Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Mammoth storm Sandy plunges NYC into darkness

NEW YORK (AP) ? Much of New York was plunged into darkness Monday by a superstorm that overflowed the city's historic waterfront, flooded the financial district and subway tunnels and cut power to hundreds of thousands of people.

The city had shut its mass transit system, schools, the stock exchange and Broadway and ordered hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers to leave home to get out of the way of the superstorm Sandy as it zeroed in on the nation's largest city.

Residents spent much of the day trying to salvage normal routines, jogging and snapping pictures of the water while officials warned the worst of the storm had not hit.

By evening, a record 13-foot storm surge was threatening Manhattan's southern tip, howling winds had left a crane hanging from a high-rise, and utilities deliberately darkened part of downtown Manhattan to avoid storm damage.

"It's really a complete ghost town now," said Stephen Weisbrot, from a powerless 10th-floor apartment in lower Manhattan.

Water lapped over the seawall in Battery Park City, flooding rail yards, subway tracks, tunnels and roads. Rescue workers floated bright orange rafts down flooded downtown streets, while police officers rolled slowly down the street with loudspeakers telling people to go home.

"Now it's really turning into something," said Brian Damianakes, taking shelter in an ATM vestibule and watching a trash can blow down the street in Battery Park before the storm surge.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Monday night that the surge was expected to recede by midnight, after exceeding an original expectation of 11 feet.

We knew that this was going to be a very dangerous storm and the storm has met our expectations," he said. "This is a once-in-a-long-time storm."

Shortly after the massive storm made landfall in southern New Jersey, Consolidated Edison cut power deliberately to about 6,500 customers in downtown Manhattan to avert further damage. Then, huge swaths of the city went dark, losing power to 250,000 customers in Manhattan, Con Ed spokesman Chris Olert said.

New York University's hospital lost backup power, Bloomberg said. Late Monday, a bright orange explosion lit up the night sky on the east side of lower Manhattan, near a Con Ed substation.

"It sounded like the Fourth of July," said Weisbrot.

Another 1 million customers lost power earlier Monday in New York City, the northern suburbs and coastal Long Island, where floodwaters swamped cars, downed trees and put neighborhoods under water.

The storm had only killed one New York City resident by Monday night, a man who died when a tree fell on his home in the Flushing section of Queens.

The rains and howling winds, some believed to reach more than 95 mph, left a crane hanging off a luxury high-rise in midtown Manhattan, causing the evacuation of hundreds from a posh hotel and other buildings. Inspectors were climbing 74 flights of stairs to examine the crane hanging from the $1.5 billion.

The facade of a four-story Manhattan building in the Chelsea neighborhood crumbled and collapsed suddenly, leaving the lights, couches, cabinets and desks inside visible from the street. No one was hurt, although some of the falling debris hit a car.

On coastal Long Island, floodwaters swamped cars, downed trees and put neighborhoods under water as beachfronts and fishing villages bore the brunt of the storm. A police car was lost rescuing 14 people from the popular resort Fire Island.

The city shut all three of its airports, its subways, schools, stock exchanges, Broadway theaters and closed several bridges and tunnels throughout the day as the weather worsened.

Earlier, some New Yorkers defiantly soldiered on, trying to salvage normal routines and refusing to evacuate, as the mayor ordered 375,000 in low-lying areas to do.

Tanja Stewart and her 7-year-old son, Finn, came from their home in Manhattan's TriBeCa neighborhood to admire the white caps on the Hudson, Finn wearing a pair of binoculars around his neck. "I really wanted to see some big waves," he said.

Keith Reilly posed in an Irish soccer jersey for a picture above the rising waters of New York Harbor with the Statue of Liberty in the background.

"This is not so bad right now," said the 25-year-old Reilly.

On Long Island, floodwaters had begun to deluge some low-lying towns and nearly 150,000 customers had lost power. Cars floated along the streets of Long Beach and flooding consumed several blocks south of the bay, residents said.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo, holding a news conference on Long Island where the lights flickered and his mike went in and out, said most of the National Guards deployed to the New York City area would go to Long Island.

Anoush Vargas drove with her husband, Michael to the famed Jones Beach Monday morning, only to find it covered by water.

"We have no more beach. It's gone," she said, shaking her head as she watched the waves go under the boardwalk.

___

Associated Press writers Karen Matthews, Colleen Long and Deepti Hajela in New York, Larry Neumeister, Frank Eltman and Meghan Barr on Long Island, and Seth Borenstein in Kensington, Md., contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mammoth-storm-sandy-plunges-nyc-darkness-014428580.html

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Neither heat nor gloom ... Afghan post office delivers

As the Afghan government struggles to develop, the post office has quietly managed to become one of the nation's most efficient institutions - and with extremely limited international assistance.

By Tom A. Peter,?Correspondent / October 30, 2012

Postal worker Abdul Hanan sells stamps at a post office in Kabul, Afghanistan.

Tom A. Peter

Enlarge

Ten years ago, the Afghan postal service lay in near total ruin, undone by the nation's civil war. Sending a letter usually meant having to find someone traveling in the direction of the recipient willing to carry a note and hoping for the best.

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Then, about four years ago, Ahmad Sher, a Jalalabad shopkeeper, noticed his city had a post office. On a whim, Mr. Sher, who loves listening to the radio, decided to send letters to several talk radio programs using the Afghan government postal service.

Like most Afghan 20-somethings who have grown up only knowing broken government institutions like the post office, he wasn't surprised at his friends' skepticism when he told them he planned to send the letters. "My friends made fun of me and said my letters wouldn't be read on the radio for a year," Sher says.

Sher and his friends were surprised, however, when the letters started making it through ? regularly and in less than a week.

During the past 11 years, the United States has spent more than $60 billion on Afghan development to improve a government that still openly deals in corruption and often struggles to offer basic services to many of its citizens. Yet as the government struggles to develop despite an excess of foreign aid, the post office has quietly managed to become one of the most efficient national institutions ? and with extremely limited international assistance.

"We saw a huge amount of money was spent on the Defense Min?istry, Interior Ministry, and the national intelligence service. Their job is to provide security for people, but 10 years later the security is getting worse, and people are still concerned about their safety," says Fouzia Roufi, a member of the Afghan parliament's telecommunication commission. "The Afghan postal service is a promising administration. Whenever we talk to people, they are happy about the services they provide."

"Friendly customer service" is not a phrase often heard in reference to government projects in Afghanistan, but, sure enough, post office workers in Kabul even go so far as to lick stamps for patrons.

"If employees are committed to providing services for people, I think that even with empty pockets they can do something," says Mohammad Naseem Rahimi, acting head of the Afghan postal service, adding that he thinks the postal service's attitude could be a model for other government offices.

Unlike other government offices that employ full-time foreign advisers, who are paid healthy six-figure salaries, the Afghan postal service has only occasionally hired temporary foreign advisers to help revise its postal code.

The US Agency for International Development and the International Security Assistance Force contributed delivery trucks, China provided 100 mail-delivery bicycles, and Iran sent postal bags. International postal organizations have also provided some equipment. Otherwise, the organization has had to be largely self-sufficient compared with other development projects.

