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Tuesday, May 14
The Indiana Daily Student

arts

Controversial museum scrapped from 9/11 Ground Zero plans

NEW YORK -- Bowing to pressure from furious Sept. 11 families, Gov. George Pataki on Wednesday removed a proposed freedom museum from the space reserved for it at Ground Zero, saying the project had aroused "too much opposition, too much controversy."\nHe left open the possibility that a new spot at the former World Trade Center site could be found for the museum.\nThe decision followed months of acrimony over the International Freedom Center, with Sept. 11 families and politicians saying the museum would overshadow and take space from a separate memorial devoted to the 2,749 victims of the World Trade Center attacks and would dishonor them by fostering debate about the attacks and other world events.\n"We must move forward with our first priority: the creation of an inspiring memorial to pay tribute to our lost loved ones and tell their stories to the world," Pataki said in a statement.\nPataki said the Freedom Center cannot be part of a cultural building located near the proposed trade center memorial. But he left open the possibility that the center could find a home elsewhere on the 16-acre site.\nPataki said he would direct the Lower Manhattan Development Corp. -- the agency he created to rebuild the site -- to explore other locations for the center.\nA campaign by some Sept. 11 families to oust the museum from space reserved for it at Ground Zero had grown in recent months to include four police and fire unions, an online petition with more than 40,000 signatures and several politicians including former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani.\n"Goodbye and good riddance," said Rep. Vito Fossella, one of three congressmen who had threatened hearings on federal funding if the museum stayed where it was. "The IFC will not stand on the hallowed grounds of the World Trade Center site."\nIn addition to the terrorist attacks, the Freedom Center planned exhibits on such topics as Abraham Lincoln, Martin Luther King Jr., the fall of the Berlin Wall, the civil rights movement, the Declaration of Independence and the South African constitution.\nThe museum would also include a section on the world's response to Sept. 11 and a film that links the victims' backgrounds to periods in history.\nSome families have opposed the museum as much for its location as its content; they said it would sit in a prominent part of Ground Zero that would obscure the memorial museum.

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