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Napa High students gather on seventh anniversary of tragedy
Friday, September 12, 2008
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Kyle Cuddy was still in elementary school when terror struck on Sept. 11, 2001.

He remembers watching the news from New York City as he prepared to go to school that morning.
Now a sophomore at Napa High School, Kyle was among 1,200 students who attended an assembly Thursday in remembrance of the victims killed in New York, Washington D.C. and Pennsylvania.

“I’m glad the high school is taking the time to honor 9/11,” said Kyle, as he entered Napa High’s gymnasium for the 30-minute assembly. Inside, students distributed as many as 1,300 white-ribbon pins in remembrance of those who died.
So was Michael Charney, a saxophone player with the Napa High School Marching Band. He said it is important to remember the victims of the attacks.

“It’s a nice gesture to all the people who lost their lives on that terrible day,” said the 18-year-old senior as he and his fellow Napa High School Marching Band members prepared to play.
After the band performed the “Star-Spangled Banner,” Ricky Hurtado, president of Napa High School’s associated student body, asked for a moment of silence in memory of the 9/11 victims.

Napa Fire Battalion Chief John Callanan reminded the students that 70 police officers and 343 New York City firefighters were among the nearly 2,800 victims killed that day.

In 2002, a city of Napa Fire Department ladder-truck engine was repainted with the names of the 343 firefighters.

As students listened intently, Callanan told the story of a New York couple that was visiting Napa about two years ago. The couple came to the downtown fire station and wanted to have a look at the equipment, he said.

Napa Fire Capt. Donnie Johnson showed the visitors Engine 1, painted in red, white and blue.

“The sad part,” Callanan said, “their son’s name was on that engine.”

So were the names of 40 other firefighters they knew, he added.

JoDell Parks, a U.S. Army recruiter, urged the teens to use the tragedy as a lesson in safety, security and how to care for their fellow Americans.

“Let us think about the future and the changes we need to make in our lives,” he said.

Hurtado, 17, led efforts to organized the 9/11 commemoration with the school’s Leadership class. In the past, the school marked the 9/11 anniversary with a moment of silence. Hurtado wanted to organize a bigger commemoration before his graduation, he said.

Napa High School Principal Barbara Franco said Thursday’s tribute was  wonderful.

“I thought it was very moving,” she said.
17 comment(s)

simpwinemom wrote on Sep 12, 2008 6:32 AM:

" Thank You Mr. Hurtado for having a vision to commemorate this day and the staff at NHS in supporting his vision.
I have heard from many students that it was an incredible moving experience and they have a different outlook on 9/11. So thank you for making a difference. "

Firewater wrote on Sep 12, 2008 7:45 AM:

" This is a very heartwarming story and "I WILL NEVER FORGET" as all American's should "

frenchtoast wrote on Sep 12, 2008 7:50 AM:

" I am happy to read this article. Good job Napa High for honoring those who lost their lives that horrible day in 2001. I will never forget seeing the images on TV - at first thinking it was just "an accident" then seeing the second plane, then hearing about the other two locations. Horrific. I am glad the students are educated and appreciate the work the firefighters and police officers did that day. And also memorializing the troops all over the world who fight for our freedom while we live our lives in a normal fashion. THANK U! "

glenroy wrote on Sep 12, 2008 8:21 AM:

" Kudos to Napa High, Barb Franco....GB the USA. "

Ruff Limblog wrote on Sep 12, 2008 8:38 AM:

" I was on top of a windturbine in the Altamont Pass on that sunny warm day in September 2001 when a radio call from our dispatch center came in.

We all came down and went home, listening in shock to the radio broadcasts, to see those horrible images of death and destruction.

American fire and police died by the tens and hundreds along with civilians they tried to save at the World Trade Center... right in front of our eyes.

Like millions of other Americans, I was enraged. I wanted to console the families, find out who had attacked us, and make them pay with their lives.

But I did not think even once of invading any country not involved and using our military might to rain down death and destruction on other innocent people.

America is shamed by allowing itself to be lied into an invasion and war on innocent people who had nothing to do with 9-11, because of 9-11.

We should get back to the righteous task of getting Osama Bin Laden, and get out of our mistaken shameful occupation of Iraq.

~Ruff "

edwest wrote on Sep 12, 2008 10:00 AM:

" Ruff- it is a war on terrorism to protect you from future attacks. It is forward thinking not retributive. Iraq was a bastion of terrorism and corruption, threatening the free world, not just the US- England, France Spain have all been hit. My son told me Dad- these people are nice, but these ?#$@%! need taken care of. He compared them to the Norteneos and Sureneos, with much more power and threat. Getting Bin Laden is why we are Afghanistan. "

localchick wrote on Sep 12, 2008 10:37 AM:

" Way to turn a nice article about Napa High honoring those who lost their lives into a political, anti-war issue. Because that was the intent of Ricky Hurtado when he helped to organize this rally, not to commemorate the lives of those lost or for these students who were still too young to do things that would make them feel like they had contributed to the relief effort to do something now, but to give you yet another chance to have a political agenda and insult our country's intelligence.

We get it Ruff, you think the war in Iraq is stupid. As someone with multiple family members serving over there, I wish that it wasn't going on, but I still support our troops and know that those who are there believe in what they are doing.

