May 2, 1968: Advert in New York Times Warns of WTC Danger, Shows Plane About to Strike One of the TowersEdit event
A 1968 advert with an artist’s rendition of a plane hitting the WTC.
A 1968 advert with an artist’s rendition of a plane hitting the WTC. [Source: Committee for a Reasonable World Trade Center]
A civic group opposed to the building of the World Trade Center publishes a nearly full-page advertisement in the New York Times, warning that the new buildings will be so tall that a commercial airliner might crash into them. The group, called the Committee for a Reasonable World Trade Center, is mainly composed of New York real estate developers who are worried that the huge construction project will glut the market.
Its leader is Lawrence A. Wien, a real estate mogul who is an owner of the Empire State Building in New York.
In July 1945, a B-25 Army bomber struck the Empire State Building, killing 14 people.
[NEW YORK TIMES, 2/26/1981] The committee’s advertisement shows an artist’s rendition of a large jet plane about to strike one of the proposed towers.