"The postal service doesn't need a big investment. With just a little bit of money you can provide people with a postal service," Mr. Rahimi says.

Afghanistan first established a postal service in 1878. Fifty years after its inception, it received international recognition. On the eve of the Soviet invasion it had grown into one of the stronger regional postal services, able to send and receive letters from anywhere in the world in a timely manner.

Since the civil war, the postal service has reinvented itself with offices in all 34 provinces, and, Rahimi says, it is close to having offices in all 364 districts.

Though street addresses are a foreign concept in Afghanistan, the postal service manages to do house deliveries ? even if a postman might sometimes have to ask around to find the correct house.

Sher says he now uses the postal service regularly.

He's even received calendars and other promotional items in the mail from a Chinese radio station, he says, delivered to his shop for about the cost of a piece of bread.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/kDvtUdg6YPs/Neither-heat-nor-gloom-Afghan-post-office-delivers

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IBM creates nanotubes that stand up straight

Paul Marks, chief technology correspondent

A few weeks ago I was at the IBM lab in Zurich, Switzerland, getting an update on Watson, solar desalination and how magnetic tape will store the big bang's big data. But I was surprised to find the lab's director, Matthias Kaiserswerth, was not nearly as excited as I had expected he would be over the prospects for graphene, the two-dimensional wonder material whose pioneers won the Nobel prize for physics in 2010. Now I know why: IBM has other ideas for the future of electronics.

It turns out IBM has been quietly continuing research on carbon nanotubes, the rolled-up-chicken-wire form of carbon that was the wonder material du jour in the decade before graphene's electronic properties were realised.

A7000154-Carbon_nanotubes-SPL.jpg

A coloured scanning tunnelling micrograph of carbon nanotubes - rolled sheets of carbon atoms, magnified 6 million times. Individual atoms are seen as the bumps on the surface of the tube (Image: Eye Of Science/SPL)

Now the company has revealed what it believes could be the answer to the problem that has dogged nanotube electronics all along: how to pick up the dastardly items -?which are only 1?nanometre in diameter - and put them where you want them. They may be great transistors, but if they cannot be placed on a chip they are useless.

Instead of a slavish and hellishly slow pick-and-place operation, IBM's trick is to encourage the nanotubes to organise themselves, with help from some clever chemical engineering.

First the engineers created a solution of nanotubes, coating them with a surfactant that encourages them to dissolve in water. Into this nanotube solution?they dipped a silicon dioxide chip carved with hafnium oxide trenches. The process coaxed one nanotube tube into each trench - where the nanotube bonds to the hafnium oxide - creating regular arrays of nanotube-based transistors at a density of 1 billion per square centimetre.

There's a good decade or more to go before they'll know whether this is the technology that'll let nanotubes break silicon's microchip monopoly, but fixing the tubes in place at least gives researchers something to work with. There's more over at the BBC.

Journal reference: Nature Nanotechnology, DOI: 10.1038/nnano.2012.189

Subscribe to New Scientist Magazine

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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

How to stay safe during Hurricane Sandy: 7 tips

Fact Sheet

posted on October 29, 2012, at 1:10 PM

New Yorkers stock up on Hurricane essentials, including matches, extra batteries, and a flashlight on Oct. 28. Photo: Mike Stobe/Getty Images SEE ALL 9 PHOTOS

Residents of the mid-Atlantic coast are?hunkering down for what promises to be a punishing, simultaneous blow from Hurricane Sandy and two blasts of winter weather. Forecasters are warning of high winds that could topple trees and damage homes, a storm surge that could flood low-lying coastal areas, and heavy rainfall or even snow that could create dangerous conditions far inland. The violent weather is also likely to down power lines and leave many of the 50 million people in the storm's path without electricity. What's the best way to stay safe? Here, seven key tips:

1. If you're in a danger zone, get out
When a hurricane comes barreling in, the primary safety rule is quite simple: Get out of the way. "We've seen a lot of people unfortunately get injured and even losing lives going out during storms when they don't need to be out there," says Federal Emergency Management Agency administrator Craig Fugate. Those in the storm's path can stay as safe as possible if they "heed the evacuation orders and stay off the road and out of this weather that comes in."

2. Stay inside
Even if you aren't ordered to leave, "stay indoors and avoid the calmed 'eye of the storm' that can pass quickly, leaving you outside at risk," says Ryan Jaslow at CBS News. Most hurricane-related injuries are caused by flying glass and other debris, and you can avoid getting hit if you hunker down in a safe spot, inside and away from windows and doors. When the winds are at their worst, a bathroom or dry basement can provide the best shelter.

3. If you plan to stay put, be prepared
If you're one of the 50 million Americans who could be affected by the storm, you need to get ready, now, even if you're not being advised to leave home, says Jaslow at CBS News. Stock your home with emergency supplies, including five gallons of drinking water per person (enough for three to five days), non-perishable foods, a battery-powered radio and flashlights, extra batteries, a first-aid kit and manual, prescription medicines, baby food, sleeping bags, extra blankets, and other necessities. Also, have important documents handy ? including insurance policies, wills, licenses, and anything "you might need to grab in a pinch."

4. Be careful what you eat
Turn your refrigerator and freezer temperatures to their coldest setting. "When the power goes out, that food in the fridge will last only so long," says ABC News Radio. Once the electricity has been out for four hours or more, "you should throw away any perishable food" you have in the fridge. If your freezer's full, leave it closed and your frozen food should stay safe for 48 hours. If it's only half full, the "safe window" is just 24 hours. And open the door as infrequently as possible, as you let cold air escape every time you open it, "effectively speeding up the clock for when your food might spoil." Use common sense, and toss anything that looks, feels, or smells funny. And always follow the "old rule, 'When in doubt, throw it out.'"

5. Make sure everyday items don't turn dangerous
If you've still got time, you should "trim back trees and shrubbery around your home," says Nashoba Publishing, and get rid of diseased or damaged tree limbs that could be blown down and sent flying by high winds. Clear rain gutters to prevent flooding in the wrong places. And do what you can to prevent items outside your home from being "picked up by strong winds and used as a missile." Make sure storage sheds and kids' playhouses are securely anchored, and bring in loose lawn furniture, hanging plants, trash cans, and other items. If you don't have storm shutters, cover windows with plywood bolted to the surrounding wall.

6. Use your generator wisely
"In a blackout, many view generators as a lifesaver," says ABC News. "But use them improperly, and they can actually put your life in danger." Generators use carbon monoxide, which you can't detect because it's colorless and odorless. Each year, 15,000 people get sent to emergency rooms and 500 people die from carbon monoxide poisoning. "To keep you and those who live with you safe, never use a generator inside your home or garage," even if the windows are open.

7. Listen to people who have been through it
Some of the best tips come from people who have already weathered a monster storm, says Kathleen Koch at CNN. So take note of these helpful pointers from people who lived through Katrina: Open drawers when making a video of your belongings for insurance purposes so you don't miss anything; have a tire plug kit and pliers to pull out nails and other sharp debris to keep you mobile after the storm; text instead of calling to extend your cell phone battery; don't expect safes and safe-deposit boxes to keep your important belongings dry in a flood; and have tarps ready to keep your home dry if wind blows shingles off your roof.

