the two towers. Some of the submissions already are on display at the 9/11 Memorial Preview Site, opened last month near ground zero as a temporary exhibit until the memorial and museum are completed. There, visitors can see a film of the attacks, with a live Webcam showing the ongoing construction on the former World Trade Center's 16 acres. The memorial is expected to open on the 10th anniversary of the attacks in 2011, and the museum a year later. The names of nearly 3,000 victims of the attacks in New York, at the Pentagon and in Pennsylvania, as well as those from the 1993 trade center truck bombing, will be around two waterfall-filled pools. The 100,000-square-foot museum will reach 70 feet underground, tracing the towers' original footprints. Photographs of thousands of terrorism victims will be flashed on a mammoth wall, with each remembered in movies, photos and narration. "There are negatives lying in drawers around the world" that have never been seen, said Michael Shulan, the foundation's creative director. "We're inviting the world to really respond." ___ On the Net: "Make History":
http://makehistory.national911memorial.org/ National September 11 Memorial & Museum:
http://www.national911memorial.org/ "Brooks Brothers": "Plane Hits Towers":
http://thecameraplanetarchive.magnify.net/
video/Night-at-1-Liberty-Place
http://thecameraplanetarchive.magnify.net/
video/Over-There-NYT
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