EconWatch.com > The Battle For Ground Zero, Part 164
[A Blog For All] One-third of all his Manhattan leases will expire during the years when new buildings are expected to rise at Ground Zero - and competition from newly minted towers is clearly not to his liking.Newsday and the Daily News comments on the unveiling as well, and notes that Greenwich Street will once again run through the site, which I think is a big mistake - not only does it cut off pedestrian traffic through the site, but poses a security risk to the towers and memorial areas.
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[Lawhawk.blogspot.com] A Blog For All: The Battle For Ground Zero, Part 74: 13, before it has a chance to identify "unmet public health needs and recommend any steps to further minimize the risks associated" with 9/11's aftermath.One problem is trying to determine what contamination was caused by the collapse of the towers, and what was already preexisting. The testing was to rely on one kind of chemical marker, but there is a dispute over whether that is sufficient, or even accurate.
[The Gutter] Goldhagen Drops the K-Bomb on Calatrava!: We weren't about to take two seconds to register at TNR online, nor would we be seen visiting a "newsstand", so, yes, it was on the title alone that we declared yesterday that the Santiago Calatrava juggernaut was over. (After all, you can't spell juggernaut without naught.) But now we post vindicated (post-vindicated?): Sarah Williams Goldhagen has written a brilliant”brilliant!”and definitive exegesis on the man, his mind, and the work (with added bonus material on the Organic Fallacy).
[KarensKorner] IN THE NEWS..SEPTEMBER 27,2005: Hillary Clinton elected president posted a banner on the New York Democrat's Washington address over the weekend, as it pushes its theme to get Bill Clinton back in the White House - this time as first lady.MORE
[The Malcontent] Cindy Sheehan Gets SWOTted: What started out as the most half-baked of ideas has now emerged from the oven: Former Massachusetts Gov. Bill Weld wants to return to the governor's mansion, but this time in Albany rather than in Boston.
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