Click here for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's guide to hurricane readiness, or here for FEMA's readiness tips.

Source: http://theweek.com/article/index/235555/how-to-stay-safe-during-hurricane-sandy-7-tips

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Buildings as a platform for innovation and transformation | GreenBiz ...

Last year, my colleagues and I at GreenBiz Group started asking the question, ?What happens when four massive technologies ? energy, information, buildings, and transportation ? collide?" We dubbed the collision?VERGE, and launched a global brand of conferences, events, research, and media. (The next event is November 12-13 in San Francisco.)

VERGE focuses on how data and IT create new platforms that enable radical efficiencies, breakthrough business models, and innovative products and services, and includes within its sphere a number of other megatrends: next-gen cities, intelligent buildings, connected mobility systems, big data, smart grids, the ?share economy,? the "Internet of things" and more. Each of these things is enabled by technology convergence, and each stands to have a profound impact on how companies operate, how cities interact with their denizens, and how all of us live, work, travel, play, and shop.

Ultimately, VERGE is place-based ? that is, it happens somewhere: a building, campus, neighborhood, city, or region. That is the focus of a report published today, written by green building pioneer and GreenBiz senior contributor Rob Watson. VERGE and the Built Environment focuses on the key trends that undergird how this technology convergence will unfold in the context of the built environment over the next few years.

The free, 34-page report can be downloaded here.

?The 20th century emphasized linear thinking and the efficiencies of assembly-line production,? writes Watson. ?We got very good at understanding the parts and optimizing the components. Unfortunately, this came at the expense of sub-optimization of the larger system. By contrast, we believe the 21st century will be one of integration and non-linear systems thinking ? a convergence of increasingly complementary parts in support of an optimized whole. The overall catalyst for this systems view is information and communications technologies, or ICT ? the explosion of information-enabled products and services.?

Part of the story, says Watson, is that changing technology, demographics and individual preferences is leading companies to squeeze more out of the space they have, rather than squeezing out more space. Average office space per person is steadily declining and forecast to drop more than 30 percent in the next five years. ?Big-box? retailers are getting smaller, especially as they move into urban cores, he says.

Technology is enabling companies to reduce or eliminate permanent space per employee. Instead, they have unassigned space that can change daily, assigned on a first-come, first-serve basis, or depending upon the need for collaborative and team activities. ICT has facilitated both the more-efficient use of space through online reservations and also the ability to work remotely.

Next Page: Energy use down while energy intensity rises

Source: http://www.greenbiz.com/blog/2012/10/30/buildings-platform-transformation

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The Senco PC1010 for Driving Finishing Nails

Driving finishing nails is a very common task in the later stages of construction, and in all types of house renovation and remodeling. Moldings, thresholds, hardwood flooring, and many other important features are best attached with relatively lightweight nails or fasteners. Though this is a crucial ? in fact, indispensable ? part of many projects, there is no reason to bring a huge, noisy, clumsy compressor to operate the nail gun. This is where small compressors like the Senco PC1010 excel.

The Senco PC1010 features a cylindrical air tank that keeps noise to a comfortable minimum, perfectly suiting the small compressor to use in crowded areas such as office spaces, apartment houses, and densely built up suburban neighborhoods. The machine weighs a mere twenty pounds, and its portability is enhanced further by a lightweight, tough pipe handle with a padded handgrip.

There are many uses to which this small compressor, with its 1 horsepower motor (which is less than some push lawnmowers) and 1 gallon capacity tank should not be put. For example, it is not designed to be used for filling tires, spraying paint, or powering high powered nail guns. You will not be able to drive framing nails with this device ? that is not its basic purpose.

You will, however, be able to drive finishing nails by the thousands.

A few may need hammer finishing when the air pressure periodically runs low, but the Senco PC1010 still greatly speeds driving of nails. There is enough air in the canister to drive somewhere between 10 and 15 nails and fasteners, which will take 30 seconds or less depending on the type of fastener being used. Once the air is exhausted, the compressor takes 35 seconds to refill the tank.

This enforces a start-stop-start pattern of nail driving if you use the Senco PC1010 steadily, though it is not as much of a problem if you tend to drive a few finishing nails, carry out a different brief task, and then drive a few more nails.

This small compressor can also be used by hobbyists and for some light compressed-air cleaning. Blowing sawdust out of cracks between boards, removing dust from hard to reach spots (even your computer keyboard), and so forth are all possible uses of the compressor, too. There is a ?? universal coupler, so you can find a range of different pneumatic accessories that will fit it.

The Senco PC1010 stands on four rubber-coated, suction cup-like feet, making it more stable and keeping it from scratching the sensitive surface of newly finished hardwood floors. The aluminum construction of the tank makes it durable and rust-proof and helps maintain the machine's low weight without sacrificing toughness. A one-year warranty covers your purchase as well, though users report having used it to drive over 10,000 finishing nails without any signs of breakdown.

Besides trim jobs, this hard-working little compressor can easily power a staple gun shooting ?? staples, greatly speeding the process. It can run hobby engraving tools, plus pin nailers and micro pin nailers. Be sure to drain moisture out of the tank with the provided valve at regular intervals to prevent internal corrosion.

All in all, within its limits, the Senco PC1010 compressor is a very useful little device that gives you a big boost when you're applying finishing nails and other fasteners. Such jobs are made far faster and easier with mechanical help; yet don't require huge amounts of air pressure, either. The Senco machine fits very neatly into that role and gives you just the support you need in a very compact, lightweight package that you can take anywhere the job needs to be done.
?

Source: http://nail.ezinemark.com/the-senco-pc1010-for-driving-finishing-nails-7d3806c0f31d.html

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Monday, October 29, 2012

Sandy: East Coast braces for epic hurricane, ?life-threatening? storm surge

Waves crash into a pier in Nags Head, N.C., Oct. 27, 2012. (Gerry Broome/AP)

[UPDATED: 6:00 p.m. ET]

"Superstorm." "The Perfect Storm." "Frankenstorm."

Whatever you want to call it, the East Coast is bracing for Hurricane Sandy, a "rare hybrid storm" that is expected to bring a life-threatening storm surge to the mid-Atlantic coast, Long Island Sound and New York harbor, forecasters say, with winds expected to be at or near hurricane force when it makes landfall sometime on Monday.

According to the National Hurricane Center, the Category 1 hurricane was centered about 270 miles southeast of Cape Hatteras, N.C., and 530 miles south of New York City early Sunday, carrying maximum sustained winds of 75 mph and moving northeast at 15 mph.

[Slideshow: Latest photos from Hurricane Sandy]

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg ordered the immediate, mandatory evacuation for low-lying coastal areas, including Coney Island, the Rockaways, Brighton Beach, Red Hook and some parts of lower Manhattan along the East River.

"If you don't evacuate, you're not just putting your own life at risk," Mayor Bloomberg said at a news conference Sunday. "You're endangering first responders who may have to rescue you."

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie's message for residents was a bit more blunt. "Don't be stupid," Christie said Sunday afternoon, announcing the suspension of the state's transit system beginning at 12:01 a.m. Monday.

