Parade 09-11

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9.11.11 A DAY of REMEMBRANCE Tom Brokaw on the lessons we must never forget How victims’ families have carried on What you can do to help SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2011 © PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.

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9.11.11 A Day of Remembrance

Transcript of Parade 09-11

Page 1: Parade 09-11

9.11.11A DAY of

REMEMBRANCE

Tom Brokaw on the lessons we must never forget

How victims’ families have carried on

What you can do to help

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2011

© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.

Page 2: Parade 09-11

Visit us at PARADE.COM2 • September 11, 2011

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Q:Can you give some tips on how to discuss

the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks with kids? —M.

Gatchi, Los Angeles

A: “Don’t wait for them to start the conversation,” says Robin Gurwitch, a psychologist at Cincinnati Children’s

Hospital. “You want to send a strong message that you’re willing to talk, even if it’s a diffi cult subject.” Also, make sure to speak in terms they understand. “A 14-year-old might know what ‘hijack’ means, but an 8-year-old might not,” Gurwitch adds. “Use words in their vocabulary and take time to defi ne the ones that aren’t.”

PersonalityWalter Sco� ,s

PARADE

Parade.com/celebrity

Q:Alan Jackson wrote a beautiful song about 9/11. Will he be performing it for the 10th anniversary? —Charlie Kim, New Jersey

A: Yes, he’s slated to sing P Julia Roberts P Alan Jackson

Q: How much money was raised by the celebrity telethon held right a� er Sept. 11? And how was it put to use? —Aimee

Rose, Tucson

A: The $129 million donated during 2001’s America: A Tribute to

Heroes, which featured stars such as Julia Roberts,

Tom Hanks, and Will Smith, was distributed through the September 11th Fund. Allotments of up to $20,000 were given to family members and fi nancial dependents of those killed in the attacks and to anyone who was seriously injured. “We used the contributions to provide cash, counseling, and a helping hand with the government red tape,” says Joshua Gotbaum, the fund’s original CEO. “The telethon helped thousands recover and rebuild their lives.”

WALTER SCOTT ASKS …

Anderson Cooper The 44-year-old CNN anchor’s new syndicated daytime talk show, Anderson, premieres Sept. 12 (check your local listings).

What do you remember about Sept. 11?

What was remarkable about being in

New York at the time was the sense of the

city pulling together. All of a sudden people

had a common purpose and a sense of belonging.

Ten years later, how can we best honor the people

who died that day? With every new generation, we must

remind people not only of those who were lost, but of the

vulnerability we experienced and the threat that is out there.

Tomorrow your show Anderson launches. What

appeals to you about daytime TV? I like the intimacy

of it and the connection you can build with an audience.

I’ve always tried to give everyday people a voice. I want

this show to be a place where they can tell their stories.

For more from the TV personality, go to Parade.com/cooper

Have a question for Walter Sco� ? Visit Parade.com/celebrity or write

Walter Sco� at P.O. Box 5001, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y.

10163-5001

THE LOVE WE MAKE

(Showtime, tonight, 11 p.m. ET)

This uplifting fi lm offers a backstage pass to the star-studded benefi t concert Paul McCartney organized at Madison Square Garden following the attacks. “Paul was on the tarmac at JFK when he noticed the towers smoldering,” says co-director Bradley Kaplan. “He wanted to do some-thing signifi cant to help.”

Go to Parade.com/picks for

more televised tributes

“Where Were You (When the World Stopped Turning)” today at the National Cathedral’s Concert for Hope. “One morning I woke up with that chorus in my head,” recalls Jackson, 52. “It was a gift I’m not sure I can take credit for.”

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9/11: 10 YEARS LATER

(CBS, tonight, 8 p.m. ET)

Filmmakers Jules and Gédéon Naudet and James Hanlon—whose documentary 9/11 cap-tured the bravery of New York City’s fi refi ghters on that day—revisit the men of Engine 7, Ladder 1, in this update, which also sheds light on the health problems plaguing fi rst responders. “They showed the best of human nature,” says Jules. “Now they need us.” Robert De Niro (above) hosts.

Parade Picks

© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.

Page 3: Parade 09-11

LIVER

DIGESTIVE

TRACT

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Important Risk Information About ZETIA: ZETIA is a

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© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.

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EDITOR Maggie Murphy

EXECUTIVE EDITOR Alison Gwinn

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ART DIRECTOR Katherine Bigelow

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Emily Listfi eld

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SENIOR EDITOR Jennifer Rainey Marquez (Health)

DEPUTY ART DIRECTOR Manuel Cartagena

PHOTO EDITOR Claudia Grimaldi

EDITORIAL PRODUCTION MANAGER

Deborah DeAscentiis

SENIOR DESIGNER Yelena Guller

ASSOCIATE EDITORS Mari Kasanuki,

Mary Margaret (Entertainment), Emmet Sullivan

COPY CHIEF Chris Cronis

SENIOR RESEARCH LIBRARIAN Mireille De Vidas

RESEARCHERS Sharon Cappelson, Lou Leventhal

ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITOR Megan Gagnon

ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR Patricia Vento

EXECUTIVE EDITOR, PARADE DIGITAL Brad Dunn

ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR, PARADE DIGITAL Erin Hill

ASSISTANT EDITORS, PARADE DIGITAL

Shannon McCook (Dash), Karla Pope

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Joy Bauer, Bobby Flay,

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Judith Newman, Dotson Rader, Connie Schultz,

Kevin Sessums, Gail Sheehy, Larry Smith,

Marilyn vos Savant, Simon Winchester, Jeanne Wolf

PRESIDENT & CEO Jack Haire

CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER Jerry Campbell

PUBLISHERS Brett Wilson (Group Publisher),

Mike DeBartolo (EVP, Parade), Tracey Altman

(SVP, Dash), Kristen Fairback (SVP, Digital)

EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENTS

Dave Barber, Allison Werder

SENIOR VICE PRESIDENTS Dominic Ainscough

(Digital), Stephen Buerger (Advertising),

Jim Hackett (Marketing), Marie Tassini (Advertising)

NEWSPAPER RELATIONS Kevin Craig,

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VICE PRESIDENTS Marilyn Armbruster,

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Robert Ziltz

©2011, Parade Publications, 711 Third Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part of any article without permission is prohibited. “PARADE” is a registered trademark of Advance Magazine Publishers Inc., used through its division Parade Publications. Address all editorial questions to Parade Publications, 711 Third Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017. Letters may be edited and may be published or used in any medium. All submissions become the property of PARADE and will not be returned.

®

T H E S U N D AY N E W S PA P E R M A G A Z I N E

ZETIA® (EZETIMIBE) TABLETS

PATIENT INFORMATION ABOUT ZETIA (zet -e-a)Generic name: ezetimibe (e-zet -e-mıb)

Read this information carefully before you start taking ZETIA and each time you get more ZETIA. There may be new information. This information does not take the place of talking with your doctor about your medical condition or your treatment. If you have any questions about ZETIA, ask your doctor. Only your doctor can determine if ZETIA is right for you.

WHAT IS ZETIA?

ZETIA is a medicine used to lower levels of total cholesterol and LDL (bad) cholesterol in the blood. ZETIA is for patients who cannot control their cholesterol levels by diet and exercise alone. It can be used by itself or with other medicines to treat high cholesterol. You should stay on a cholesterol-lowering diet while taking this medicine.

