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Irish America magazine - Dec '03/Jan '04 issue: Kennedy Homecoming, Jim Sheridan - In America, The Irish and Alcohol, Chuck Feeney, The Kelly Gang, Irish Nuns, Michael Flatley cleared of charges, Audrey Hepburn, Stephen Siller, Gerry McNamara

 
Jim Sheridan In America.
Jim Sheridan speaks about what inspired him to make his latest film, In America.
 
Irish Loop Drive
Travel writer Nancy Griffin explores a corner of Ireland in Newfoundland.
 
The Irish & Alcohol
An exploration of Irish pub culture and alcohol abuse in modern Ireland.
 
 
 

A tribute to courage.

The Annual 5K Tunnel to Towers Run in honor of Stephen Siller and the 342 other firefighters who lost their lives on the 11th of September at the World Trade Center. The course recreates the run that Siller made from Brookyln through the Battery Tunnel to the WTC site. Florida Firefighter Dan McKay leads the pack of runners near the end of the Battery tunnel.

Thousands turned out in lower Manhattan on a rainy Sunday morning on September 28 to remember relatives and friends lost on September 11, and to retrace the final steps of Stephen Siller, a firefighter from Brooklyn. 

Siller, of Squad 1 in Park Slope, was off-duty when he strapped on 60 pounds of gear and walked to Manhattan through the Battery Tunnel to West and Liberty Streets, where he was last seen.

Some 4,000 runners retraced the firefighter’s last steps, in the second annual Tunnel to Towers Run from Battery Park to Ground Zero and back.

Dan McKay, a 24-year-old firefighter from Hollywood, Florida, won the race. McKay, quoted in the New York Daily News, said, “This was something I had to be a part of.” 

The $30 entrance fees went to the firefighter burn center and the Stephen Siller “Let Us Do Good For The Children’s Foundation,” which was set up for children who lost parents on September 11.

“I was almost crying through the tunnel,” said second-place finisher Ken Bonham from Brooklyn’s Ladder 106. “There were guys on the left holding flags, one for every guy we lost.”

Some of those marching behind bagpipes from Battery Park said they hoped that officials would preserve the so-called footprints of the World Trade Center in the rebuilding.

“You can have the rest, just give us that,” said Florence Staub, 60, of the Bronx, whose 30-year-old son, Craig, died in the attacks.

For Siller’s 36-year-old widow, Sally, and his five children, the five-kilometer race is a way to remember Siller’s last act. “The kids can see that their father is a hero,” Mrs. Siller told the News.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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