Earlier, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo announced the suspension of all MTA service--including subways, buses, Long Island Railroad and Metro North--beginning at 7 p.m. Sunday. New York City Public Schools will be closed on Monday, the mayor said. The New York Stock Exchange said its trading floor will be closed on Monday, too--the first such shutdown in 27 years, according to the Wall Street Journal.

[Related: Superstorm could impact 60 million]

Sandy is expected to continue on a parallel path along the mid-Atlantic coast later Sunday before making a sharp turn toward the northwest and southern New Jersey coastline on Monday--with the Jersey Shore and New York City in its projected path.

But the path is not necessarily the problem.

"Don't get fixated on a particular track," the Associated Press said. "Wherever it hits, the rare behemoth storm inexorably gathering in the eastern U.S. will afflict a third of the country with sheets of rain, high winds and heavy snow."

(FEMA)

A tropical storm warning has been issued between Cape Fear to Duck, N.C., while hurricane watches and high-wind warnings are in effect from the Carolinas to New England. The hurricane-force winds extend 175 miles from the epicenter of the storm, while tropical storm-force winds extend 500 miles--or roughly 1,000 miles end to end, making Sandy one of the biggest storms to ever hit the East Coast.

"We're looking at impact of greater than 50 to 60 million people," Louis Uccellini, head of environmental prediction for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, told the Associated Press.

"The size of this alone, affecting a heavily populated area, is going to be history making," Jeff Masters wrote on the Weather Underground blog.

President Barack Obama received a briefing on the storm at Federal Emergency Management Agency headquarters in Washington on Sunday. "My main message to everybody involved is that we have to take this seriously," President Obama said. "[We will] respond big and respond fast."

[Also read: Big storm scrambles presidential race schedules]

"I can be as cynical as anyone," Christie said on Saturday, announcing a state of emergency. "But when the storm comes, if it's as bad as they're predicting, you're going to wish you weren't as cynical as you otherwise might have been."

Meanwhile, emergency evacuations were being mulled by state officials in Connecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire and even Maine.

In Virginia, Governor Bob McDonnell said 20,000 homes there had already reported power outages.

(Weather.com)

"This is not a coastal threat alone," said FEMA director Craig Fugate said during a media briefing early Sunday. "This is a very large area."

Forecasters also fear the combination of storm surge, high tide and heavy rain--between 3 and 12 inches in some areas--could be life-threatening for coastal residents.

According to the National Hurricane Center summary, coastal water levels could rise anywhere between 1 and 12 feet from North Carolina to Cape Cod, depending on the timing of the "peak surge." A surge of 6 to 11 feet is forecast for Long Island Sound and Raritan Bay, including New York Harbor.

The storm surge in New York Harbor during Hurricane Irene in September 2011, forecasters noted, was four feet.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/sandy-hurricane-east-coast-nyc-forecast-142549538.html

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Spain and Italy leaders meet to discuss crisis

(AP) ? The leaders of Spain and Italy are meeting to discuss the economic crisis that is afflicting both countries.

The meeting Monday in Madrid between Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy and his Italian counterpart Mario Monti is part of a summit which has brought together ministers and business representatives from both countries. It is the fourth time they have met since they took office late last year.

Both countries are in recession as they struggle to get their public finances into shape.

Spain, which has an unemployment rate of 25 percent, is facing particular pressure at the moment to ask for outside aid to help deal with its debts.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-10-29-Europe-Financial%20Crisis/id-0ff5525de332438a95f3194176c736a6

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Afghan raid kills 4 Taliban, 3 civilian bystanders

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Sunday, October 28, 2012

Using a generator for hurricane Sandy? Here are four safety tips.

Generators are flying off the shelves as people prepare for hurricane Sandy. Before you fire up the backup generator, there are a few safety tips to keep in mind.

By David J. Unger,?Contributor / October 27, 2012

Hurricane Sandy is captured by the Suomi NPP satellite on Friday in this detailed infrared image courtesy of NOAA. If you're planning to use a generator in the event you lose power, there are some safety tips to keep in mind.

NOAA Environmental Visualization Laboratory/Reuters/Handout

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The anticipation surrounding hurricane Sandy is quickly swelling to proportions on a scale with, well, Frankenstorm.

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As the storm nears, many may consider investing in a backup generator, as weather analysts forecast prolonged, widespread power outages.

The run on backup power sources has already begun.

As of Friday afternoon, generators made up eight of the 10 items in the home and kitchen category of Amazon.com's Movers and Shakers List ? a ranking of the online retailer's best selling items over the past 24 hours. The?DuroMax Elite MX1500 Gas Powered Portable Generator jumped from?13,478 to?78 on the site's overall best selling items, a?17,179 percent increase.?

U.S. Congress may face another debt-limit showdown in 2013

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. debt-ceiling increase could be headed for a Wall Street-rattling showdown in 2013 if Congress, as expected, shuns a quick and easy fix at the end of this year in favor of another round of last-minute brinkmanship.

Regardless of who wins the November 6 elections, many congressional aides and Capitol Hill observers are predicting that lawmakers will go right up to the deadline - probably around mid-February or early March - before increasing the $16.4 trillion limit on borrowing that is nearly exhausted.

While no one is certain of another 11th-hour fight in February or March, no one is ruling it out.

Without the bigger government credit card, the U.S. Treasury Department no longer would be able to finance government operations, forcing widespread shutdowns and default on debt payments to creditors from China to England.

It is a scenario almost exactly like the summer of 2011 when investors, credit-rating agencies and capitals around the world watched with alarm as Washington went to the brink before reaching a debt-limit and deficit-reduction deal.

Another such showdown is "always a possibility," a Republican staffer said, even though there will be an opportunity to head it off early in a post-election "lame-duck" session of Congress set to begin on November 13.

That session will be focused mainly on trying to clean up another big mess Congress has created over a series of imminent tax increases and spending cuts - known as the "fiscal cliff" - that could throw the U.S. economy back into recession if allowed to happen.

"A lot of people (in Congress) don't want it (the debt-limit increase) to be part of the lame duck," the aide said. "For many people, the situation is complicated enough as it is" with the budget and tax decisions. "So why not take one component out of the equation," the aide added.

A Senate Republican leadership aide, who also asked not to be identified, flat out predicted, "You're just going to see a focus on tax cuts and spending cuts" - and not raising the debt limit - during the upcoming post-election session of Congress.

But even the main two fiscal-cliff problems - how to parcel out a new round of deep spending cuts and how to structure tax rates - are probably too daunting for Congress to fully deal with during the short, five-week post-election session.

As a result, they will have to be revisited next year, when Democratic President Barack Obama promises to negotiate a comprehensive deficit-reduction deal if he is re-elected. Last year, he and House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner, a Republican, nearly shook hands on a $4 trillion package of spending cuts and revenue increases.

Bruce Josten, the chief lobbyist for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, told Reuters that since the debt limit is so closely tied to those other big decisions, they all ought to be addressed simultaneously, probably in 2013.

Does that set up another bruising fight over the debt limit? "Of course," Josten replied.

Just as in 2011, the ominous debt-limit deadline will not be the only one breathing down lawmakers' necks in the first quarter of 2013.

On March 31, Washington runs out of money to pay for nearly all government activities and will be searching for a deal to fund programs through September 30, 2013.

