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Why Do Toes Wrinkle in the Bath?

?Witness and Response,? a Library of Congress exhibition, now features a new component that lets members of the public contribute their personal remembrances of the tragic events of Sept. 11, 2001, and their aftermath. In a partnership with the September 11 Digital Archive, the Library of Congress is providing this opportunity for you to share your experiences and memories of the terrorist attacks.

Nuns looking at missing notices following Sept. 11 terrorist attack, 2001, New York City,? 2001 ?Shanksville, Pennsylvania, 2002

Your submissions will be permanently saved in the September 11 Digital Archive, a project of the Center for History and New Media at George Mason University, the American Social History Project at the City University of New York Graduate Center and the Library of Congress. There are three ways to participate. You can contribute a story, an e-mail or relevant art. You can also browse the submissions of others.

If you go to Today in History?s archive page for Sept. 11, you will gain access to a wealth of links to information throughout the Library relating to this extraordinary day.


A. David Finn, [Nuns looking at missing notices following Sept. 11 terrorist attack, 2001, New York City,? 2001. Gift of the artist. Prints and Photographs Division. ?Witness and Response? image No. 133.

B. Carol Highsmith, ?Shanksville, Pennsylvania, 2002,? 2002. Gift of the artist. Prints and Photographs Division. ?Witness and Response? image No. 185.


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