Developer Izak Senbahar Offloads Pricey Co-op
After five years on the market, developer Izak Senbahar has finally found a buyer for his co-op at The Mark. Unit 1501 at 25 East 77th St has sold and closed for $10.5 million, sources say. The 3,183 s/f, three-bedroom condo came on the market in 2008 with an asking price of $15.75 million. It was most recently reduced to $11.5 million.- Published in Latest

Zeytinia market's General Manager Mucahit Arici says its business as usual at the Croton-on-Hudson grocery store. But he does say that he occasionally gets questions from customers regarding the store's tax evasion case. "It's true that people came into the store and they've asked if Zeytinia was closing down, because they like to come in," said Arici. "They like to shop in local places. And we just told them that we just have the case going on."
Zalide Toledo, head of the Association of Israeli Turks Foundation in BatYam city of Israel, said that nearly 100,000 Jews of Turkish origin were living in Israel. Toledo told AA on Wednesday that Turkish Jews were mainly living in BatYam, Ashkelon and Tel Aviv, adding that they were not specialized on a certain line of business. You can see Jews of Turkish origin in almost every profession, Toledo noted, adding that mass migration of Jews from Turkey to Israel began in 1948.
But to grow in the 21st century, the company knows it needs to do more than that. For that reason, Boeing [BA 72.82 -0.88 (-1.19%) ] has been aggressively diversifying. Take space, for example. The company was recently awarded a $460 million contract by NASA to pursue human spaceflight for government and commercial purposes. That's small change for a $55 billion company, but Boeing clearly sees space travel as a key component of its future. So what makes Boeing think they are so likely to succeed?






