Saturday, November 24, 2012

95% Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark in IMAX

tomatometer

67

Average Rating: 7.1/10
Critic Reviews: 6
Fresh: 4 | Rotten: 2

Featuring bravura set pieces, sly humor, and white-knuckle action, Raiders of the Lost Ark is one of the most consummately entertaining adventure pictures of all time.

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Average Rating: 4/5
User Ratings: 808,555

Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) is no ordinary archeologist. When we first see him, he is somewhere in the Peruvian jungle in 1936, running a booby-trapped gauntlet (complete with an over-sized rolling boulder) to fetch a solid-gold idol. He loses this artifact to his chief rival, a French archeologist named Belloq (Paul Freeman), who then prepares to kill our hero. In the first of many serial-like escapes, Indy eludes Belloq by hopping into a convenient plane. So, then: is Indiana Jones afraid of anything? Yes, snakes. The next time we see Jones, he's a soft-spoken, bespectacled professor. He is then summoned from his ivy-covered environs by Marcus Brody (Denholm Elliott) to find the long-lost Ark of the Covenant. The Nazis, it seems, are already searching for the Ark, which the mystical-minded Hitler hopes to use to make his stormtroopers invincible. But to find the Ark, Indy must first secure a medallion kept under the protection of Indy's old friend Abner Ravenwood, whose daughter, Marion (Karen Allen), evidently has a "history" with Jones. Whatever their personal differences, Indy and Marion become partners in one action-packed adventure after another, ranging from wandering the snake pits of the Well of Souls to surviving the pyrotechnic unearthing of the sacred Ark. A joint project of Hollywood prodigies George Lucas and Steven Spielberg, with a script co-written by Lawrence Kasdan and Philip Kaufman, among others, Raiders of the Lost Ark is not so much a movie as a 115-minute thrill ride. Costing 22 million dollars (nearly three times the original estimate), Raiders of the Lost Ark reaped 200 million dollars during its first run. It was followed by Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1985) and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989), as well as a short-lived TV-series "prequel." ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Oct 21, 2003

$3.1M

Paramount Pictures

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/indiana_jones_and_the_raiders_of_the_lost_ark_in_imax/

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Insolvency, Bankruptcy, and Debt Negotiation | Light Rail - Light Rail ...

In our current economic climate, even businesses who follow a trustworthy model and put in hard work may be at risk of becoming insolvent. When a business is not able to generate the profits they need in order to pay back their debts in time, they are said to be insolvent. However, insolvency does not just apply to businesses, as an individual can also face insolvency in their personal finances as well. Some people equate insolvency with bankruptcy, but they are actually not the same thing. Bankruptcy is just one of the potential outcomes of insolvency. If a business owner or individual finds themselves insolvent, they may consider filing for bankruptcy, or they may decide to attempt to renegotiate their debt. It all depends on the situation of the individual or business and the flexibility of creditors. In some cases, businesses who renegotiate debt or declare bankruptcy can pay back their debt while still remaining open to the public.

Bankruptcy

Types of Insolvency

Unfortunately, the current economic situation has lead a number of businesses to become insolvent. Efforts to help businesses increase their customer base, such as the building of public transportation systems like the Phoenix Metro light-rail, have had some success in increasing foot-traffic in entertainment districts and shopping areas. However, businesses still face a number of challenges. Across the U.S., thousands of business owners and individuals are faced with increasing difficulty when it comes to paying back their business and personal expenses, leaving them with tough choices to make. The two types of insolvency businesses face include:

>Cash flow insolvency

>Balance sheet insolvency

When a business is balance sheet insolvent, it means they currently hold more liabilities than assets. When a business is said to have cash flow insolvency, it means that they do not have enough cash to provide payment for debts when they are due. In these types of situations, a business may need to consider filing for bankruptcy. Businesses may file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, also known as business reorganization, or they can file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, which is referred to as liquidation. When a business is more likely to not be able to keep their doors open, chapter 7 bankruptcy is the more suitable option, while chapter 11 bankruptcy is available for businesses who may be able to reorganize their debt and remain open while working to pay it off.