ZETIA works to reduce the amount of cholesterol your body absorbs. ZETIA does not help you lose weight. ZETIA has not been shown to prevent heart disease or heart attacks.

For more information about cholesterol, see the “What should I know about high cholesterol?” section that follows.

WHO SHOULD NOT TAKE ZETIA?

• Do not take ZETIA if you are allergic to ezetimibe, the active ingredient in ZETIA, or to the inactive ingredients. For a list of inactive ingredients, see the “Inactive ingredients” section that follows.

• If you have active liver disease, do not take ZETIA while taking cholesterol-lowering medicines called statins.

• If you are pregnant or breast-feeding, do not take ZETIA while taking a statin.

• If you are a woman of childbearing age, you should use an effective method of birth control to prevent pregnancy while using ZETIA added to statin therapy.

ZETIA has not been studied in children under age 10.

WHAT SHOULD I TELL MY DOCTOR BEFORE AND WHILE TAKING ZETIA?

Tell your doctor about any prescription and non-prescription medicines you are taking or plan to take, including natural or herbal remedies.

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• ever had liver problems. ZETIA may not be right for you.

• are pregnant or plan to become pregnant. Your doctor will discuss with you whether ZETIA is right for you.

• are breast-feeding. We do not know if ZETIA can pass to your baby through your milk. Your doctor will discuss with you whether ZETIA is right for you.

• experience unexplained muscle pain, tenderness, or weakness.

HOW SHOULD I TAKE ZETIA?

• Take ZETIA once a day, with or without food. It may be easier to remember to take your dose if you do it at the same time every day, such as with breakfast, dinner, or at bedtime. If you also take another medicine to reduce your cholesterol, ask your doctor if you can take them at the same time.

• If you forget to take ZETIA, take it as soon as you remember. However, do not take more than one dose of ZETIA a day.

• Continue to follow a cholesterol-lowering diet while taking ZETIA. Ask your doctor if you need diet information.

• Keep taking ZETIA unless your doctor tells you to stop. It is important that you keep taking ZETIA even if you do not feel sick.

See your doctor regularly to check your cholesterol level and to check for side effects. Your doctor may do blood tests to check your liver before you start taking ZETIA with a statin and during treatment.

WHAT ARE THE POSSIBLE SIDE EFFECTS OF ZETIA® (EZETIMIBE)?

In clinical studies patients reported few side effects while taking ZETIA. These included diarrhea, joint pains, and feeling tired.

Patients have experienced severe muscle problems while taking ZETIA, usually when ZETIA was added to a statin drug. If you experience unexplained muscle pain, tenderness, or weakness while taking ZETIA, contact your doctor immediately. You need to do this promptly, because on rare occasions, these muscle problems can be serious, with muscle breakdown resulting in kidney damage.

Additionally, the following side effects have been reported in general use: allergic reactions (which may require treatment right away) including swelling of the face, lips, tongue, and/or throat that may cause diffi culty in breathing or swallowing, rash, and hives; raised red rash, sometimes with target-shaped lesions; joint pain; muscle aches; alterations in some laboratory blood tests; liver problems; stomach pain; inflammation of the pancreas; nausea; dizziness; tingling sensation; depression; headache; gallstones; infl ammation of the gallbladder.

Tell your doctor if you are having these or any other medical problems while on ZETIA. For a complete list of side effects, ask your doctor or pharmacist.

WHAT SHOULD I KNOW ABOUT HIGH CHOLESTEROL?

Cholesterol is a type of fat found in your blood. Your total cholesterol is made up of LDL and HDL cholesterol.

LDL cholesterol is called “bad” cholesterol because it can build up in the wall of your arteries and form plaque. Over time, plaque build-up can cause a narrowing of the arteries. This narrowing can slow or block blood fl ow to your heart, brain, and other organs. High LDL cholesterol is a major cause of heart disease and one of the causes for stroke.

HDL cholesterol is called “good” cholesterol because it keeps the bad cholesterol from building up in the arteries.

Triglycerides also are fats found in your blood.

GENERAL INFORMATION ABOUT ZETIA

Medicines are sometimes prescribed for conditions that are not mentioned in patient information leafl ets. Do not use ZETIA for a condition for which it was not prescribed. Do not give ZETIA to other people, even if they have the same condition you have. It may harm them.

This summarizes the most important information about ZETIA. If you would like more information, talk with your doctor. You can ask your pharmacist or doctor for information about ZETIA that is written for health professionals.

Inactive ingredients:Croscarmellose sodium, lactose monohydrate, magnesium stearate, microcrystalline cellulose, povidone, and sodium lauryl sulfate.

Issued July 2009REV 21

29480885T

Manufactured for:Merck/Schering-Plough PharmaceuticalsNorth Wales, PA 19454, USA

CARD-1003742-0007

© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.

Page 5: Parade 09-11

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Report INTELLIGENCE

A Nation TestedFor photographer Tom Franklin of New Jersey’s Bergen Record, lower Manha� an on the a� ernoon of Sept. 11 “was like a ba� le� eld.” A� er hours of wander-ing amid the debris and documenting the frantic rescue e� orts, he came upon three � remen raising an American � ag and shot what has become one of the day’s most enduring images. “Here was a picture of patriotism and unity, one that demonstrated we would prevail,” Franklin says. Today, at 8:46 a.m. (ET), the nation will observe a moment of silence to remember those we lost. In this special issue of PARADE, veteran news anchor Tom Brokaw re� ects on the indelible lessons of 9/11. We also pay tribute to the strength and resilience of the victims’ families—and share ways you can help their loved ones live on in memory.

RAISING THE FLAG

“It was just three guys with an idea,” Daniel McWilliams

(center) has said of this moment. He, William Eisen-

grein (right), and George Johnson are still members

of New York’s Bravest.

For a gallery of other powerful 9/11 images, go to Parade.com/911

© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.

Page 6: Parade 09-11

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6 • September 11, 2011

How We RememberTen years a� er 9/11, we need to come together again as a

nation and remind ourselves of the lessons we learned on that long day

By Tom Brokaw | Cover photograph by Ted Morrison

© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.

Page 7: Parade 09-11

Visit us at PARADE.COM

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September 11, 2011 • 7

FROM TIME TO TIME, my � ights into

New York City are routed out over the

harbor and the Statue of Liberty and

then steered north, beginning at the

southern tip of Manhattan. Before

9/11, I looked forward to these aerial

tours of the world’s greatest skyline.

But no more. Now I am immediately

reminded of the missing piece: the

World Trade Center. And my heart

sinks again as I am pulled back to that

long day of violence, terror, death, con-

fusion, grief, and rage. The hole in the

skyline is symbolic of the hole in our

lives, that moment that took so many

of our fellow citizens to their death,

plunged others into a lifetime of loss and bewilderment, and blasted all of us out of our comfort zones.

We have the same reaction when we see the evocative memorial next to the Pentagon or the wound in the countryside of Shanksville, Pa.

Sept. 11 was without a doubt the single most challenging day of my journalistic career. From the moment I went on the air that morning, I had no idea what would

happen next. There were so many more questions than answers. Who were the hijackers? How could this happen? What was the next target?

