
(Photograph by Evangelos Dousmani)
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One Year Later
Students, faculty members, and administrators reflect on their lives, careers, and academe after September 11
Letty Eisenhauser, staff counselor, Borough of Manhattan Community College

Mihaela N. Metianu, international-student adviser, Florida State University

Alan M. Dershowitz, law professor, Harvard University

Kenneth W. Hearlson, political-science professor, Orange Coast College

Kathryn M. Kueny, associate professor of religious studies, Lawrence University

The following are for Chronicle subscribers only:
David Ward, president, American Council on Education

John Waterbury, president, American University of Beirut

John E. Ulmschneider, library-system director, Virginia Commonwealth University

Richard A. Falk, professor emeritus of politics and international affairs, Princeton University

Barry Munitz, president, J. Paul Getty Trust

Craig T. Watson, police chief, Emory University

Laura Hobgood-Oster, assistant professor of philosophy, Southwestern University

Wilfred M. McClay, history professor, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga

Scott Laderman, student columnist, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities

Joshua W. Matthews, recruiter, University of Wyoming ROTC program

Stanley Hauerwas, professor of theological ethics, Duke Divinity School

M. Lee Pelton, president, Willamette University

Jacqueline Jensen, dancer, Ragesties project

Carol Christ, president, Smith College

Mashe'l al-Dabbous, Ph.D. student, State University of New York at Buffalo

Janice Kempster, writing instructor, Great Basin College

Bijan Khazai, Ph.D. student in engineering, University of California at Berkeley

Steven M. Block, professor of biological sciences and applied physics, Stanford University

Christopher P. Turner, resident adviser, University of the South
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Reflections on Fractured Landscapes

FROM THE CHRONICLE REVIEW:
Jay Parini: Since September 11, what's happened to dissent?

Sasha Abramsky: Fiction's small truths can provide great insights for those trying to understand lives in times of war and chaos.

James M. McPherson: History has yielded perspective on another American September of carnage -- Antietam, 1862. Might we someday view September 11 with similar clarity?
(Illustration by Julie Delton)
Colloquy
How has academe changed since September 11?
Normalcy Returns
At the University of Maryland at College Park,
September 11 didn't reshape the world as much as students had expected.
Information in Depth
A collection of news and opinion articles on the events of September 11, as reported by The Chronicle

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