Other Options

While declaring bankruptcy may seem like the only answer to insolvency, there are actually some other options that should be explored as well. By speaking with an experienced bankruptcy attorney, insolvent business owners may be able to learn more about debt negotiation. If debt negotiation is an option that creditors are willing to consider, it could result in:

>Reduced interest

>Lesser monthly payments

>Due date extensions

Dealing with the perils of insolvency is never easy. However, many businesses are finding that the guidance and representation of a bankruptcy attorney can be incredibly beneficial. Bankruptcy attorneys are useful for a number of different situations. Some of the issues they can address include how to fight foreclosure, how to declare personal bankruptcy, how to see past bankruptcy myths, and how to renegotiate your debt.

Source: http://lightrailblogger.com/insolvency-bankruptcy-and-debt-negotiation/

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Friday, November 23, 2012

Markets subdued as Black Friday dawns in US

LONDON (AP) ? Markets were subdued Friday as Wall Street readied to return following the Thanksgiving holiday and as the U.S. shopping season begins in earnest.

The day after Thanksgiving is dubbed "Black Friday" because it is when U.S. retailers traditionally turn their first profit of the year as millions of Americans rush out to stores in search of gifts for Christmas and other seasonal holidays.

A strong holiday shopping season will be used to help predict the momentum of the U.S. economy, the world's biggest. Anecdotal evidence and footfall figures over the coming days will be closely monitored.

"With much of the northeast still struggling in the aftermath of hurricane Sandy, holiday shopping has the potential to disappoint," said Rebecca O'Keeffe, head of investment at Interactive Investor.

In Europe, the FTSE 100 index of leading British shares was up 0.1 percent at 5,797 while Germany's DAX fell the same rate to 7,238. The CAC-40 in France was 0.1 percent lower too at 3,493.

Wall Street was poised for a fairly unspectacular return from Thanksgiving, with both Dow futures and the broader S&P 500 futures up 0.1 percent. Trading is expected to remain subdued especially as it's only a half day in U.S. markets.

"Thanksgiving Thursday and Friday always means quieter markets and this year is no different," said Alastair McCaig, market analyst at IG.

Though trading levels are clearly down, investors will be monitoring developments in Brussels as European Union leaders try to cobble together a budget deal. The prevailing view in the markets is that nothing will be achieved Friday and that another meeting will be needed.

Cyprus is also in focus amid signs that the country, one of the 17 EU countries that use the euro, is close to agreeing a financial bailout deal with representatives from the EU, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund. Cyprus stocks were up nearly 10 percent Friday, a clear indicator of an expected deal.

Over the rest of the year, the focus will likely remain on whether the White House can come to a deal with Congress on the budget and whether Greece will get its next batch of bailout cash.

The expectation in the markets is that both will be dealt with positively. A deal to give Greece more money is expected to be achieved at a euro finance ministers meeting on Monday.

Hopes that Greece will avoid an imminent bankruptcy have lain behind the euro's recent advance. That held Friday, with Europe's single currency up a further 0.2 percent at $1.2897.

Earlier in Asia, Hong Kong's Hang Seng index rose 0.8 percent to 21,913.98 and South Korea's Kospi added 0.6 percent to 1,911.33. Japanese markets were closed for a holiday.

In the oil markets, benchmark oil for January delivery was down 13 cents to $87.25 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/markets-subdued-black-friday-dawns-us-113057413--finance.html

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Clean energy decision is delayed

The government has published details of its long-awaited Energy Bill, designed to keep lights on and emissions down.

The government will allow energy companies to charge households an extra ?7.6bn, to go towards low-carbon electricity infrastructure by 2020.

A decision about setting carbon emission targets for 2030 has been delayed until 2016, after the election.

Labour said this was a "humiliating failure" by the Lib Dems, who want gas banished from the electricity system.

Environmentalists also condemned the bill, saying it would make it very hard to meet the UK's law on climate change.

Details of the bill were announced late on Thursday although the bill itself will not be published until next week.

Crudely speaking, the bill has been a battleground between Chancellor George Osborne, who favours gas-powered generation, and the Liberal Democrats, who want clean energy.

The chancellor is adamant that gas will help keep down power bills in the future. He and the Treasury want flexibility in energy choices.

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

David Cameron has allowed a militant tendency within his own ranks to derail the Energy Bill?

End Quote John Sauven Greenpeace

But the Lib Dems want to banish gas from the electricity system almost entirely by 2030 to reduce CO2 emissions in line with the Climate Change Act, although gas will be needed as a back-up.

They say this will also keep power bills down overall by reducing the UK's exposure to volatile gas prices in a power-hungry world.