At one point, I referred to the burning towers and said, “There is so much structural damage, they may eventually have to be brought down.” Instantly, I regretted my words, thinking, “Maybe I’ve gone too far.”

Moments later, the buildings began to collapse on their own, and

The hole in the

skyline is symbolic

of the hole in our

lives.”

we all watched in horror, fearing that as many as 20,000 people might still be inside. I kept remind-ing myself, “Stay cool, tell viewers what you know, not the rumors, and don’t let your emotions spill over.” (I have Irish ancestors on my mother’s side, and those genes take me to the brink of tears pretty easily.)

I was doing relatively fi ne until later that day when a survivor from one of the towers began to describe his colleagues in wheel-chairs who never made it out. I couldn’t stand the thought of those poor souls trapped by their paralysis, waiting for an elevator that never came. I choked up and passed our news coverage to an-other correspondent who carried on until I regained my composure. On Sept. 11, it took everything I’d learned in 40 years as a journalist, husband, father, friend, and citizen to make it through.

I came to know other survivors, as well as many family members of the people who died. Their strength steeled me. One was Beverly Eck-ert. She’d met her husband, Sean, when they were teenagers at a school dance in Buffalo, N.Y., and they called their marriage Camelot because they felt it was a fairy tale.

On the morning of the attacks, Beverly was on the phone with Sean, who worked on an upper fl oor of the south tower. As she urged him to escape, she saw the sky-scraper come down on television.

Beverly became an energetic, ar-ticulate activist for the 9/11 families, pushing successfully for an investi-gative commission and for fair com-pensation. I so admired her quiet, persistent drive to find some

© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.

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Visit us at PARADE.COM8 • September 11, 2011

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Commander Patrick Dunn always told his wife, Steph-anie, “If anything happens to me, the navy will take care of you.” On Sept. 11, not long after he called to

tell her that the World Trade Center had been hit and that he loved her, American Airlines Flight 77 slammed into the Pentagon. Patrick and 183 other victims were killed. Stephanie was 31 and three months pregnant.

At 2:30 a.m. on Sept. 12, the Pentagon was still smoldering when the navy began to make good on its promise. Cdr. Marshall “Marty” Martin, Stephanie’s casualty assistance offi cer, and two other naval offi cers knocked on the door of her Springfi eld, Va., townhouse to tell her that Patrick was missing. “From the second that I saw [Marty], there was this trust,” Stephanie recalls. “I put everything in his hands.”

Anytime a member of the military is wounded, killed, or missing, a casualty assistance offi cer notifi es his or her next of kin and guides them through the necessary procedures and forms. Although Marty had been trained as a casualty assistance offi cer, that night was the fi rst time he’d had to perform those duties. For the next two weeks, Stephanie says, “Marty was always there.” When Patrick’s body was identifi ed, Marty delivered the news. He fi lled out the endless paperwork. He helped Stephanie select the casket. And he rode with Patrick’s body to New Jersey—where the Dunns held a visitation—and back again.

And, of course, Marty was standing outside the chapel next to Arlington Cemetery after the funeral. “Even though I had my family and my priest with me, it was Marty who I wanted to know was there,” Stephanie recalls.

He continued to be there for everything. When Stepha-nie’s dad had a stroke shortly after 9/11, Marty was the fi rst person she called. He visited her dad during his recovery. “That’s when Marty became a brother,” she

says. He was at the hospital to meet Stephanie and Patrick’s baby, Allie, the morning after her birth in March 2002.

The caring was mutual. “I was single at the time, and

Stephanie and her mom tried to fi x me up,” Marty says, laughing. When he introduced them to a woman he was dating named Sarah, Stephanie and her family were thrilled. In the summer of 2002, Stephanie fl ew to their wedding in Minnesota, where she toasted Marty’s loy-alty. “There wasn’t a dry eye in the room,” she says.

The next year, Marty and Sarah were in the wedding party when Stephanie married a naval offi cer, then-Cdr. Paul DeSimone, in Virginia. “Paul and I had our fi rst dance to Josh Groban’s ‘You’re Still You,’ and I looked over at Marty and his face was covered with tears.”

Although Stephanie and Marty have lived on different coasts for years—she’s on the west coast, he’s on the east—they’ve kept up by phone and email. Of their friend-ship, “which came out of the ashes,” she says, “Marty taught me that complete strangers can turn out to be incredible guardian angels.” —Kate Meyers

resolution to that awful event. Now, 10 years later, I hope that

we’ll remember how we came together as a nation. We mourned as a family and found common ground on which to move for-ward. We saw political adversaries stand side by side on the Capitol steps as they sang “God Bless America.” We watched proudly as young men and women en-listed in the military, knowing they’d soon be in harm’s way.

When war came and there were differences about why we were fi ghting, we had spirited but appropriate debates. When pro-testers took to the streets, there were no scenes of car burnings, tear gas, and billy clubs but of civil demonstration. We waited patiently in airport security lines as new federal agencies tried to sort out what was effective and what was merely symbolic.

Today, so much of that com-mon fabric of united response has frayed. In the years since 9/11, we’ve been beset on another front by our economic excesses and our failure to honor the fundamental laws of fi nancial risk.

We’ve gone about our lives with too little connection to the sacrifi ces of those fi ghting for us far away and the sacrifices of their families living just down the street or seated in the next row at our houses of worship.

Here are some things worth contemplating as we recall that surreal day in 2001 when inno-cent passengers on civilian planes became the first victims of the terrorists whose abhorrent actions changed all of our lives forever.

“I Put Everything In His Hands”The wife of a Pentagon victim � nds a lifelong guardian angel

continued on page 11

Brokaw | continued from page 7

HOW WE REMEMBER

AN UNSHAKABLE

BOND Marty Martin visits the grave of Patrick Dunn (inset) on behalf of his good friend, Dunn’s widow, Stephanie (left).

© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.

Page 9: Parade 09-11

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FOR THE PHARMACIST:

For reimbursement, please submit to Patient Choice. The information to the right should be used when submitting for reimbursement. For questions, please call the Help Desk at 1-800-422-5604.

Important Safety Information About SYMBICORT for Asthma SYMBICORT contains formoterol, a long-acting beta2-adrenergic agonist (LABA). LABA medicines such as formoterol increase the risk of death from asthma problems. It is not known whether budesonide, the other medicine in SYMBICORT, reduces the risk of death from asthma problems seen with formoterol. SYMBICORT should be used only if your health care provider decides that your asthma is not well controlled with a long-term asthma control medicine, such as an inhaled corticosteroid, or that your asthma is severe enough to begin treatment with SYMBICORT. If you are taking SYMBICORT, see your health care provider if your asthma does not improve or gets worse. It is important that your health care provider assess your asthma control on a regular basis. Your doctor will decide if it is possible for you to stop taking SYMBICORT and start taking a long-term asthma control medicine without loss of asthma control. Children and adolescents who take LABA medicines may have an increased risk of being hospitalized for asthma problems.SYMBICORT does not replace rescue inhalers for sudden asthma symptoms. Be sure to tell your health care provider about all your health conditions, including heart conditions or high blood pressure, and all medicines you may be taking. Some patients taking SYMBICORT may experience increased blood pressure, heart rate, or change in heart rhythm. Do not use SYMBICORT more often than prescribed. While taking SYMBICORT, never useanother medicine containing a LABA for any reason. Ask your health care provider or pharmacist if any of your other medicines are LABA medicines, as using too much LABA may cause chest pain, increase in blood pressure, fast and irregular heartbeat, headache, tremor, and nervousness.