So, get off your political, anti-war soap box and think about what this article was really about. We remember those who lost their lives on September 11th and we will never forget the tragic events that happened that day. "

musikluvr wrote on Sep 12, 2008 10:54 AM:

" Tragedy? The headline calls 9/11 a tragedy? 9/11 was an "Attack" on our country by people who have declared war on our country! Calling it a tragedy is a so-called politically correct liberalism that is designed to blame our own country for this attack on us. "

kkjp wrote on Sep 12, 2008 11:12 AM:

" edwest: If we follow your line of reasoning, we should be "forward thinking" and immediately spend trillions more dollars and lose thousands more lives attacking Iran, Pakistan, North Korea and Russia, all "bastions of terrorism and corruption", in order to "protect us from future attacks". Where does it end? "

wipemedown wrote on Sep 12, 2008 12:36 PM:

" forward thinking??? hmmm Im thinking i look forward to george bush being out of office. I think i will drink myself to the floor in celebration. WOO 1-20-09! Get your pull. Or I will drink myself to the floor because of old man winter and the governor of alaska are in the drivers seat. In that case I will wear my seat-belt because we will be on a crash course. "

moh2o wrote on Sep 12, 2008 1:56 PM:

" One good way we could honor those who died on 911, would be to have a legitimate investigation into the events leading up to , during and after that fateful day.
If the neo conservative war hawks really wanted to defend our people the first thing they should do is seal our borders and protect our citizens from the hoards of illegals coming and bringing crime into our country. But the Neo-con corporate elitists make too much money from the dirt cheap labor and exploitation of illegal labor.
The Liberal elites? I call them Psuedo Liberals, they too have similar values to the neo con elites. They both have trampled upon the constitution and abandoned fellow citizens to serve their own special interest groups. Both camps of elitist are also Globalists and they don't recognize the sovereignty of this nation or others while blindly rushing us ahead into oblivion. "

Ruff Limblog wrote on Sep 12, 2008 2:37 PM:

" localchick - There are ways to commemorate 9-11 that don't require the presence of military recruiters at a high school. The photo shows more people in fatigues than civilian attire. Pardon me if I am suspicious that the military might be recruiting at a 9-11 commemoration.

I have a stepson in the Army, and I still am adamantly against one more mother's son or daughter dying on the fool's errand in Iraq.

Sarah Palin says that US troops are on a Mission from God, and that war with Russia may be necessary. I shiver to think of what yet ANOTHER war would bring in terms of flag-covered caskets.

In point of fact, the American military was rendered completely impotent by instructions to fly away from where the planes hijacked on 9-11 were going.

The air traffic control tapes were destroyed so that nobody can prove where those misleading commands came from.

And today, seven years later, the folks on whose watch allowed 9-11 to happen still have a large chunk of the American people thinking that Iraq had something to do with 9-11.

I remember the fallen on 9-11... and I also remember that more of America's kids have died in Iraq than died on 9-11.

Somebody has to speak up at the perversion of one tragedy into a much bigger one.

Mark Twain was right you know...

~Ruff "

Ruff Limblog wrote on Sep 12, 2008 2:45 PM:

" Calling a horrible event a tragedy is now something only LIBRULZ would do?

Hmmm, Pearl Harbor was often called a tragedy by the Americans grieving over the loss of life... those Democrats that beat the Axis powers in WWII.

I wonder if they are all traitors, too?

~Ruff "

B-Side wrote on Sep 12, 2008 4:12 PM:

" Ruff,

I think you and I are on the same page for the most part. How does calling it a tragedy translate into blaming it on America? Here is the definition of tragedy according to my Websters dictionary.
A dramatic, unhappy, often disastrous event, esp. one of moral significance.
That seems to sum it up pretty well. We are all saddend by the events of this day.
William Rodriguez was a janitor in sub level 2 of the north tower on 9/11.
Go to Google videos, search his name and look for his speech at the American Scholars Symposium June 25, 2006. He saved many lives on that day. Listen to what he says and see if that changes what you believe about 9/11. If anything it is truely an amazing story.
Many intelligent people are questioning the official story ('airline pilots for 911 truth' just to name one) and are quickly labled nut jobs by the ignorant. "

Joe wrote on Sep 12, 2008 4:55 PM:

" I think the US acted in a very cowardly way on 9-11-01 by not allowing international flights to land in the US. These planes did not have enough fuel to return to where they came from so they had to go to Canada. Some jumbo jets were forced to land at airports that weren't made to accomodate jets of that size. It was very dangerous. Why was it ok for these planes to put Canada at risk of attack. Keeping planes from landing in New york or Washington would be understandable. But passing the burdon on to Canada is very cowardly. Canadian air traffic control did a great job to get those planes down. they saved peoples lives. I guess the US just couldn't handle the pressure. How selfish. "

simpwinemom wrote on Sep 12, 2008 9:18 PM:

" Please all reread the article... it is not about politics it is about a young man and his vision and his school supporting him. We all need to remember that we have lost some soldiers in our own community and these high school students just wanted to remember them and all the person we lost in 9/11. These high schools are our future and they will go far and make a spectacular difference. "

tcrandellgarza wrote on Sep 12, 2008 9:53 PM:

" Here's something, maybe those of you that are making too much of this nice memorable article, should re-read it. It is telling the Napa community that this day in our history, Napa High School did a special thing by bringing in these important people to support this anniversary to honor that horrible day. It was a really nice article, and my daughter said that Mr. Hurtado is a nice kid, and it's all anyone could talk about. Let's try not to ruin a nice thing. Keep it positive as did these recruiters and firemen and all who attended. Please quit finding so much negative in something that was only to be positive at Napa High on Thurs. Sept. 11, 08!! "

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