Members of Congress - gun shy of Tea Party protests against more spending and more borrowing - probably will need the hard reality of these twin deadlines to be forced to act, according to congressional aides and budget and tax specialists outside of government.

STRINGS ATTACHED

Technically, market analysts expect the debt limit to actually be reached December 31. But they predict that Treasury Department maneuvers will allow the government to continue operating safely until mid-February. Even with last year's scares, analysts do not think it is important for Congress to increase the limit before the end of the year.

"It would be nice not to go down to the drop-dead date, but with the way the process has evolved over the last 20 years, operating on auxiliary engines is standard practice now," said Lou Crandall, chief economist with Wrightson ICAP, referring to emergency steps the Treasury Department can take to briefly delay exhausting its borrowing limit.

Representative Chris Van Hollen, a member of the House Democratic leadership, told Reuters: "It would serve the country well if we could resolve that issue (raising the debt limit) sooner rather than later ... in the lame-duck session."

But political considerations are standing in the way.

If Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney wins on November 6, Democrats likely would want to see the next debt-limit increase - always unpopular with voters - on the new president's watch rather than on Obama's, said a Senate Democratic aide.

If Obama is elected to a second term, he likely will have to deal with a House of Representatives still under Republican control. And Boehner repeatedly has warned he is not willing to let the debt limit rise without strings attached: For every dollar of higher borrowing authority, there would have to be at least one dollar of savings.

So for example, if Obama were to seek a $1 trillion debt limit increase Congress would have to find $1 trillion in spending cuts or tax increases under Boehner's rule. That is probably too ambitious for a lame-duck session that will last only five weeks or so.

One House aide, however, suggested that if Congress during the lame duck approved a "framework" for larger deficit reduction steps next year - with details to be worked out later - that might be enough to satisfy Boehner's demand.

(Editing by Fred Barbash and Eric Beech)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-congress-may-face-another-debt-limit-showdown-182412393.html

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Penn State Track and Field Alumni Golf: Still the Ladies Man

Note that the Track Alumni Reunion Weekend and Coach Groves Golf Tourney are on the Friday and Saturday May 17, 18, 2013. I have no idea how I messed that one up? The Blog Datum Procurement Specialist picked up that one for me. Much obliged!

Still the Ladies Man


Blog Muse and all-around Best Man Rob Whiteside took his daughter Phoebe to the Ivy League Cross Country Championships, better known as the Heptagonals. Look who they happened to run into!? I've always said he was everywhere, so be sure to mind your p's and q's.

I'll update the results of the B1G Championships here later. Go Lions.

Women finish in 3rd Place with Rebekkah Simko taking 5th place overall.

?Owly Images

Source: http://psutafalumnigolf.blogspot.com/2012/10/still-ladies-man.html

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Saturday, October 27, 2012

Netanyahu's hard-right alliance could backfire in ballot

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's tie-up with far-right coalition partner Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman could backfire by eroding their lead ahead of Israel's January 22 ballot, a poll said on Friday.

The findings flew in the face of Netanyahu's prediction that, by merging with his fiery rival for nationalist votes, he would muster a "big, cohesive force" of support to win a third term as premier.

They also suggested that opposition parties, long dawdling thanks to Israel's stable economy and disillusionment with the deadlocked Palestinian peace process, would be reenergized by the conservative incumbent's tack toward the Lieberman tent.

According to a survey published by top-rated television station Channel Two, the joint candidate list of Netanyahu's Likud and Lieberman's Israel Beiteinu parties, announced on Thursday, would take just 33 of the 120 seats in parliament.

Though that still puts them ahead of rival parties, it represented a drop-off from Monday, before the unexpected alliance was unveiled, when a poll for parliament's television station Knesset 99 gave them a combined 39 seats.

"Unifying lists usually shrinks them," commented Nahum Barnea of the biggest-selling newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth.

"Anyone who did not tolerate Lieberman and voted for Netanyahu will think twice, and the same is true for those who did not tolerate Netanyahu and voted for Lieberman."

Friday's poll also found boosted support for Israel's strongest opposition parties, left-leaning Labor and the new, centrist Yesh Atid. They were seen taking 27 and 18 seats, respectively, up from the 19 and 15 predicted on Monday.

"WE'LL LEAD FOR YEARS"

Reasons analysts gave for that shift included worry among wavering Israelis about the rise of the Soviet-born Lieberman, an often undiplomatic diplomat who faces possible indictment on graft charges - though he denies wrongdoing.

His party has questioned the loyalty of Israel's Arab minority and promoted legislation that critics denounced as an undemocratic targeting of liberal causes, such as a move to slap a 45 percent tax on foreign donations to human rights groups.

"The strong Russian accent, the police probes and the old left's fear of the man who doesn't believe in peace painted him in one stripe," said Netanyahu ex-spokesman Yoaz Hendel, adding that he believed much of the public had misjudged Lieberman.

The foreign minister brushed off Friday's poll, telling reporters Israel Beiteinu's own surveys anticipated it would win 16 seats in the next Knesset - up from today's 15.

"We are setting up the broad-based, traditional, historic nationalist camp that will lead the country for many years," he said. A Likud spokeswoman declined to comment on poll figures.

Netanyahu and Lieberman said their partnership will ditch some of the fractious small-party wrangling typical of Israeli politics and help the country attend to security challenges like Iran's nuclear program, as well as domestic problems.

The secularist Lieberman is also pushing to end en masse exemptions granted to Israeli Arabs and ultra-Orthodox Jews from compulsory national service.

While Channel Two projected an even 60-60 seat split between coalition and opposition in the next parliament, most commentators agreed that the latter were unlikely to build on that strength by uniting to offset the Netanyahu-Lieberman list.

"There is no agreed-upon (opposition) leader and no consensus, and almost no union seems possible there," wrote Shalom Yerushalmi of Maariv daily.

(Writing by Dan Williams; Editing by Crispian Balmer)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/netanyahus-hard-alliance-could-backfire-ballot-113346698.html

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Have You Taken the Michelle Obama Fit Test? | Clutch Magazine

Kids and adults alike have a new super hero to idolize and she?s none other than FLOTUS Michelle Obama. Galvanizing around the country, doing pushups with Ellen Degeneres and other famed celebrities in an effort to tackle and demolish childhood obesity, Mrs. Obama?s?Let?s Move initiative?is dedicated to solving the challenge of childhood obesity within a generation, so that children born today will grow up healthier and able to pursue their dreams.

For the first time in 25 years, the arduous presidential fitness test has been updated to reflect the current needs of the nation?s children and has used current research to take out the intimidation factor of the test and make it more individualized. Leading the change, Mrs. Obama is approaching the fitness of our country with her healthy foods and communities initiatives that?s helping us make healthier choices, and prevent both childhood and adult diseases.

Known to challenge her daughters to a fun game of family fitness, FLOTUS is also pushing adults to raise their own awareness about healthy eating and exercise habits to encourage children to get healthy as well. We?re not exempt. The staggering rates in heart disease, cancer and diabetes are still very prevalent in many adults.

So now the question becomes how fit are you? Mrs. Obama?s initiative also offers the?Adult Fitness Test?that helps you measure your aerobic fitness, muscular strength, flexibility, and other aspects of health-related fitness. The featured activities provide a way for you to get an idea of where you are in your fitness ability and what you can do to improve. Before embarking on the test?Find out if you are healthy enough for testing?and speak with your doctor before beginning any new exercise routine.