Patients taking SYMBICORT should call their health care provider or get emergency medical care:• if you experience serious allergic reactions including rash, hives, swelling of the face,

mouth and tongue, and breathing problems. • if you think you are exposed to infections such as chicken pox or measles, or if you have any

signs of infection. You may have a higher chance of infection.• if you experience an increase in wheezing right after taking SYMBICORT, eye problems

including glaucoma and cataracts, decreases in bone mineral density, swelling of blood vessels (signs include a feeling of pins and needles or numbness of arms or legs, fl u like symptoms, rash, pain, and swelling of the sinuses), decrease in blood potassium and increase in blood sugar levels.

If you are switching to SYMBICORT from an oral corticosteroid, follow your health care provider’s instructions to avoid serious health risks when you stop using oral corticosteroids.Common side e� ects include nose and throat irritation, headache, upper respiratory tract infection, sore throat, sinusitis, stomach discomfort, fl u, back pain, nasal congestion, vomiting, and thrush in the mouth and throat. Approved Uses for SYMBICORT for Asthma SYMBICORT is a medicine for the treatment of asthma for people 12 years and older whose doctor has determined that their asthma is not well controlled with a long term asthma control medicine such as an inhaled corticosteroid or whose asthma is severe enough to begin treatment with SYMBICORT. SYMBICORT is not a treatment for sudden asthma symptoms.Please see Important Product Information on adjacent page and discuss with your doctor.You are encouraged to report negative side e� ects of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit www.fda.gov/medwatch, or call 1-800-FDA-1088.

IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT SYMBICORT

For more information, call 1-800-687-3755

or go to MySymbicort.com/info

If you’re without prescription coverage and can’t a� ord your medication, AstraZeneca may be able to help.

For more information, please visit www.astrazeneca-us.com.SY

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Page 10: Parade 09-11

Free Trial for Insured, Cash, MA residents, and government funded program patients:

Patient: Present this free trial offer to your pharmacist, along with a valid prescription to receive a free 30-day supply (1 inhaler) of SYMBICORT. This offer may not be combined with any other free trial, coupon, discount, prescription savings card, or other offer. Valid only at retail pharmacies; no mail order. No claim for payment can be made to ANY third-party payer for product dispensed pursuant to this offer. Not valid if reproduced. Prescriber ID# required on prescription. Void where prohibited by law.

This offer is valid only for product manufactured for AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals, LP and purchased from an authorized retailer or distributor in the United States. This offer may be changed or discontinued at any time without notice. Offer expires 03/31/2012. One free trial offer per person. The prescription must be new, refi lls are not eligible. If you have any questions regarding this offer, please call 1-800-236-9933.

Pharmacist: For reimbursement, please submit to Patient Choice. The information printed on the reverse side should be used when submitting for reimbursement. For questions, please call the Help Desk at 1-800-422-5604.

If you are without prescription coverage and cannot afford your medication, AstraZeneca may be able to help. For more information, please visit www.astrazeneca-us.com

You are encouraged to report negative side effects of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit www.FDA.gov/medwatch, or call 1-800-FDA-1088.

I M P O R T A N T I N F O R M A T I O N A B O U T S Y M B I C O R T

Please read this summary carefully and then ask your doctor about SYMBICORT.

No advertisement can provide all the information needed to determine if a drug is right for you or take the place of careful discussions with your health care provider. Only your health care provider has the training to weigh the risks and benefi ts of a prescription drug.

WHAT IS THE MOST IMPORTANT INFORMATION I SHOULD KNOW ABOUT SYMBICORT?People with asthma who take long-acting beta

2-agonist (LABA) medicines, such

as formoterol (one of the medicines in SYMBICORT), have an increased risk of death from asthma problems. It is not known whether budesonide, the other medicine in SYMBICORT, reduces the risk of death from asthma problems seen with formoterol.

SYMBICORT should be used only if your health care provider decides that your asthma is not well controlled with a long-term asthma control medicine, such as an inhaled corticosteroid, or that your asthma is severe enough to begin treatment with SYMBICORT.

Talk with your health care provider about this risk and the benefi ts of treating your asthma with SYMBICORT.

If you are taking SYMBICORT, see your health care provider if your asthma does not improve or gets worse. It is important that your health care provider assess your asthma control on a regular basis. Your doctor will decide if it is possible for you to stop taking SYMBICORT and start taking a long-term asthma control medicine without loss of asthma control.

Get emergency medical care if:■ breathing problems worsen quickly, and■ you use your rescue inhaler medicine, but it

does not relieve your breathing problems.

Children and adolescents who take LABA medicines may be at increased risk of being hospitalized for asthma problems.

WHAT IS SYMBICORT?SYMBICORT is an inhaled prescription medicine used for asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). It contains two medicines:

■ Budesonide (the same medicine found in Pulmicort Flexhaler™, an inhaled corticosteroid). Inhaled corticosteroids help to decrease infl ammation in the lungs. Infl ammation in the lungs can lead to asthma symptoms

■ Formoterol (the same medicine found in Foradil® Aerolizer®). LABA medicines are used in patients with COPD and asthma to help the muscles in the airways of your lungs stay relaxed to prevent asthma symptoms, such as wheezing and shortness of breath. These symptoms can happen when the muscles in the airways tighten. This makes it hard to breathe, which, in severe cases, can cause breathing to stop completely if not treated right away

SYMBICORT is used for asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease as follows:

Asthma

SYMBICORT is used to control symptoms of asthma and prevent symptoms such as wheezing in adults and children ages 12 and older.

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

COPD is a chronic lung disease that includes chronic bronchitis, emphysema, or both. SYMBICORT 160/4.5 mcg is used long-term, two times each day, to help improve lung function for better breathing in adults with COPD.

WHO SHOULD NOT USE SYMBICORT?

Do not use SYMBICORT to treat sudden severe symptoms of asthma or COPD or if you are allergic to any of the ingredients in SYMBICORT.

WHAT SHOULD I TELL MY HEALTH CARE

PROVIDER BEFORE USING SYMBICORT?

Tell your health care provider about all of your health conditions, including if you:■ have heart problems■ have high blood pressure■ have seizures■ have thyroid problems■ have diabetes■ have liver problems■ have osteoporosis■ have an immune system problem■ have eye problems such as increased

pressure in the eye, glaucoma, or cataracts■ are allergic to any medicines■ are exposed to chicken pox or measles■ are pregnant or planning to become

pregnant. It is not known if SYMBICORT may harm your unborn baby

■ are breast-feeding. Budesonide, one of the active ingredients in SYMBICORT, passes into breast milk. You and your health care provider should decide if you will take SYMBICORT while breast-feeding

Tell your health care provider about all the medicines you take including prescription and nonprescription medicines, vitamins, and herbal supplements. SYMBICORT and certain other medicines may interact with each other and can cause serious side effects. Know all the medicines you take. Keep a list and show it to your health care provider and pharmacist each time you get a new medicine.

HOW DO I USE SYMBICORT?

Do not use SYMBICORT unless your health care provider has taught you and you understand everything. Ask your health care provider or pharmacist if you have any questions.

