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http://worldcat.org/entity/work/id/56756657

September 11, 2001 : a collection of newspaper front pages selected by the Poynter Institute

"Here lies a souvenir of horror, a blazing obituary of American innocence. But you are also holding a testament to news ..."--The introduction. Contains the front pages of various newspapers from around the world recording the September 11, 2001 attacks. *** No front pages are included from the Middle East and much of Asia.

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  • "On Tuesday September 11, our world changed forever. The United States was attacked by an unknown terrorist organization. Word of this attack spread instantaneously around the world. Billions of people woke up on September 12 to find that the front page of their local newspaper was devoted to the tragedy of the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. And then on May 1, 2011 the world changed again with the news that Osama Bin Laden had been located and killed by a team of U.S. navy seals. September 11, 2001 and May 1, 2011 is a collection of over 150 front pages of major newspapers throughout the world announcing both events."
  • ""Here lies a souvenir of horror, a blazing obituary of American innocence. But you are also holding a testament to news ..."--The introduction. Contains the front pages of various newspapers from around the world recording the September 11, 2001 attacks. *** No front pages are included from the Middle East and much of Asia."@en
  • "Reproduces 150 front pages from newspapers around the world depicting the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001."
  • "Reproduces 150 front pages from newspapers around the world depicting the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001."@en
  • "For each of us, there are occasions - a wedding, a child's birth, a family tragedy - so compelling that details are forever etched in memory. Few events define all of us. September 11, 2001, did. We all gaped, horrified, as the second passenger plane collided with the second tower. We all watched the wedge of destruction carved into the Pentagon. We all peered into the desolate crater on a field in Pennsylvania. We all looked eagerly for more ghostly survivors to trudge, holding one another, out of the concrete soot that clouded the remains of collapsed twin towers. Not since the assassination of John F. Kennedy has one event so transfixed a nation, a world. The Poynter Institute, a school that teaches skills and ethics to professional journalists in St. Petersburg, Florida, had no plan to memorialize these frozen moments in time. The school merely posted a notice on its Web site inviting news editors who design front pages to send us an electronic copy of how they told this urgent story. Within a day, hundreds of front pages were recorded on the Web site. And all over the world people were turning to the school as another place to connect themselves to the record of these terrible events, and thus to one another."@en

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  • "Pictorial works"@en
  • "Sources"
  • "Sources"@en
  • "Electronic books"
  • "Facsimiles"
  • "Facsimiles"@en

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  • "September 11, 2001 : a collection of newspaper front pages selected by the Poynter Institute"@en
  • "September 11, 2001 : a collection of newspaper front pages"
  • "September 11, 2001"@en
  • "September 11, 2001"
  • "September 11, 2001 and May, 1 2011"
  • "September 11, 2001 : [a collection of newspaper front pages]"@en