To his right, Capt. Joseph Pastore saw a huge 21-million gallon oil drum filled with sand and water. To his front and his left, he saw another tank of equal size engulfed in a roaring firestorm and beginning to leak its boiling oil. Behind him grew the undergrowth and brush of untended Salinas Valley pastureland.
When Nashville, Tenn., began exploring ways to redevelop its urban core, there was only one place the city chose to look — Portland and more specifically, the Pearl District.
Gov. Pataki's courtship of New York's Latino voters has never been a secret. Along with noted policy shifts opposing military exercises on the island of Vieques and his extension of health insurance to more than 500,000 of the state's underprivileged children, Pataki now greets Latino voters in Spanish, backed by an active "Amigos de Pataki" fundraising squad.
When Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante announced his run for governor on Aug. 6, political pundits hailed it as a major stumbling block for Arnold Schwarzenegger and California Republicans. The thinking: Bustamante would offer Latino and Mexican-American voters the chance to elect one of their own - "a farm worker from the barrio," as he describes himself.
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