Use SYMBICORT exactly as prescribed. Do not use SYMBICORT more often than prescribed. SYMBICORT comes in two strengths for asthma: 80/4.5 mcg and 160/4.5 mcg. Your health care provider will prescribe the strength that is best for you. SYMBICORT 160/4.5 mcg is the approved dosage for COPD.■ SYMBICORT should be taken every day as 2

puffs in the morning and 2 puffs in the evening.■ Rinse your mouth with water and spit

the water out after each dose (2 puffs) of SYMBICORT. This will help lessen the chance of getting a fungus infection (thrush) in the mouth and throat.

■ Do not spray SYMBICORT in your eyes. If you accidentally get SYMBICORT in your eyes, rinse your eyes with water. If redness or irritation persists, call your health care provider.

■ Do not change or stop any medicines used to control or treat your breathing problems. Your health care provider will change your medicines as needed.

■ While you are using SYMBICORT 2 times each day, do not use other medicines that contain a long-acting beta

2-agonist (LABA)

for any reason. Ask your health care provider or pharmacist if any of your other medicines are LABA medicines.

■ SYMBICORT does not relieve sudden symptoms. Always have a rescue inhaler medicine with you to treat sudden symptoms. If you do not have a rescue inhaler, call your health care provider to have one prescribed for you.

Call your health care provider or get medical care right away if:■ your breathing problems worsen with

SYMBICORT■ you need to use your rescue inhaler medicine

more often than usual■ your rescue inhaler does not work as well for

you at relieving symptoms■ you need to use 4 or more inhalations of your

rescue inhaler medicine for 2 or more days in a row

■ you use one whole canister of your rescue inhaler medicine in 8 weeks’ time

■ your peak fl ow meter results decrease. Your health care provider will tell you the numbers that are right for you

■ your symptoms do not improve after using SYMBICORT regularly for 1 week

WHAT MEDICATIONS SHOULD I NOT

TAKE WHEN USING SYMBICORT?

While you are using SYMBICORT, do not use other medicines that contain a long-acting beta

2-

agonist (LABA) for any reason, such as■ Serevent® Diskus® (salmeterol xinafoate

inhalation powder)■ Advair Diskus® or Advair® HFA (fl uticasone

propionate and salmeterol)■ Formoterol-containing products such as Foradil

Aerolizer, Brovana®, or Perforomist®

WHAT ARE THE POSSIBLE SIDE

EFFECTS WITH SYMBICORT?

SYMBICORT can cause serious side effects.■ Increased risk of pneumonia and other lower

respiratory tract infections if you have COPD. Call your health care provider if you notice any of these symptoms: increase in mucus production, change in mucus color, fever, chills, increased cough, increased breathing problems

■ Serious allergic reactions including rash; hives; swelling of the face, mouth and tongue; and breathing problems. Call your health care provider or get emergency care if you get any of these symptoms

■ Immune system effects and a higher chance for infections

■ Adrenal insuffi ciency–a condition in which the adrenal glands do not make enough steroid hormones

■ Cardiovascular and central nervous system effects of LABAs, such as chest pain, increased blood pressure, fast or irregular heartbeat, tremor, or nervousness

■ Increased wheezing right after taking SYMBICORT

■ Eye problems, including glaucoma and cataracts. You should have regular eye exams while using SYMBICORT

■ Osteoporosis. People at risk for increased bone loss may have a greater risk with SYMBICORT

■ Slowed growth in children. As a result, growth should be carefully monitored

■ Swelling of your blood vessels. This can happen in people with asthma

■ Decreases in blood potassium levels and increases in blood sugar levels

WHAT ARE COMMON SIDE EFFECTS

OF SYMBICORT?

Patients with Asthma

Sore throat, headache, upper respiratory tract infection, thrush in the mouth and throat

Patients with COPD

Thrush in the mouth and throat

These are not all the side effects with SYMBICORT. Ask your health care provider or pharmacist for more information.

NOTE: This summary provides important information about SYMBICORT. For more information, please ask your doctor or health care provider.

SYMBICORT is a registered trademark of the AstraZeneca group of companies.

Other brands mentioned are trademarks of their respective owners and are not trademarks of the AstraZeneca group of companies. The makers of these brands are not affi liated with and do not endorse AstraZeneca or its products.

© 2010 AstraZeneca LP. All rights reserved.

Manufactured for: AstraZeneca LP, Wilmington, DE 19850 By: AstraZeneca AB, Dunkerque, France Product of France

Rev 12/10 1345100

Visit www.MySymbicort.com. Or, call 1-866-SYMBICORT

© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.

Page 11: Parade 09-11

September 11, 2011 • 11

We’re still armed and on the ground in two Muslim nations where we’ve fought for much of the past 10 years, but we still have not extinguished the rage of extremists. We need to be more effective in promoting the American ideal without using guns or drones.

We need to be citizens again, offering our assistance to others. By doing so, we’ll show we can be more than the sum of our parts. Throughout our commu-nities, states, and nation, on rural Main Streets and in coun-tries around the globe, Uncle Sam needs us.

We need to listen to each other more and shout less. The 9/11 at-tacks were the beginning of an unexpected passage in American life in a new century, and no one group has all the answers.

Because of technology, our planet, even with its growing number of inhabitants, is more connected than ever before. By the same token, it is more com-petitive. We cannot keep our place as the greatest nation on Earth if we are a self-absorbed, deeply divided people, too quick to forget the unity that prevailed immediately after 9/11.

We owe those who lost their lives that day and in the resulting wars a common commitment to the values they personifi ed, the values that have made this an exceptional country.

Whenever I fly over the southern tip of Manhattan where the twin towers no longer stand, that’s what I will try to remember.

HOW WE REMEMBER

Brokaw | continued from page 8

“The Recommended treatment for Prilosec®, Prevacid® and all other PPI's is only 14 days— I TOOK THEM FOR 14 YEARS!”

*THESE STATEMENTS HAVE NOT BEEN EVALUATED BY THE FDA. THESE PRODUCTS ARE NOT INTENDED TO DIAGNOSE, TREAT, CURE OR PREVENT ANY DISEASE. RESULTS MAY VARY.

“Every time I ate something that didn't agree with me… I’d get what I called ‘Rot Gut’, like my stomach was rotting out!”

HEALTH & WELLNESS

“For 40-Years, I was tortured with unbearable indigestion”

“And How I BEAT the indigestion Nightmare that Almost Killed Me!”

Confessions of an acid refl ux victim

63-year old Ralph Burns enjoying a spicy-hot portion of Lobster Fra Diavolo. Just 15-Minutes after taking AloeCure®

“I was beside myself. What was I gonna do? Keep taking the pills, or suffer with problems that could ultimately be my demise.”

The following is the true story of Ralph Burns, former acid refl ux sufferer.

Here’s My Story: I've Suffered With Acid Refl ux for Almost 40-Years Now. Unless you experience it; you can’t imagine how horrible it is. Every time I ate spicy foods I would get what I called "ROT GUT". Like something was rotting in my stomach. But now I can eat anything… No matter how spicy. Even if I never could before.

Let me explain… For the better part of my life; I

purposely avoided a lot of foods. Especially ones with even a tiny bit of seasoning. Because if I didn't, I’d experience a burning sensation through my esophagus— like somebody poured hot lead or battery acid down my throat. Add to that, those disgusting ‘mini-throw ups’ and I was in ‘indigestion hell’.

