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"Gottschalk, Peter"
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Miss Schneider Engaged to Wed
Dr. Gottschalk, who is known as [Peter Christopher Henry Gottschalk], is an intern at St. Vincent's Hospital in Manhattan. A graduate of Johns Hopkins University, he received his M.D. from Columbia.
Newspaper Article
Ms. Schneider Weds Peter Gottschalk
Dr. Gottschalk, who is known as [Peter Christopher Henry Gottschalk], graduated from the St. Bernard's and Collegiate Schools, Johns Hopkins University, Faculte la Sorbonne in Paris and the Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons. He is an intern at St. Vincent's Hospital in New York. His father is a founding partner of Gottschalk & Zayan, an architectural firm in Tampa, Fla.
Newspaper Article
India's Bihar region requires deeper analysis
2009
Much of the reporting on India's economy focuses on its urban industrial and service sectors. But 75 per cent of India's population live in rural environments and agriculture remains the largest sector.
Newspaper Article
Planners won't support nudists' expansion
2001
When Lake Como nudist resort in Land O'Lakes announced plans to expand by 32 acres, neighbors on Lake Como Drive and Moss Branch Court decided they wouldn't grin and bear it anymore. To help balance its books, Lake Como proposes leasing lots on a 32- acre orange grove it owns south of the existing resort. Nudists want to put as many as 60 mobile and modular homes on the property, which is zoned for agriculture. about 20 neighbors who attended the planning commission worried about losing the grove, a buffer between nude and non-nude residents in that part of Land O'Lakes. At a minimum, residents want a masonry fence to block children from glimpsing naked flesh.
Newspaper Article
Two big condo projects fade away
2005
Peter Gottschalk, the Seasons architect, said Wednesday that the new buyer has built condo towers elsewhere and may want to build one at the 602 E. Whiting St. site. The deal is supposed to close in 30 to 60 days, said Gottschalk, who would not identify the buyer or the sales price. Two more condo towers have been announced in recent weeks. Novare- Intown Tampa Development LLC, which is building the 32-story downtown SkyPoint tower, has proposed a 25-story tower in the Channel District. On Wednesday, Mercury Advisors made available details on another tower it wants to build in the district. Ken Stoltenberg, co-director of Mercury Advisors, which has started building its 14-story Grand Central at Kennedy, now plans to build a 22-story condo tower nearby.
Newsletter
LAND OF PLENTY: PLENTY OF RICH, POOR AMERICA'S INCOME GAP KEEPS WIDENING AND THE TREND ISN'T ABOUT TO CHANGE
1994
\"Inequality increased in all groups, in all occupations, in all areas of the world,\" since 1973, [Peter Gottschalk] said. \"College graduates did very well, but there's even inequality among college graduates.\" Although college graduates fared better than others, a fifth of college graduates between 25 and 34 earn less than $15,000 a year, the poverty level for a family of four. For high school graduates in that age group, 38 percent earn under $15,000. Gottschalk said the most important factor causing the widening gap was technological change that increased skill demands and displaced many workers.
Newspaper Article
Wage supplements for low pay jobs lead to search for better jobs
2003
The study, Do Earning Subsidies Affect Job Choice? The Impact of SSP Supplement Payments on Wage Growth, was designed and executed by Helen Connolly of the Department of Economics from Northeastern University and Peter Gottschalk, from the Department of Economics from Boston College. The purpose was to determine whether wage or earnings subsidies can affect job choice and duration.
Journal Article
Proposal for town center weakened
2002
The plan's author, the Tampa Bay Regional Planning Council, has retreated from an earlier recommendation to require Cracker-style building ornamentation such as tin roofs in Land O'Lakes. \"If it takes until 2005, will there be any Pasco County left?\" asks Peter Gottschalk, a Land O'Lakes architect who helped shape the plan. \"Certain forces want it to be as slow as possible so the status quo can continue.\" Assistant County Administrator Bipin Parikh said county commissioners agreed to spend $20,000 on the community plan only if its approval took the slow road. Parikh wondered: What would happen if the advisory committee, after wrapping up three years of work, envisions a different Land O'Lakes from the community plan?
Newspaper Article
Proposal for town center weakened
2002
The plan's author, the Tampa Bay Regional Planning Council, has retreated from an earlier recommendation to require Cracker-style building ornamentation such as tin roofs in Land O'Lakes. \"If it takes until 2005, will there be any Pasco County left?\" asks Peter Gottschalk, a Land O'Lakes architect who helped shape the plan. \"Certain forces want it to be as slow as possible so the status quo can continue.\" Aside from [Ted Williams], once dubbed the \"godfather\" of Pasco Democratic politics, they've created a critic in former County Commissioner Curtis Law, who owns 90 rural acres west of U.S. 41.
Newspaper Article
Neighbors' opposition fails to slow subdivision
2000
Despite complaints the proposed 590-home Chapel Pines subdivision is a recipe for urban sprawl, the Pasco Planning Commission assented to a rezoning application sought by the Byrd Corp. of Clearwater. Chapel Pines is just the latest proposed subdivision. Lykes Development Corp. plans 760 houses and townhomes on 328 acres northwest of Curley and Wells roads and Safety Harbor Capital Corp. wants to build about 200 homes on a tree farm north of Lykes. [Peter Gottschalk] said the housing density of Chapel Pines is incompatible with the less dense development in the neighborhood. [Eugenia Fellows] complained developers were hopscotching too far north of existing suburbs.
Newspaper Article