Some of the quotes from a USA Today story about the Sullivan Bros(all 5 were killed on one ship attack in WWII) & how that war compares to todays war.
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''There's more patriotism now, but it's a show of patriotism,'' says Donna Hamilton, 72. ''We're not doing anything. There's nothing to be done.''
Since Sept. 11, ''you hear some people saying that things will change forever,'' says Leo Rooff, who was best man at the wedding of Albert Sullivan, youngest of the five brothers who died at sea. ''Well, things did change forever in World War II.''
In World War II, leisure driving was banned, the speed limit was lowered to 35 mph, and gasoline and tires were strictly rationed. Today, gas prices are the lowest in three years, car sales are up, and travelers are officially urged to travel more.
In World War II, Japanese-Americans on the West Coast were interned, and one Waterloo Lutheran church canceled its German-language service. Today, local Arab-Americans -- who braced for harassment or worse after Sept. 11 -- have encountered nothing of the kind. ''Everyone has been quite supportive and understanding,'' says Raja Akbar, president of the local Islamic community center.
In World War II, Waterloo lost 265 people, mostly young men, in military service. The newspaper reported a new death, on average, once every four days. Today, the city has so far lost no one to terrorism or the fight against it, and the state lost six people in the Sept. 11 attacks.
The government warns of more attacks, but the peacetime rhythm mocks the wartime rhetoric.
let's see that level of awareness in 2002People were told to turn off the lights when they went out in case of an air raid drill. In the general Midwestern blackout drill on Nov. 22, 1942, no more than five homes in the whole city failed to comply
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