Have you taken Michelle Obama?s fitness test yet?

Source: http://www.clutchmagonline.com/2012/10/have-you-taken-the-michelle-obama-fit-test/

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Clearwire moves forward with Huawei in network upgrades after federal consultation

Clearwire moves forward with Huawei in network upgrades after federal consultation

China's Huawei has found itself followed by a cloud of suspicion from governments and national security agencies, both in America, and futher afield. A recent announcement from Clearwire stating it will use the firms hardware in a network upgrade, however, could see some sunshine of confidence finally poking through. Reuters reports that the service provider consulted several technical departments from various federal agencies before making the decision. Clearwire already uses some Huawei equipment in its infrastructure, and it's in these areas that the hardware will be used for upgrades. The firm went on to assure that, overall, less than 5 percent of its LTE budget involves Huawei gear, and irrespective of origin, all vendors are subject to approval from US government approved third parties.

Filed under: ,

Clearwire moves forward with Huawei in network upgrades after federal consultation originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 27 Oct 2012 08:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/27/clearwire-moves-forward-with-huawei-in-network-upgrades/

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T.I.'s Gotye Sample 'Bridges The Gap' Between Genres

Tip tells MTV News that Kendrick Lamar and B.o.B joins him on Trouble Man's 'Somebody I Used To Know.'
By Nadeska Alexis


T.I. and Gotye
Photo: Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1696310/ti-gotye-collab-trouble-man.jhtml

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Friday, October 26, 2012

Making Sunday Bloody Sunday - From the Current - The Criterion ...

The following piece by Sunday Bloody Sunday screenwriter Penelope Gilliatt originally appeared as the introduction to the 1971 U.S. publication of the script.

A friend of mine who had started scrubbing at fourteen and went on to be a barmaid had forty years of filmgoing behind her by the time I knew her. She went to the flicks in London three times a week, sitting in the cheap seats for a double feature. She knew films backward, and often muttered the lines ahead of the actors when we were watching a revival on television. ?That Clark Gable is the most gracious in his talk,? she would say. Or ?Barbara Stanwyck gives you the tongue of America, doesn?t she.? Or ?Leslie Howard has the mark of a gentleman whenever he talks about music.? Or ?You know, they sometimes have to do a shot two or three times, dear. I often wonder where they get the time for their writing.? There lay the only mistake she ever made: she was quite convinced that actors wrote their own lines. ?Sir Laurence Oliver? definitely wrote Henry?V. Sir Laurence was always ?Oliver? and always admired.

Perhaps she was not so far off, for it was seldom in her days that scriptwriters wrote the script. The front office did, the producer, the producer?s wife. ?An original script,? or what is piously called ?an original,? as in the ?hand-done oil paintings? that are sold in bad art shops in London, remains hard to find in American or English filmmaking. It is said not to be ?bankable.? A bankable script in the English-speaking cinema is still, by and large, an adaptation of a stage hit or a best-selling novel.

In the late sixties, I was asked to write an original script for John Schlesinger and the man who often produced his films, Joe Janni. The offer came through my indispensable young English agent, Clive Goodwin, when I was film critic of the Observer in London.

Clive died only a little later because of Hollywood: after lunching with a producer, he was sick on the red carpet of his Beverly Hills hotel, carted off in a squad car because a desk clerk thought he was drunk, and died of a brain tumor in a night cell. Terrible things are engendered by the panicky amorality of Hollywood; typical that the place with deaths such as Clive?s on its hushed-up conscience should have thought that ?disaster? films had to be fictionalized.

Clive was a friend and he thought this film offer held something. I said yes to the invitation. We drove to see John on location in Dorset. John was shooting Far from the Madding Crowd in an ocean of mud. We had a late dinner, the four of us, in the cottage where Joe and John were temporarily housed. I remember that Joe said, ?It?s beginning to seem like home.? John said firmly, ?No, it isn?t.? I think that he particularly was reminded of public school. Crack-of-dawn rises, mud, long evenings of prep in the form of rushes (dailies). But he and Joe were spirited, considering the vexatious mixture of crisis and delay that is the mark of filmmaking for the director and any working producer.

John had what he apologized for as the germ of an idea. He expressed it in about three sentences. It happened, for me, to kick off a straight progression from a novel of mine that had lately come out, A State of Change. As we talked, the film would have three principals, like my novel: they became, for me, a professional young woman (Alex), a professional man (Daniel), whom John wanted to be Jewish, and a bisexual go-between called Bob with whom both were in love. The Pandarus character, as I saw him, was both more flip and more lost than either of the others found him. The male lead became a doctor in my head as Clive and I were driving back to London, more and more oddly a direct extension of the one I had written about in A State of Change. It had seemed, in Dorset, immediately easy to say yes; daunting, demanding, a rare chance to make a packed and grown-up film about compromises, piercing breakups, decisions both impossible and necessary. Neither John nor I ever really believed that we were embarking on a picture that would be recognizable to more than two and a half people.

I wrote the full draft in three months. A good three-quarters of that was taken up with note-making and working on the structure. The energy seemed to me to spring backward from the end, which I wrote first. The last scene?Daniel learning Italian by gramophone record, ready for a holiday with his Bob that will never come to fruition?evolves from obedient repetitions of the tourist infantilisms droned by the record to a rebellious speech made straight to camera about the grown-ups who tell him that he is well rid of Bob. No, Daniel says to the camera, or us: half a loaf is better than no bread. I wrote the scene on a train in Switzerland. I was going to see Nabokov to write a piece about him. I knew that Daniel?s decision was going to be the opposite of Alex?s, though it has the same effect: she was going to quit her half life with Bob rather than settle for short shrift and fake happiness on the run. There was plenty of time to think. It was a long journey from Montreux to the grand hotel in the mountains where Nabokov was hunting butterflies. Eight hours, as I remember.

From then on I wrote as usually recommended, from the start. (Though the usual doesn?t always work best. E. M. Forster once said something about the importance for a writer of knowing ?the weight in the end of the tale.? Perhaps he meant ?tail.? That final speech, which is sitting in front of me now in the original black leather notebook, surrounded by notes about Nabokov and his card indexes, was certainly a thrashing fish tail.) Alex and Daniel are deliberately seen against the background of their parents as the film goes on, and they are rootedly English. Bob is parentless as we see him in the film, and a citizen of the mid-Atlantic. His attachments are fugitive, like his here-today pop art. He is on the make because his random world has so far declined to be the making of him. He is as binational as he is bisexual, a charmer without conscience; he provides the other two with fun and lightness, and plagues them with his undependability. His promises are seldom kept, and ?duty? is fatuous. The other two remember the Second World War with a vividness that grows as they grow older; he is not a great deal younger, but he thinks that any dwelling on the past is a waste of time. No reader he, no music lover. Hope lies in smash-and-grab chances, in possible first-option contracts, not in yellowing old opera scores. Daniel plays, thematically, Cos? fan tutte, recognizing the grief lying in this unequaled Restoration comedy of music. Alex, like Daniel, views the go-getter present with sad contempt and, being like him again, does something about it. She has a job finding new careers for businessmen made redundant, and she is sick at heart with the way our society throws valuable people on the rubbish heap because they are nearing retirement age. Bob is after SPQR: not in the Latin sense but ?small profits, quick returns.? The others want things to last; Bob believes in the disposable, in gags and gadgets that can be swiftly marketed.