Lost the battle

On-going uncertainty over energy strategy has infuriated the firms that are expected to invest more than ?100bn to renew the UK's decaying energy infrastructure by 2020.

It is clear from the announcement that the Lib Dems have lost the battle over the clean energy target.

The decision runs counter to the resolution at the Lib Dem party conference.

In a compromise, the principle of the target will be attached to the bill, but details will not be decided until 2016.

The delay will make it hard for the UK to meet its long-term emissions targets under the Climate Change Act.

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

This is a huge investment and must bring forward the jobs and economic growth that the UK needs?

End Quote Angela Knight Energy UK

The advisory committee on climate change estimates the increase that the ?7.6bn allowed for in the bill will add about ?110 to the average household energy bill by 2020.

The Department for Energy and Climate Change (DECC) has a lower estimate of ?95 - or 7% - although some analysts think it would be more.

DECC believes the clean energy measures will save on bills in the long run. The Energy and Climate Change Secretary, Ed Davey, told the BBC that the measures would eventually save about the same amount. He said the figures being bandied about by others about the impact on bills were "rubbish".

The chairman of the Commons energy select committee, Tim Yeo, said it was worrying that the government had not introduced an emissions goal for 2030: "There will be concern that the government hasn't accepted the full implications - which are already clear - of the extent to which electricity generation needs to be decarbonised by 2030".

Labour criticised the government's failure to set an emissions target for electricity for 2030.

"It is outrageous that on the day Ed Miliband committed to a tough cut in Britain's carbon levels by 2030, George Osborne and Ed Davey abandoned their target," said Caroline Flint, shadow energy and climate change secretary.

Mr Yeo, a Conservative MP, also said he was disappointed at the lack of a target, describing the omission as "significant." He said it would add to uncertainty for investors.

'Bill derailed'

Environmental groups have also criticised the government's announcement.

"By failing to agree to any carbon target for the power sector until after the next election, David Cameron has allowed a militant tendency within his own ranks to derail the Energy Bill," said John Sauven, executive director of Greenpeace.

"It's a blatant assault on the greening of the UK economy that leaves consumers vulnerable to rising gas prices, and sends billions of pounds of clean-tech investment to our economic rivals."

But Energy UK, which represents the energy industry, welcomed the measures.

"This agreement is good news and we look forward to seeing the details of the bill," said Angela Knight, chief executive of Energy UK.

"We are pleased to see that the levy control framework means that the UK will be building new power stations, including nuclear and renewables. This is a huge investment and must bring forward the jobs and economic growth that the UK needs."

There are many more fragments to come in the energy jigsaw.

Decisions on the way subsidies from bills will be shared between nuclear and various renewable technologies will be made later.

Key decisions on how to ensure there are enough gas power stations to keep the lights on when the wind is not blowing will be announced alongside the chancellor's autumn statement.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-20451189#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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Thursday, November 22, 2012

Irish charms keep U.S. giants sweet for now

DUBLIN (Reuters) - U.S. business chiefs gathered in the Irish capital on Thursday to give thanks for low taxes, a cool climate and the financial crisis - three factors that have helped produce a bumper year in their favorite corner of Europe.

But there was a hint of foreboding at the American Chamber of Commerce's annual Thanksgiving lunch in Dublin that Ireland's promise to maintain its low corporate tax rate, its crisis wage cuts and its perfect weather for high-tech data farms may not be enough to keep the relationship sweet.

A limited pool of skilled workers, the loss of lucrative pharmaceutical patents and the threat of a fresh European attack on its low company taxes mean Ireland will need to fight to keep the investment flowing.

For its part, the government is thankful that multinationals, many of them based in the United States, are still backing Ireland as it struggles to recover from economic crisis and an international bailout in 2010.

"I'd like to give thanks for the U.S. investment and the enormous job creation," Finance Minister Michael Noonan told the executives gathered for a traditional Thanksgiving feast of turkey and pumpkin pie, saying he expected another record year for investment this year.

"It's important that what is being offered in Ireland is as attractive as it ever was," he said, promising to maintain a package of incentives for companies and executives to face down growing competition from Britain, Israel and Singapore.

U.S. firms invested $30 billion into Ireland last year, more than in China and the rest of emerging Asia combined, according to the American Chamber of Commerce.

