Aarp staffers remember where they were on 9/11
Aarp staffers remember where they were on 9/11"
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We who woke up on the East Coast that morning will never forget what a splendid day it was. Bright and blue and virtually cloudless, the sky on September 11, 2001, revealed no hint of the
destruction we'd see over the next few hours. To commemorate the anniversary of that terrible day, we published a piece by Steven Greenhouse. You'll hear the voices of survivors
and first responders on our website, as well as on our social media feeds and YouTube channel. But I wanted to give this space to my fellow AARP staffers who were witnesses; most of them
were working for other news outlets at the time. At 8:46 a.m., the first plane sliced into the North Tower of the World Trade Center, just blocks away from Mike DeSenne's office at the
former SmartMoney.com. “I saw the planes crash from my window,” recalls DeSenne, now an executive editor for aarp.org. “Most of us were paralyzed by disbelief, but disbelief turned to terror
when the first tower collapsed and our building was engulfed in smoke." AARP senior editor George Mannes — at the time a writer for TheStreet.com — was outside looking at the South
Tower when it fell. “As I was running down Broadway, trying to escape the dust cloud, someone snapped my picture,” he remembers. “I was overtaken by the cloud, which turned the day to night
in an instant. I made my way to a nearby building, interviewed some people about their experiences and filed a story that night." At AARP's E Street headquarters in Washington,
phones began ringing off the hook in the lobby at 9:37. Security guards locked down the building. “We were told to shelter in place,” notes Jeff Van Dam, AARP's director of business
strategies and operations. A plane had just hit the Pentagon, 3 miles away. Mike Hedges, then a national security reporter for the Houston Chronicle, arrived at the Pentagon just after the
plane struck. “When the first firefighters showed up, I hurried in behind them to record their efforts to deal with fire billowing out of the huge gash carved by the aircraft,” says Hedges,
now an AARP executive editor. “At first I thought maybe a small plane loaded with explosives was involved. Then I saw a piece of the aircraft's tail with the American Airlines logo. I
felt sick at the thought that a jetliner had disappeared into that wall of flames.” At AARP headquarters, employees who headed up to the roof “could see the smoke rising from the Pentagon,”
recalls executive editor Margaret Guroff. “Downtown D.C. was swarming with people walking, trying to get home." Senior staff writer Dena Bunis was the Washington bureau chief for the
_Orange County Register_. “I was driving into the District of Columbia — dodging military Humvees — as everyone was clearing out,” she remembers. She did interviews and later headed to the
Capitol. “It wasn't until members of Congress gathered on the Capitol steps and began singing ‘God Bless America’ that I finally broke down and allowed myself to weep over what had
happened to our nation that day."
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