Word: attracted
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...site (10 in all), 7 World Trade Center is the only one that exists much beyond blueprint and imagination. In the 412 years since 9/11, ground zero has been excavated, purified and turned into a place of pilgrimage. When completed, the new World Trade Center memorial will attract 10 million visitors a year, its handlers expect. Ground zero has inspired dozens of books, several documentaries and passionate calls to rebuild and reclaim the hole in the ground with something both respectful and profitable. The result? Sixteen barren acres of good intentions...
...M.I.T. of the microprocessor business, and [we] attract great people. We spend a lot of time checking to see if what we have in mind is relevant for our customers. We also have a much healthier balance of risk taking in technology and innovation...
...Balanced Look at the Right through the aftermath of the 2004 election. In its concentration on the Air America stint, the film inevitably covers much the same material as last year?s Left of the Dial. But it?s a frank-seeming portrait of a man who can always attract a crowd of autograph seekers, even at the Republican National Convention of 2004. (Franken takes it in stride, noting, ?In this country, celebrity trumps ideology.?) He is a kind of crucial figure, for he straddles a span that continues to shrink: the space between politicians who want to be more...
...performed at Harvard, will play Beethoven’s “Third Piano Concerto in C Minor” at 3:30 p.m. in Paine Hall, with pianist Katherine Chen ’06 accompanying.Although the performances—which are open to the public—do attract families and general audiences, everyone involved in the fair stresses that there is no room for mediocrity or pandering. “Musicians at Harvard prepare for a concert in a way that’s very spontaneous,” says Arielle A. Hansen...
...groups, was brought in from surrounding quarters as reinforcements. Adhamiya is a safe haven for any number of anti-American organizations, which share intelligence and weapons and coordinate their activities. According to insurgent sources, the groups agreed that only sparing attacks would be launched locally so as not to attract U.S. attention. American brigade commander Col. Thomas Vail says the district's concentration of working poor made it easy for insurgents to hide. "It was easy sanctuary," he says...