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Depending on whom you talk to, the Trans-Texas Corridor is either an innovative solution to the U.S.'s overcrowded highway system or a Texas-size boondoggle. Backers claim that such corridors are needed to divert road and rail traffic--NAFTA truckers driving up from Mexico, railcars of Chinese goods from Western ports, hazardous cargoes of all kinds--from congested urban areas. Buying land for the system now, decades before it's needed, would cut acquisition costs and might entice businesses to relocate inside the corridors. T. Boone Pickens could ship his West Texas water across the state in pipelines...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Next Wave in Superhighways, or A Big, Fat Texas Boondoggle? | 12/17/2004 | See Source »

Perry, a farm boy from West Texas who studied animal science at Texas A&M University, sees the Trans-Texas Corridor as a way to make his mark by tackling the state's growing congestion. Urban rush-hour drivers were stuck in traffic for an average of 46 hr. in 2002, nearly triple the time in 1982, according to a study conducted by the Texas Transportation Institute. Increasingly, tolls are seen as a way to reduce traffic. "We simply can't afford to build our way out of traffic congestion, so we have to better manage it," says Michael Replogle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Next Wave in Superhighways, or A Big, Fat Texas Boondoggle? | 12/17/2004 | See Source »

...longer gather at the cotton gin, but the town's first national chain, Home Depot, has moved in. Mayor Mike Ackerman drives by the construction site every day on his way to work and is sanguine about the changing face of his town. "Anything we can do to get traffic moving north and south, we need to do," he says. The question is whether the rest of Texas agrees with him. --With reporting by Hilary Hylton/Austin

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Next Wave in Superhighways, or A Big, Fat Texas Boondoggle? | 12/17/2004 | See Source »

...city is responsible for providing fire protection to those residents and to that land. We make sure that the streets are clean. We make sure that the traffic flows smoothly,” Galluccio said in an interview yesterday. “Those services cost money...

Author: By Alan J. Tabak, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Harvard Pressured to Pay City More | 12/16/2004 | See Source »

...including a 10-minute misconduct—and Harvard would strike three times on its power play. Kevin Du deflected a Tom Walsh slapshot at 5:56, and Andrew Lederman extended the Crimson lead to 3-0 with a screamer from the blueline that beat Howard glove-side through traffic...

Author: By Rebecca A. Seesel, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: CROSS 'EM OFF: M. Hockey Tops Fourth-Straight Ranked Team, Avenges Last Year's Loss to Maine | 12/13/2004 | See Source »

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