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Post by MiloticSoldier on Jul 14, 2006 21:03:54 GMT -5
Topic Sentence: The gas blast that leveled Dr. Nicholas Bartha's land-marked Upper East Side townhouse didn't lower the properties value -- and, may even have increased it, real-estate experts told the Post.
Q. So how much is the property worth?
R. He added that it also could be more desirable because a developer wouldn't have as many landmark issues to contend with-- although the new building's facade would have to be reasonable facsimile of the original.
S. “ The value is not in the building, but the land on which it sits -- especially in that area," said Corocan Group CEO Pamela Liebman.
T. “ Someone would have bought the place and gutted it,” he said.
U. Another real-estate source, who has visited the house the Bartha allegedly destroyed rather than give up, said that beyond the exterior, the 96-year-old, 4931-square-foot house at 34 E. 62nd St. “wasn’t all that terrific.”
V. Another broker, who asked not to be named, said the site, minus the four-story brownstone "is a developer’s dream" because there's no need to pay for demolition or to go time-consuming process of evicting tenants.
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Post by MiloticSoldier on Jul 17, 2006 15:02:01 GMT -5
Jimmy Dang Mars July 17, 2006 Writing
Do you have some money you want to waste? Go to a local astrology center instead! Or you can be smart and save your money. It should not be waste on astrology in my opinion for three reasons in which I am about to show you. Firstly, it cannot be proven by science, making it untrue. Secondly, that makes it an unnecessary scam to take money since it is recreational, signifying it is of no importance, just for “fun.” It is a scam because more than half of the predictions are incorrect.
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Recent college grad Jennifer Panicali was just walking to her job in Central Park Monday morning when all of a sudden she was catapulted into the street, a torrent of glass shards and debris raining down on her. The fallout from the massive gas explosion – allegedly set off by Dr. Nicholas Bartha to flatten his East 62nd Street townhouse in a suicidal bid for revenge against his ex-wife – hit the young Parks Department worker like a ton of bricks. It took doctors at New York Presbyterian Medical Center three hours to remove the glass, wood, and stone fragments imbedded in the more the 100 wounds to the 22-year-old Staten Islander’s body. “It’s sad. She’s in a lot of pain,” said her uncle, Bruce D’Alessandro. After her surgery Monday night, the retired cop said Panicali’s devastated parents “spent the whole night in the hospital with her.” By morning, her condition was listed as stable and she was the only blast victim, other than the critically injured Bartha, to remain hospitalized.
Topic Sentence: Recent college grad Jennifer Panicali was just walking to her job in Central Park Monday morning when all of a sudden she was catapulted into the street, a torrent of glass shards and debris raining down on her.
Q. By morning, her condition was listed as stable and she was the only blast victim, other than the critically injured Bartha, to remain hospitalized.
R. “It’s sad. She’s in a lot of pain,” said her uncle, Bruce D’Alessandro.
S. After her surgery Monday night, the retired cop said Panicali’s devastated parents “spent the whole night in the hospital with her.”
T. The fallout from the massive gas explosion – allegedly set off by Dr. Nicholas Bartha to flatten his East 62nd Street townhouse in a suicidal bid for revenge against his ex-wife – hit the young Parks Department worker like a ton of bricks.
U. It took doctors at New York Presbyterian Medical Center three hours to remove the glass, wood, and stone fragments imbedded in the more the 100 wounds to the 22-year-old Staten Islander’s body.
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