Archive of News (2001)

Trade-Off by Environmentalists on Rebuilding; Looser Rules for Manhattan Are Backed to Avoid a Bigger Threat: Sprawl

Corporate leaders and politicians who argue that New York City must rebuild Lower Manhattan as quickly as possible — even if it means sidestepping or streamlining some environmental protection rules — are getting support for their position from what might seem an unlikely quarter: environmentalists.

Levy Tries to Calm Fears About Air Quality Near Ruins

Trying to relieve parents’ environmental concerns about schools near the World Trade Center, Schools Chancellor Harold O. Levy said yesterday that he would move his office to one of the schools, Stuyvesant High School, when it reopened to students on Tuesday.

Schools Struggle, Delicately, to Balance the Normal With the Surreal

In Brooklyn, several young schoolchildren falsely claimed that their fathers had died in the World Trade Center attack in a muddled attempt to identify with classmates who actually had lost parents.

Schools Struggle, Delicately, to Balance the Normal With the Surreal

In Brooklyn, several young schoolchildren falsely claimed that their fathers had died in the World Trade Center attack in a muddled attempt to identify with classmates who actually had lost parents.

Victims’ Families Promised Some Health Coverage

Thousands of people are in danger of losing their health insurance in the aftermath of the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center, according to consumer advocates and health care agencies.

Advertise on NYTimes.com Victims’ Families Promised Some Health Coverage

Thousands of people are in danger of losing their health insurance in the aftermath of the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center, according to consumer advocates and health care agencies.

PUBLIC LIVES; The Psychiatrist in the House Feels the Nation’s Trauma

In the days after the terrorist attacks, Representative Jim McDermott of Washington, the only psychiatrist in Congress, could not get his mind off the image of a plane crashing into the World Trade Center.

A NATION CHALLENGED: THE SCENT; 20 Days Later, an Invisible Reminder Lingers

It’s the odor of a burning computer. Or a burning tire. Or burning paper. One person said it was the scent of unsettled souls. It’s the smell, once overwhelming, now increasingly more ephemeral, that emanates from the tangled wreckage of the World Trade Center.

20 Days Later, an Invisible Reminder Lingers

It’s the odor of a burning computer. Or a burning tire. Or burning paper. One person said it was the scent of unsettled souls. It’s the smell, once overwhelming, now increasingly more ephemeral, that emanates from the tangled wreckage of the World Trade Center.

The Psychiatrist in the House Feels the Nation’s Trauma

IN the days after the terrorist attacks, Representative Jim McDermott of Washington, the only psychiatrist in Congress, could not get his mind off the image of a plane crashing into the World Trade Center.