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Media Muddle (Metro Weekly)
August 28, 2008, 7:01 am EDT
Some forms of media bias I can appreciate. For example, someone at The Washington Post got carried away in the August 21 issue with color photos of Jamaican sprinting champion Usain Bolt, which grace the front page, the cover of the sports ...
Media bias is in eye of beholder (Herald & Review)
August 28, 2008, 2:23 am EDT
The presidential campaign is beginning to grow even more heated, with the Democratic National Convention this week and the Republican convention the week following.
The wrath of women scorned (Warren Advocate)
August 27, 2008, 7:15 pm EDT
TO THE end, they made her their winner. "Hill-ary … the nominee", they chanted in the filled underground Manhattan gymnasium where Hillary Clinton held her final victory celebration. Five months of campaigning ended with a win in South ...
William Klein: Play TV Talking Heads Rope-A-Dope Poker (HuffingtonPost)
August 27, 2008, 3:39 pm EDT
The networks' convention coverage can be so mind-numbingly tedious that viewers are concocting their own strategies for staying awake.
Just Over Half of Democrats Say Bill Clinton Likes Obama and Wants Him to Win (Rasmussen Reports via Yahoo! News)
August 27, 2008, 11:12 am EDT
Bill Clinton is expected to talk about himself at the Democratic National Convention tonight and then leave town before Barack Obama's acceptance speech. But just over half of Democrats believe there is no animosity between the two men and that ...
Belles in Hell's Kitchen (Santa Fe Reporter)
August 27, 2008, 6:31 am EDT
My mother, a PhD in Women’s Studies, finds my obsession with food bewildering. “How can anybody care so much about all that?” she groans. As writers Andrew Dornenburg and Karen Page say: “Food has become our national ...
No Nastiness In Springfield? (Brent Bozell III via Yahoo! News)
August 27, 2008, 3:00 am EDT
For two years now, we've heard Barack Obama's media allies tell us how he was somehow Not a Politician, that he was the pragmatic soul of civility who was "uniquely qualified to nudge the country toward the color purple." (So said Newsweek.) If ...
Antiwar T-shirts win protection (Arizona Daily Sun)
August 21, 2008, 9:38 am EDT
PHOENIX -- A federal judge on Wednesday permanently blocked state and local officials from prosecuting a Flagstaff man who produces and sells antiwar T-shirts with the names of U.S. soldiers killed in Iraq.


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National Defense

Emergency response is a product of preparedness. On the morning of September 11, 2001, the last best hope for the community of people working in or visiting the World Trade Center rested not with national policymakers but with private firms and local public servants, especially the first responders: fire, police, emergency medical service, and building safety professionals.

HEROISM AND HORROR

Building Preparedness The World Trade Center.

The World Trade Center (WTC) complex was built for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. Construction began in 1966, and tenants began to occupy its space in 1970.The Twin Towers came to occupy a unique and symbolic place in the culture of New York City and America.

The WTC actually consisted of seven buildings, including one hotel, spread across 16 acres of land. The buildings were connected by an underground mall (the concourse).The Twin Towers (1 WTC, or the North Tower, and 2 WTC, or the South Tower) were the signature structures, containing 10.4 million square feet of office space. Both towers had 110 stories, were about 1,350 feet high, and were square; each wall measured 208 feet in length. On any given workday, up to 50,000 office workers occupied the towers, and 40,000 people passed through the complex.1

Each tower contained three central stairwells, which ran essentially from top to bottom, and 99 elevators. Generally, elevators originating in the lobby ran to "sky lobbies" on higher floors, where additional elevators carried passengers to the tops of the buildings.2

Stairwells A and C ran from the 110th floor to the raised mezzanine level of the lobby. Stairwell B ran from the 107th floor to level B6, six floors below ground, and was accessible from the West Street lobby level, which was one


The World Trade Center Complex as of 9/11
Rendering by Marco Crupi

floor below the mezzanine. All three stairwells ran essentially straight up and down, except for two deviations in stairwells A and C where the staircase jutted out toward the perimeter of the building. On the upper and lower boundaries of these deviations were transfer hallways contained within the stairwell proper. Each hallway contained smoke doors to prevent smoke from rising from lower to upper portions of the building; they were kept closed but not locked. Doors leading from tenant space into the stairwells were never kept locked; reentry from the stairwells was generally possible on at least every fourth floor.3

Doors leading to the roof were locked. There was no rooftop evacuation plan. The roofs of both the North Tower and the South Tower were sloped and cluttered surfaces with radiation hazards, making them impractical for helicopter landings and as staging areas for civilians. Although the South Tower roof had a helipad, it did not meet 1994 Federal Aviation Administration guidelines.4

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