Doctors put me on all sorts of ant-acid remedies. But nothing worked. Or if they di d, it would only be for a brief period. And then boom! My nightmare would return.

Sometimes, I felt like I was dying. The pain was unbearable and nothing could make it stop.

But then my wife, who occasionally suffered with the same problem; gave me one of her prescription acid blockers. It was a miracle. I felt like I could live again. Because before that, I was just miserable. I wanted to kill myself. But thankfully, it worked, and worked well.

I felt great, until about one year ago; when I read an FDA warning that scared the heck out of me. It went something like this…

FDA WARNING! Using proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) on a long term basis, increases your risk of hip, bone and spinal fractures. That's a particular concern to me, since many acid blockers are PPI's. I've gone through two back surgeries and bilat-eral hip replacements. I had to ask my-self, could PPI's have been responsible for my medical woes? After all…

I was “between a rock and a hard place”. Stop using the PPIs and I'm a “dead man in the water”. It would be unbearable. I wouldn't be able to eat anything. I’d have to go on a water diet.

But that FDA warning was scary. I knew I had to stop or else risk devel-oping spinal stenosis. My mother had that. And I watched her die a horrible death. Her spine just fractured. It was the worst death. She didn't deserve that. And neither do I.

I had to quit. So I stopped taking PPI's for a day or so. But my indi-gestion was worse than ever. I would rather take the chance of a spinal frac-ture than to live like that again. I tried everything. Even started using home remedies like Apple cider vinegar. But it just felt like I was pouring even more acid down my throat.

Then one day at dinner, a friend of mine said "why don't you try an aloe drink?" I said "aloe drink"? Jeez. That doesn't sound good at all!” The next day he brought me a case of some-thing called AloeCure®. I was skepti-

cal, but I was desperate! So instead of being an ingrate I decided to try it.

I was shocked! AloeCure® tasted pretty good too. It has a pleasant grape fl avor that I actually enjoy drinking. I decided to experiment. I stopped tak-ing the PPI's altogether and replaced it with a daily diet of AloeCure®. Then something remarkable happened… NOTHING! Not even the slightest hint of indigestion.

And here’s the best part. The next day we had Italian food — my worst enemy. But for the fi rst time in 40-years I didn't get indigestion without relying on prescription or OTC pills and tablets. Finally, I just didn’t need them anymore!

I was so thrilled; I wrote the AloeCure® company to tell them how amazing their product is. They thanked me, and asked me to tell my story... the story that changed my life. I said “Sure, but only if you send me a hefty supply of AloeCure®. I just can't live without it.

But don't believe me. You have to try this stuff for yourself. I recommend AloeCure® to anyone who suffers with the same problem I did. It gives you immediate relief. You'll be grateful you did. I sure am. It's the best thing that's happened to me in a long, long time.

TRY IT 100% RISK-FREE!The makers of AloeCure® have

agreed to send you up to 6 FREE bottles PLUS 2 free bonus gifts with every order— they’re yours to keep no matter what.

That’s enough AloeCure® for 30-days of powerful digestive relief, absolutely FREE! But hurry! This is a special introductory offer, reserved for our readers only.

Call Now, Toll-Free!

1-855-451-6712

ADVERTISEMENT

© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.

Page 12: Parade 09-11

12 • September 11, 2011

On a late September day in 2001, Mary Fetchet headed to the Family Assistance Center in lower Manhattan. Her son Brad, 24, a trader whose offi ce was on the 89th fl oor of the south tower of the World Trade Cen-ter, had died in the attacks. A social worker, Fetchet thought one way to cope with her grief would be to

help other trauma victims. At a conference a few years earlier, she’d heard a woman who lost her daughter in the Oklahoma City bombing talk about how the tragedy affected the whole community, and what people needed in order to heal. As she observed the bereaved family members at the center, she thought back to that speech. “All these people,” she recalls, “would need guidance to navigate the complicated systems ahead.”

The guidance began that October in Fetchet’s New Canaan, Conn., living room. “I invited local families to our house because a lot of the women had small children and couldn’t easily get to New York City to attend information sessions.” Those weekly meetings were the fi rst whispers of Voices of September 11th (voicesofsept11.org), an organization founded by Fetchet and 9/11 family member Beverly Eckert (whom Tom Brokaw describes in his essay; Eckert died in 2009) to provide assistance and social services to

those directly affected by the attacks: family mem-bers, survivors, and res-cue workers. Its expanding number of programs include support groups; the 9/11 Living Memorial Project, which helps people create tributes to loved ones; and the Day of Remembrance Informa-tion Forum, held every year on Sept. 10.

“Voices has connected me to other 9/11 families, which has been a huge help,” says Duane Orloske, a Connecticut resident whose wife, Margaret, died in the attacks. “There’s no substitute for being able to talk to other

people who share this common experience. You’re automatically bonded.” The key to the organization’s success—some 13,000 families now belong—has been the determination of Fetchet and her husband, Frank, to understand and respond to the constantly changing needs of the 9/11 community. “The 9/11 population keeps moving through time,” Frank says. “The public might think, ‘Gee, that was 10 years ago. Haven’t they put that behind them?’ I’ve learned there’s no putting it behind you. At best, you tuck it away in a safe place and learn to live your life.” —Joanne Kaufman

Giving 9/11 Families a VoiceThis group helps those a� ected by the tragedy help each other

LeRoy Homer Jr. was born to fl y. As a child, he’d fall asleep gazing at the model airplanes hanging above his bed. On weekends he and his father would go to the air-port and spend hours watching jets take off and land. Homer put himself through fl ight school in his teens and earned his private pilot’s license. After high school, he

attended the Air Force Academy. He served in the military for seven years—in Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm and later fl ying humanitar-ian missions to Somalia—before leaving active duty to become a pilot for United Airlines. He and his wife, Melodie, met—where else?—at an airport.

On Sept. 11, Homer, 36, died doing what he loved most. He was the fi rst offi cer on United Flight 93, which crashed into a Pennsylvania fi eld after passengers and crew members fought back against terrorists who’d seized the plane’s controls. A devastated Melodie was left to raise their 10-month-old daughter, Laurel, by herself. Soon after 9/11, she thought about fi nding a way to pay tribute to her husband, “but emotionally I wasn’t ready. Then one of LeRoy’s friends took me out to lunch and said, ‘If you want to do something, I’ll help you get it up and running.’ ”

Out of that conversation came the LeRoy W. Homer Jr. Foundation (leroyhomer.org), which since 2003 has provided fl ight-school scholar-ships to up to three students a year, helping them earn a private pilot’s license and pursue a career as a pilot. “Having your license can make it

Helping Others Soar A pilot’s widow supports young people’s dreams of � ying

HOW WE REMEMBER

STRONGER TOGETHER

The Fetchets united 9/11 families after their son Brad (inset) died.

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© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.

Page 13: Parade 09-11

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easier to get into the Air Force Academy or the Naval Acad-emy,” says Melodie, a nurse who lives in southern New Jersey. “It’s competitive to get into the academies, so showing you have an aptitude for fl ight gives you an edge.” She and foundation members also visit schools. “We talk to students about considering aviation as a career. That’s another part of our mission.”

