Downtown Express photo above by Aline Reynolds
Workers at a nursery in Millstone Township, N.J. prepare a swamp white oak tree before it is carefully placed onto a truck. It is one of over 400 trees that will be transported to the W.T.C. site in time for the opening of the 9/11 Memorial next year.
W.T.C. site has new life; first trees are planted
BY Aline Reynolds
Life has returned to the World Trade Center site nine years after the September 11 terrorist attacks.
Rent stability returns to I.P.N. after five years
BY Aline Reynolds
Tenants of Independence Plaza North in Tribeca came out victorious on Tuesday after a five-year-long battle with their landlord.
Pick on someone your own size
Port looking elsewhere for crossing guards
BY Aline Reynolds
Sam Schwartz Engineering is not ready to relinquish its post at two of the busiest intersections in the city.
Familiar with the First Precinct, commanding the Seventh
BY Albert Amateau
When Deputy Inspector Nancy Barry became commanding officer of the Seventh Precinct on the Lower East Side in May 2009, she was no stranger to the station house on Pitt Street.
Voting goes to the dogs
Different kind of Wall St. tour led by insiders
Making a statement

ARTS DOWNTOWN

Please don’t call it a Fall Arts Preview
Compiled by Scott Stiffler
It’s more like an Autumn Roundup, OK?
FringeNYC: Gone yes, but not forgotten
BY SCOTT STIFFLER
Tim & Micah’s show over, still worth checking out.
Playwright asks: Is a rabbit just a bump in the road?
BY JERRY TALLMER
Ultra-intimate sexual act viewed as ticket to fame.
The A-List
By Scott Stiffler
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News
Port, Silverstein seal deal on towers 2, 3 & 4
BY Aline Reynolds
After five months of deliberation, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey has finalized an agreement with real estate mogul Larry Silverstein to redevelop the World Trade Center.
A Conversation with Larry Silverstein
One press release better than 50; Park51 supporters bond
BY Aline Reynolds
Over 50 citywide and national organizations have assembled to form an umbrella coalition in support of Park51.
De Blasio creates list of local slumlords
BY John Bayles
Landlords in New York City may soon find their names on a new list created by the City’s Public Advocate Bill de Blasio. However, it’s not a list they want to make.
‘It’s our land,’ defiant owner tells fracking forum
By Albert Amateau
The City Council’s Tuesday forum on proposed hydrofracture natural gas drilling in the state, which potentially threatens most of the city’s drinking water, attracted about 200 people, including officials from the federal Environmental Protection Agency and two Upstate property owners who support the controversial process.
Park vendors win again
Muslim Cabbie Stabbing

P.S. 276 has a home, and a brand new one to boot
BY Aline Reynolds
After an incubator year at Tweed Courthouse on Chambers Street, P.S. 276 is opening its very own doors this school year over at 55 Battery Place.
Mentors help students break the trend and ditch the city
BY John Bayles
Melissa Peralta thought about college when she was in high school, but knew it wasn’t within her reach.
Girls Prep gets a new home
After 20 years, Church St. School still creating
BY Aline Reynolds
Twenty years ago, Lisa Ecklund-Flores converted a second-floor loft at 311 Church Street into a school. It consisted of two large classrooms, a small lobby and an office.
Fruit of her labor is to put kids through college
By Roslyn Kramer
Luz Vera doesn’t speak much English, but her mastery of the American way is huge. Mexican by birth, she has raised five children in New York City while earning a living as a street vendor whose workday starts before dawn.
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