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McGUIGAN: Remembering 9/11

Patrick B McGuigan
Published: September 11th, 2012

On the morning of September 11, 2001, as Oklahoma City education reform leaders met with the City Council, an aide handed Mayor Kirk Humphreys a note.
After reading it, the mayor announced there were news reports a small private plane had crashed into one of the World Trade Center Towers in New York City. Before long, he made a second announcement: Another plane had crashed into the other tower. Soon we knew these were commercial airliners, not small planes.
The council quickly adjourned. We made hurried goodbyes and I headed to work at The Oklahoman, where I ran the editorial page.
At the office, after the 10-minute drive from downtown, I touched base with J.E. McReynolds, chief editorial writer.
He would write our institution’s response, expressing the solidarity Oklahomans felt for New York’s first responders, men and women who had flown to the heartland after the Murrah Building bombing in 1995.
I kept a luncheon date with my wife Pam and Denise Bode, a state Corporation Commissioner.
Pam had spent the morning working at home. She heard about the attacks from me. Denise’s husband John worked in Washington, and she had not yet heard from him.
During lunch, her cell phone rang. John was fine, nowhere near the Pentagon when one of the hijacked planes slammed into its side.
I encouraged Pam to get her car filled with gas. She did so and witnessed the start of panic buying. The nation’s airports were closed and gasoline supplies began to constrict. She said that despite their worries, people she encountered were calm, respectful and concerned.
In the afternoon, I checked the final draft of J.E.’s editorial. It was stellar.
Like millions of others, I viewed with horror replays of the Towers coming down. Pam later told me other mothers were worried about turning on televisions with children in the room, as the images replayed. Some youngsters believed it was happening over and over again.
At The Oklahoman, I looked for an item to anchor the next day’s editorial page. The first commentary to arrive echoed what I sensed was needed.
In an otherwise passionate piece, George Will wrote, sensibly, “The complexities of urban industrial societies make them inherently vulnerable to well-targeted attacks that disrupt the flows and interconnectedness of such societies. The new dependence on information technologies multiplies the vulnerabilities.”
He urged a calm and steady response in the wake of the day’s terrible reminder that we live in “a still-dangerous world.”
During that afternoon, my son called to say that state Commerce Secretary Russell Perry, also editor of The Black Chronicle in northeast Oklahoma City, had called to cancel a speech that night before a student chapter of accounting students at Oklahoma State University.
A member of Gov. Frank Keating’s emergency team, Perry had been called into a series of meetings and would not be able to address the group.
As it was my son’s chapter, Russell suggested I take his place. With things on track for the editorial page, Pam and I drove to Stillwater to meet with students. The students and I talked about the business world, even as they asked about the evil that men do in this world. I conveyed then, and still believe, the best way to honor those who had died was to keep living, in freedom.
One who died on American Airlines Flight 77, the plane that slammed into the Pentagon, was Barbara Olson. 
I first knew her as Barbara Kay Bracher, from Federalist Society gatherings in Washington and around the nation in the 1980s.
We bonded in the arena of legal policy “combat,” to the point that we began to seek one another out at receptions or dinners, catching up in the midst of separate, busy lives.
After all those times of talking through judicial controversies and Justice Department scuttlebutt, our relationship had slowly transitioned into friendship. One day, at a Federalist encounter, she grabbed me when I reached out to shake her hand, pulling me into a warm embrace.
Barbara went onto great success in television and as a writer; I returned to my home state, Oklahoma, for a career in journalism. When we saw each other over the years, it was always the same: A long hug and kind, endearing words.
When I read on 9/11 that she was gone, I closed my eyes and tears came.
I could smell her blonde hair – always a fruit, like fresh berries. In the mind’s eye, I saw Barbara’s face. Her eyes and blonde hair. Her smile. That warm embrace of friendship.
In a matter of seconds, the smell of her hair was gone. And I missed her so.


You may contact Patrick B. McGuigan at Patrick@capitolbeatok.com and follow us on
Twitter: @capitolbeatok.

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Pat McGuigan
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