She proudly describes the scholarship winners as “an excep-tional group,” adding, “They’ve become like an extended family to me.” Among them is Michael Scott, 25, who so adored the roar and rush of planes when he was a kid that he, too, would hang out at a local airport. Scott graduated from the Naval Academy and is now a lieutenant junior grade in the navy. “I was able to earn my pilot’s license in high school, which helped so much when I went to navy fl ight training,” he says. “That experience was vital.”

Melodie says that her husband would have wanted to be memo-rialized by a foundation that enables young people to fulfi ll their own dreams of fl ying. On a recent day, Melodie, who has fl own only on larger air-planes, excitedly says, “I’m going up in a single-engine plane today for the fi rst time! It’s with a scholarship winner. If I’m going to go with anyone, I’m glad it’s with one of them.” —Joanne Kaufman

TAKING WING In memory of her husband, LeRoy, Melodie Homer is supporting future fl iers.

ING WING I f h

© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.

Page 14: Parade 09-11

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14 • September 11, 2011

families of the fl ight’s 40 people into their hearts and homes. “They’ve given us love,” says Wainio, 66, who drives to Shanksville about six times a year. “They’ve made the most diffi cult thing in my life easier.”

Flight 93 struck with such force that it shook Donna Glessner’s house, three miles away. In December 2001, the mother of two went to the fi eld and was concerned by what she found. “I saw visitors fi lming a nearby scrap-metal business, and they thought it was wreckage from the plane,” recalls Glessner, 53. “They took pictures of a pond and said it was the crater caused by the crash. There was so much misinforma-tion.” She put out word that she was looking for resi-

A Small Town Opens Its HeartThe citizens of Shanksville, Pa., keep vigil at the United Flight 93 crash site

When Ben Wainio sits on a bench in southwestern Pennsylvania and gazes at a hillside dotted with wild-

fl owers, he says he can feel the presence of his daughter, Elizabeth. She was 27 and a passen-

ger on United Flight 93 when it went down in a fi eld next to the rural town of Shanksville, after the passengers and crew courageously stopped the terrorists who’d seized control of the plane.

The peacefulness of Shanksville, pop. 237, is a source of comfort for the Baltimore father. So are the “ambassadors”—the group of volunteers who staff the crash site and who’ve taken the

EVER FAITHFUL Donna Glessner (inset) organized town residents to greet visitors at the fi eld where Flight 93 crashed.

HOW WE REMEMBER

dents from Shanksville and the surrounding township of Stonycreek to volunteer for weekend shifts to show visitors the crash site in the unmarked fi eld, and peo-ple responded enthusiastically. (Now the site is staffed seven days a week.) That fi rst winter, before the spot became a temporary memorial with a shelter, the ambassadors waited in their cars, running their en-gines to stay warm, so they could greet those who braved the cold to pay their respects.

Over the past 10 years, an estimated 1.5 million people have traveled to Shanksville. The soft-spoken Glessner says it has been an honor to share with them the heroism of those on board that fl ight. “I’m sure

If You Downloaded a Coupon for a Free KFC Kentucky Grilled Chicken® Meal And Did Not Receive the Meal (Or Other Compensation),

You May Be Entitled to a Cash PaymentPara una notificacion en Espanol, visitar www.couponmarketinglitigation.com

If you downloaded a coupon on May 5 or 6, 2009 for a free Kentucky Grilled Chicken® meal (“KGC Free Meal”) from unthinkfc.com or oprah.com, and did not receive a free meal (or other compensation), you may be part of a class action settlement and able to file a claim for cash. This notice is only a summary. For more complete information, please read the detailed notice by visiting www.couponmarketinglitigation.com, or by writing to the address below.

What Is This About?On May 5, 2009, Oprah Winfrey announced on her show that between May 5 and May 6, 2009, KFC Corporation (“KFC”) would make available downloadable coupons for a KGC Free Meal that would be redeemable between May 5 and May 19, 2009 (excluding Mother’s Day). The lawsuit claims, among other things, that KFC and YUM! Brands, Inc. (“Defendants”) violated contract law and various state consumer protection statutes by not actually allowing coupon redemptions for the KGC Free Meal between May 5 and May 19. The lawsuit also claims that KFC did not adequately disclose that the topical seasoning for Kentucky Grilled Chicken® contained beef products. Defendants deny these claims and say their conduct was lawful.

What Does the Settlement Provide?The settlement provides a $1.575 million fund to pay the claims of class members who qualify, which includes up to $515,000 in costs and attorneys’ fees. Each class member who submits a valid claim may be entitled to a cash payment of up to $3.99 for each valid coupon submitted (or a lesser amount depending on the type of claim), up to a maximum of four coupons, or a lesser amount if the settlement expenses, attorneys’ fees and costs, incentive awards, and valid claims exceed $1.575 million dollars.

For a copy of the detailed Notice and a Claim Form, write to: Coupon Marketing Litigation, P.O. Box 2559, Faribault MN 55021-9559,

call 1-888-398-8208, or visit: www.couponmarketinglitigation.com

What Are My Legal Rights?

��Remain a member of the settlement class: You do not have to do anything. To receive money,

you must file a claim. If the Court approves the proposed settlement, you will be bound by all of the Court’s orders. This means you will not be able to make any claims against the Defendants that are covered by the settlement.

��Submit a claim: Visit www.couponmarketinglitigation.com and

follow the instructions provided there for submitting a claim. You must submit your claim on or before January 30, 2012.

��Get out of the settlement class: You must request exclusion online or submit a

letter to the Settlement Administrator at the address below. The request for exclusion must be submitted online or postmarked by October 26, 2011. If you request to be excluded, you cannot submit a claim form.

��Tell Counsel if you do not like this proposed settlement:

To object or comment, you must send a copy of the appropriate papers to (1) class counsel, Jay Edelson and Michael J. McMorrow, Edelson McGuire LLC, 350 North LaSalle, Suite 1300, Chicago, IL 60654, and (2) counsel for Defendants, David F. Graham, Sidley Austin LLP, One South Dearborn, Chicago, IL 60603. The papers must be postmarked to counsel by October 26, 2011.

The settlement class is represented by Jay Edelson and Michael J. McMorrow of Edelson McGuire, LLC. You may hire your own attorney, if you wish, at your own expense.

The Court will hold a Fairness Hearing on November 30, 2011 at 10 a.m., to consider whether the proposed settlement is fair, reasonable, and adequate and to consider the motion for plaintiffs’ attorneys’ fees and expenses.

Legal Notice

© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.

Page 15: Parade 09-11

Visit us at PARADE.COM

their families wish they could be here to greet them,” she says. “We are their surrogates.”

On a July day in 2002, Kathie Shaffer, Glessner’s 56-year-old sister and also an ambassador, gave a talk to a group of 30 people. When she fi nished, a tall man in the back said, “My daughter was on the plane.” It was Ben Wainio.

The retired banker spent two hours telling Shaffer about Elizabeth, a young woman with an infectious smile. With Shaffer by his side, Wainio hung a laminated photo of his daughter on the fence enclosing the crash site, which was already covered with fl ags, wreaths, and other pictures.