***

Glenda Jackson was the obvious choice for Alex. Anyone who had seen her work with [director] Peter Brook at LAMDA [the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art], or her Ophelia, could have been in no doubt. I once wrote about her that she was the only Ophelia I had ever seen who was capable of playing Hamlet. Peter Finch, who had worked with John before, played Daniel. I believe it to have been the part of his career. He had to come into rehearsals later, but he made up for lost time at the studios at Bray, wandering around the soundstages with a script in his hand. We had known each other for a long time. He had a reputation as a hell-raiser, but not when he was working. One morning, when he was not on call till the afternoon, we sat on the nibbled-looking grass at Bray Studios and went through the script for the umpteenth time. He wanted to talk about the shifts in style and went through the last scene. He saw that it moved toward techniques now often held to be the theater?s unique prerogative; but in the early days of cinema, in today?s France and Japan and anywhere but our hidebound studios, moviemaking and movie acting have been free to draw on any sources they wanted. His training was in the theater, mostly in the classics, and he leapt to the idea of adding to film acting?s possibilities the stage?s right to soliloquies and asides and speeches addressed directly to the audience. He had seen a lot of Godard?s work for just that reason. The early directors of cinema used the full vocabulary of theater and camera technique; why lose it? Peter was a rare actor. He is keenly missed.

The part of Bob was most hard to cast. John and Joe had long since generously cottoned on to the fact that I could be useful to our work in parts of filmmaking that are often roped off from the writer. Together the three of us had to reject name after name that came up in our minds. In the end I put together a test scene that was not in the film; to use anything in the script itself always fixes things inflexibly for the chosen actor later. John tested three actors. Two of them were skillful professionals, but they were both without the quality we wanted, a quality of being strange to the established world. The Bob we needed had to seem a being dropped out of nowhere. Our secret vote about the tests was unanimous: for Murray Head, who had been in the London production of Hair. Essentially a performer and not, I think, eager to learn to act, he was to give John a lot of directing difficulties, and not all of them technical. One day he turned up with a burn on the side of his nose. He explained cheerfully that his girlfriend had stubbed out a joint the night before on the nose profile that John and Billy Williams, the cameraman, needed for close-ups. Shooting schedules were thrown into chaos.

***

Most of the final and shooting scripts were planned and finished at my house in London. It has a drawing room big enough for three people to roam and ponder, and for any number of people to be seen for casting rehearsals. I worked overnight on my anchor of a typewriter, called portable but denied as that by many a gallant man when I have moved around the world with it and help has been offered at airports. As John and Joe left, work began. Neither of them is a writer. Both, interestingly, found the script to be telling themselves something about themselves. It is biographical or autobiographical about no one, but no writer would find it anything but natural if readers or listeners to fiction found it close to home. A Latin American may find a truth about himself in Dostoyevsky. Any decent writer will have letters from anywhere, always moving, saying, ?How did you know this about me?? We spoke a lot of extra scenes but nearly all of them were scrapped. Joe has a remarkable sense of structure and contributed a great deal where most producers subtract. When he got excitable he spoke English with such a heavy Italian accent that he sometimes seemed to be speaking Latin. There is one scene where Daniel, hearing that Bob has wangled some extra time for them to be together, says, ?What a bonus.? Joe spoke for many days about ?the bonnus scene? before John or I was sure what he meant. We planned a scene in a sculpture gallery, epitomizing something about Daniel?s search for anything that will last, and then junked it. It seemed redundant. John tried to edge out a reference by Peggy Ashcroft, as Alex?s mother, to the General Strike because he said that no one would understand what she was talking about; but in the end, after I had been working on the scene overnight, he read it and said (it was a phrase characteristic of him after some gale of director?s worries had blown itself out), ?I take your point.?

We rehearsed the scene, an end-of-dinner scene, in Dame Peggy?s house. She knew her lines from the beginning, and concentrated on experimenting with her moves around the seated Alex, alone with her: when to stand behind her, when to lift the weight off her by some family normality with an after-dinner chocolate. With the precision of this great actress, she found the exactness that was needed. Her attention to Alex, and her confidences, are the character?s way of helping her divorced and unhappy daughter to hold herself together. Alex is thinking of quitting the Bob she loves because ?there are times when nothing has to be better than something.? She thinks she is quite alone, and has always believed her parents to be content with each other.

I had given the mother a sudden confidence to Alex that makes her see that she is not alone at all: a shock about a political split between the couple in the Depression that made her mother leave her father for a while. The decision Alex is contemplating suddenly turns out to be in direct line from her mother?s own judgment that there are times when decks must be cleared, for all it may cost. Dame Peggy asked careful questions about the scene and its context, talked the lines through to herself, minutely rehearsed the moves she found crucial. Her mind?and therefore her diction, which always ends cleanly at a full stop, much as a good Bach performer plays without rubato?brings solitary perplexities into the clear air of older and unsuspected allies? understanding of their own pasts. The scene carried Alex through her ending of a love she cleaves to but knows to be not enough, not enough at all.

***

We rehearsed in an offshoot of some dingy restaurant near the Tottenham Court Road. John was always ahead of time, like everyone else, apart from the actor we soon replaced with Peter Finch. He is too gifted to name but he was too anxious about this part to play it. He was nervous of it, nervous of John, nervous of the rest of the cast. The car we shared to rehearsal?he picked me up?arrived more and more unpunctually. Alarm clocks hadn?t gone off, his housekeeper hadn?t woken him. Having to replace an actor is a sorry business all around.

At rehearsal, the actors sat at a table to work on the scenes between principals. John stood behind them, near the continuity girl. The costume designer?Jocelyn Rickards?was off in a corner making piles of clothes that were to be auditioned in one of the never-existing gaps. Glenda had her own look and kept to it. She turned her hair chestnut and was at her best in longish skirts and leather tunics over them. In rehearsing the one-to-one scenes, we would begin without notes, with me crouching beside one or the other actor and listening to the lines. Sometimes I could hear a difficulty for Glenda that she had been brooding about overnight, and with a nod from John we would get up and play the scene through with moves, sometimes improvising an extra line, sometimes cutting. This was the way we worked on the fuse scene. Glenda needs to be on the move when she is thinking out a scene. She has a sense of the whole that is remarkable for an actor. Many actors read only their own lines and have no idea how they will play in context. Glenda sees a scene whole. By working together she saw how to make the energy of the fight that starts in the basement carry her through yell after yell to Bob from floor after floor, leading straight from a flaming spat and her furious ?Perhaps you?re spreading yourself too thin? to her ?Sorry, sorry, sorry, sorry? in another set, shot close in, arms around him.

Peter, starting later in rehearsal time, never needed a change. He bent himself to the text. With Murray, I could often make things better for him by breaking up a sentence into parts that seemed haphazard in a way characteristic of Bob?s temperament, which continually picks things up and puts them down again to go on to something else. His life is a bedroom of emotions abandoned like half-finished socks knitted for some forgotten war.

The main work that can be done on the filmmaking itself by a writer is during the rehearsal and editing times. It is to John?s and Joe?s credit that they knew this. They are fine working filmmakers both, unlike a lot. A Hollywood producer with loads of Monaco money has just rung me (reverse charge) as I write, to say that he just loves my new film script, what is its name, remind me, remind me. Seriousness unflagging, I supplied the name. He said, ?I can?t hear, it?s a terrible line, know what I mean?? and then came through hot and strong with ?It?s wonderful, it?s an English surrogate myth for Manhattan, sibling myth, gentle, know what I mean? I?ll back it if you?ll put in a car crash, hear what I?m saying?? I said that I thought I had, adding ?Sorry? for no good reason.

***

When John was shooting and when I was in America working, he once rang up in desperation and asked for a couple of lines to get a character across a gallery in Alex?s studio. It was easily done?ninety seconds?and all credit to John to have rung. He recognizes the sound of an original voice and, being musical, and good enough to believe that he is not a writer himself, he made the transatlantic call. I was soon back, because we were editing. The film was running a good twenty-five minutes longer than it should. From the last rough cut I saw, it had been obvious that we could shave at least eight minutes out of it. Billy Williams, a great and modest cameraman who typically dislikes the ornate description ?cinematographer? that others insist on, shoots with a rare ear for the characters? dialogue and a rare eye for gestures and pauses. Together we found a good many scenes where Glenda had the punch line and didn?t need it. Her strength of character and force of expression did it. We would cut the line and keep the camera on her face, with the punch line coming from the unseen character. The way had grown clear in rehearsal: I would slip round to Annie Skinner, the continuity girl, and she would ?fix? (make firm) my cuts in the master. Annie is a remarkable woman, trusted by John?not everyone is?and much valued by all of us. John would absently run his fingers through her long blonde hair in a pause when we were all thinking. She deserves to be a producer; people of her caliber are much needed for the job that is more often characterized by a craven sort of despotism.

With the concern about the number of minutes that we had to cut, I was back in the viewing room. John, Joe, Billy, and Annie were there, and the editor, Richard Marden. I looked at John after we had seen the rough cut and said I had thought of a possible big section to lose. He made a hapless gesture, this usually assured man who likes to wear a jaunty spotted handkerchief round his throat. I went back into the projection room, and the editor and I worked over the Moviola; then I asked him if he?d try cutting from here to here. The here-to-here was a deliberately prolonged set of jumped scenes: lapses in the time flinging by as Alex gets later and later, in shots and time jumps that stutter about the forgery ahead. Friends of hers and Bob?s (?We should have feared false friends / When we did feast?: Timon) have set up for them a mock parental weekend to care for their gang of ruefully liberated children. The friends live in Hampstead, a well-off left-wing part of London. They, too, are free spirits with a vengeance. Like many cult leftists, they are dead keen on convention and feel sure that Alex and Bob will see the glory of family life and be married by Monday. Famine relief posters hang in the richly appointed kitchen. The fridge is full of enlightened foods that no child in its right mind would touch. The eldest of the children, Lucy, uses as a moral butler or bodyguard a dog called Kenyatta. The real mother, well-intentioned and ill-tuned, is having an awkward affair with an African, with such woodland joy that her husband is not allowed to be wounded.

So, into this situation Alex and Bob are plunged. The fakery of it makes them falter about each other all the more. But I suddenly saw that the faltering is demonstrated the minute they meet. In the projection booth, we cut a lot of the prelude of endless postponements by Alex, her telephoned apologies about getting later and later. The cuts worked because the well-meant, heedless hoax of the ?family weekend? was laid in already. I hope someone will one day find those cut scenes in some flea market and think the cuts right. Neither John nor Joe nor anyone else could quite believe that a writer would cut her own work so drastically. Of all the overwrought arguments about the auteur theory of cinema, this alone makes me believe that there are no arguments: they boil down to the people involved bending to what they see on the screen, which is always subtly different from the script. ?To hold in the mind two opposed opinions at once,? wrote Dostoyevsky, as best it can be translated: in this case, the idea of the script and the idea of the way it can best be carried out. Both notions carry, and eventually the realization commands the plan. I would never have seen the self-evident scissor jobs needed if I hadn?t been away from the rough cut for a time. Filmmaking is intensely interesting for writers if directors and producers are good enough to let them use their heads.

***

The title. It had always been Bloody Sunday, Sunday nearly always being bloody in the minds of English children: the day of stasis; of grown-ups going to sleep after too heavy a lunch; of mothers in hats straight from church cooking roast beef and Yorkshire pudding and roast potatoes and brussels sprouts; of desperate people come for the weekend afflicted with the same childish fidgety legs as even grown-ups have in other people?s houses on Sundays, escaping with the household Labradors to ?walk off? the lunch; of rows about the quality of the washing-up, done by the children at high speed (no soap; too little soap; too much soap; not enough rinsing, so that great-uncle?s glass of port produces bubbly champagne and a soap taste that, to children, is no more disgusting than alcohol).

But Bloody Sunday suddenly presented problems. Some eager young beaver working as a researcher at ten dollars an hour went to the New York Public Library and said didn?t I know there was a famous Irish Bloody Sunday? Yes, I said, it is famous. In England, sped by a Eumenides of innocent knowledgeability, an English researcher paid at five pounds an hour had been to the British Museum and telephoned me in America, where I then was two days later, to say didn?t I know about the Russian Bloody Sunday? Yes, I said. But it still wasn?t the English bloody Sunday. She agreed, with sweetness, having got the point in the first place herself, but glad of a job. The total bloodiness of Sundays from childhood to death is due, I think, to the enslaving legend we have made for ourselves, with the help of the enslaving Old Testament, that time off is fun and work is at the behest of others. On the contrary, diligence is native to the species, as one only has to watch a three-year-old to know, when it is pottering about on its self-invented projects of collecting stones, or making the sounds it likes on a broken plumbing pipe in the order it likes, or getting the blotting paper out of school inkwells, or numbering books. It is to break no holy rule to pursue things seven days a week. If there is any communal god, apart from the jealous deities that dictators have invented for their own warlike purposes, and if he takes one day in seven off, he or she or it should use it to repair the bungles of inadequate imaginings on the other six. A mischievous and motley lot, these idols that mankind has dreamt up for itself. As the research girls in their different ways agreed, Sundays are bloody indeed. Wars break out on Sundays.

But the word bloody continued to worry the American front-office people. To them, bloody was still as much of a swear word as it was in Shaw?s day. Anyway, they said to England on the transatlantic telephone, the English word was bleeding. England waited. The telephone went every now and again from many other parts of the world where cross-collateralized films were being shot. Apex was suggested forcefully. So was Triangle. So was Every Day of the Week.

After a fortnight or so, the telephone went again and a well-known voice with a glottal stop of wealth said, ?I?ve got it. Sunday Bloody Sunday.? But no comma.

Reprinted courtesy of and copyright the estate of Penelope Gilliatt.

Source: http://www.criterion.com/current/posts/2524-making-sunday-bloody-sunday

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