Wainio and Shaffer’s friend-ship has only deepened since he and other family members began making regular trips to Shanksville to plan the perma-nent Flight 93 National Memo-rial (www.honorfl ight93.org), run by the National Park Service. Some of the ambassadors, including Glessner, are also actively involved in the project. The memorial is not yet com-plete (funds are still needed to fi nish it), but as of Sept. 10, the public can view the crash site from a plaza that contains white marble panels inscribed with the names of the 40 victims.

Deborah Borza, whose 20-year-old daughter, Deora, was the youngest person on Flight 93, says that knowing the ambassadors were there day after day gave her the strength to return to her job and life in California. “They’re the living, breathing fl ame that’s always lit,” she says. Or, as a grateful Esther Heymann, Elizabeth Wainio’s stepmother, puts it, “Out of the worst of humanity came the best of humanity.” —Cristina Rouvalis

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© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.

Page 16: Parade 09-11

16 • September 11, 2011

To Read More

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Page 17: Parade 09-11

I know why millions ofAmericans are saving on theirheating bills with the Eden-PURE ® Infrared PortableHeater.

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© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.

Page 18: Parade 09-11

18 • September 11, 2011

Legacies of HopeIn the wake of 9/11, hundreds of scholarships, advocacy groups, and community service

programs were created in memory of the victims. This is just a partial list of the countless ways you can honor those who were lost.

Beyond the 11th

Susan Retik’s husband was killed on American Airlines Flight 11 when it crashed into the north tower. The Massachusetts mother decided to take the huge outpouring of support she received and extend it to widows in Afghanistan, where some of the 9/11 hijackers had trained. Her organization has helped provide grants for education and small businesses to more than 10,000 Afghan women and their families. beyondthe11th.org

Brooke Jackman

Foundation

Thousands of children have learned to read because of Brooke Jack-man, a 23-year-old who loved books and who died in the twin towers. In October 2001, her family founded an organization that funds literacy pro-grams and gives books, backpacks, and school supplies to kids in the New York City area.brookejackman

foundation.org

Camp Haze

Started in 2002 by the family of Scott Hazelcorn, a bond trader, Camp Haze offers a weeklong, all-expenses-paid summer adventure for kids who lost a loved one on 9/11 or in other tragic circum-stances. Every year, nearly 100 children reconnect with friends and counsel-ors at the same New York campsite where Scott spent happy summers when he was young.camphaze.org

H.E.A.R.T. 9/11

The Healing Emergency Aid Response Team was cre-ated in 2007 by four retired fi rst responders who’d helped out at ground zero after 9/11. Drawing on its members’ years of experi-ence, this group of former cops, fi refi ghters, and res-cue workers assists and rebuilds after disasters. The team has gone to both New Orleans and Haiti. heart911.org

MyGoodDeed

To celebrate his brother Glenn’s generous spirit, Jay Winuk joined with friend David Paine to form MyGoodDeed, a nonprofi t that rallies people around giving back on Sept. 11 and sharing their acts online. As a result of their lobbying, in 2009 President Obama declared every Sept. 11 a National Day of Service and Remembrance. 911day.org

Peter C. Alderman

Foundation

Peter C. Alderman, 25, was at a conference at Windows on the World in the north tower when the fi rst plane hit. In 2003, his parents started an organization to help other victims of terrorism and mass violence. It has built six trauma treat-ment centers in Uganda and Cambodia and will soon open a clinic in

Liberia that will also train mental health providers.petercalderman

foundation.org

Shelley A. Marshall

Foundation

Budget analyst Shelley Marshall had three pas-sions: enjoying afternoon tea, encouraging reading and creativity in kids, and looking out for senior citizens. After she died in the Pentagon, her hus-band, Donn, used her life-insurance money to start a foundation that refl ects those passions. It sponsors reading hours in libraries, tea parties at nursing homes, and writing con-tests for students. shelleysfoundation.org

Tunnel to Towers

Sept. 11 was a day off for fi refi ghter Stephen Siller, who was on his way to New Jersey to play golf when he heard about a fi re at the World Trade Center. He turned his car around and headed there, only to be stopped at the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel. So Siller left his vehicle and ran through the tunnel; he made it to the buildings, where he died in the line of duty. In memory of that run, his siblings organized the annual Tunnel to Towers 5K race in 2002. The event has since raised $10.5 million for burn centers, injured soldiers, and children who have lost one or both parents.tunneltotowersrun.org

HOW WE REMEMBER

THE GIFT OF READING Erin Jackman works with kids in tribute to her late sister, Brooke.

For more 9/11-related organizations, go to Parade.com/911 P

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© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.

Page 19: Parade 09-11

75 73 13 17 27

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Visit us at PARADE.COM

ILL

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On this 10th anniversary of 9/11,

I’m reminded of a question we

published from a reader who

wondered about the enormity of

it all. I thought you might like to

see it again.

A handful of people can wreak

great destruction in a short

period of time. Could the op-

posite happen? Could a few

people perform as powerful a

good act so quickly? —Ryan

Neaveill, Champaign, Ill.

Medical science often per-forms masterstrokes that would have astonished people of earlier eras, but as we now take progress for granted, these great deeds lack the capacity to shock. Take the polio vaccine. Once it was approved, doc-tors were suddenly able to save thousands of people from a terrible fate simply by administering an injection.

It is far harder to create than to destroy. That’s why the builders of our world are the ones honored by history.

Complete 1 to 81 so the

numbers follow a horizontal or

vertical path—no diagonals.

Numbrix®

MORE WAYS

TO PLAY! Print and play a new

puzzle every day at

Parade.com/numbrix

Trail of Clues Le� ers

1. Where you may see the handwriting. 4

2. The desirable color of holy smoke. 5

3. Bean dish immortalized in love song. 11

4. What you shouldn’t do after you kiss. 4

5. Avoid getting in line in front of one. 10

6. Charitable gift favored by celebrities. 9

7. Witchcraft, but with way cool outfi ts. 7

8. Less than a pinch, but more than a jot. 7

9. People knock on it when concerned. 4

10. Lip-smacking cousin to caramel. 12

11. Mary Poppins wouldn’t forget hers. 8

1. WALL 2. WHITE 3. PASTA FAZOOL 4. TELL 5. PICK-

POCKET 6. AUTOGRAPH 7. SORCERY 8. SMIDGEN

9. WOOD 10. BUTTERSCOTCH 11. UMBRELLA

Find the hidden words that connect to form a trail

from word No. 1 to No. 2, etc. Letters link horizontally

and vertically. Start anywhere.

Ask MarilynBy Marilyn vos Savant

O O U T R B M U H

W D B T E L L A C

N E G E R S C O T

R C D I M T U A T

O E R Y S O P O E

S H P A R G K C K

W A L L F A C I P

T I H W A Z L T L

E P A S T O O E L

WORDBLAZER

DARE TO BE

BEAUTIFUL

90 SECOND EYE LIFT

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© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.

Page 20: Parade 09-11

...and every day with over 30 delicious fl avors, all around 100 calories.

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Swap a slice of key lime pie for a key lime pie Yoplait Light, and you could save 280 calories. Slice of key lime pie (118 g) has 380 calories, Yoplait Light key lime pie yogurt (6 oz)

has 100 calories. All 30 fl avors not available at all Walmart locations. Yoplait is a registered trademark of YOPLAIT Marques Internationales SAS (France) used under license.

© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.