Ireland has long cultivated its ties with the huge Irish-American community, and the country is sometimes tongue-in-cheek called the 51st state of the union.

But sentimentality does not attract U.S. business projects. Thanks to the 12.5 percent company tax rate and transfer pricing - in which multinationals route profits from high tax to low tax countries - foreign firms can repatriate most of the money they pour into Ireland, bolstering their profits.

Ireland, lying on the western edge of Europe and relatively isolated from many of its major markets, jealously guards the competitive advantage brought by the low tax regime.

But European hostility over this has re-emerged, with German opposition leader Peer Steinbrueck, who hopes to oust Chancellor Angela Merkel in elections next year, criticizing it last month.

A storm over how multinationals cap their tax bills, brewing since a Reuters investigation into the issue, is likely to put Ireland in the spotlight, an editorial in The Irish Times noted on Thursday. "For the government, such developments are a major concern," the newspaper said.

At Thursday's lunch, Noonan reiterated that the corporate tax rate was "not negotiable".

FOREIGN ACCENTS

Multinationals have benefited from Ireland's economic crash as business costs have fallen back to 2003 levels, according to the IDA, the agency tasked with attracting foreign investment.

U.S. multinationals currently employ over 100,000 of Ireland's 1.8 million strong workforce and a host of companies, including PayPal and Apple , are expanding.

Dublin commercial property prices, once on a par with Manhattan and Moscow, have more than halved. Capitalising on this, Google spent 100 million euros last year on the tallest commercial office building in Dublin. The U.S. technology giant plans to kit it out with a swimming pool in the basement for its 2,000 plus staff.

But high-tech companies are struggling to find enough talent in Ireland, where graduates preferred to become architects or real estate agents during the property-fuelled boom years rather than software engineers or scientists.

Multinationals are fighting over recruits from overseas who have brought plethora of foreign accents to the coffee shops and sandwich bars of Dublin's trendy south docklands area, where Google and Facebook have large offices.

In September, a senior Facebook executive said the firm would continue investing in Ireland, where it already has over 400 staff, as long as it could find the right sort of employees.

Conscious of the problem, the government has introduced tax breaks for overseas workers who move to Ireland.

Peter O'Neill, head of the American Chamber of Commerce in Ireland, said Ireland can not rest on its laurels if it wants to attract the right worker and the right companies to Ireland.

"The bar is getting higher all the time," said O'Neill, who is chief of IBM Ireland. "Investment is mobile, people are mobile, you've got to have the right environment at all times."

PATENT CLIFF

A strategy to lure drugs companies, started in the 1960s, has made Ireland the largest net exporter of pharmaceuticals in the world, according to Dublin-based industry group PharmaChemicalIreland. Products such as Viagra and Botox are manufactured in the country.

But this reliance on the life sciences sector, which employs over 47,000 people, has become a weakness as patents lapse on a host of drugs, allowing competitors to make cheap copies elsewhere. These include Pfizer's Lipitor and Enbrel, although Enbrel will go off patent later than originally scheduled.

Officials in Ireland say the "patent cliff" will be offset by new patented drugs and products coming into production but there will be a time lag, according to experts.

"The new products coming on-patent in the short-term will not be able to offset the fall in exports of these blockbuster drugs coming off-patent," said Chris Van Egeraat, lecturer at Maynooth University. "We are going to talk about billions in a reduction of exports".

The impact is already being felt; Irish exports fell sharply in September from record highs the previous month.

"You've two risks for Irish exports: you've the specific risk related to the patent cliff, and you have the risk related to the global environment," said KBC Ireland chief economist Austin Hughes, predicting a gentle slowdown. "But luckily a lot of the companies that are in Ireland are doing well."

CLOUD NINE

Irish officials can at least be thankful that the weather at least is here to stay.

Ireland's temperate climate, often the bane of wind-swept tourists, is an asset for data center operators. Natural air can be used to cool the rows of giant servers that act as the world's online library without costly heavy air-conditioning.

Google recently opened a 75 million euro data center, housing computers that run cloud computing services, where users store data on secure external servers rather than their own network or computer. Microsoft also unveiled a $130 million expansion to its Dublin-based "mega" data center earlier this year.

Cheaper and better options exist in Europe, but Ireland is fast becoming a cloud hub for the region because the tech giants already installed in Ireland are opting to build out in a country which they know and like.

"Ireland will become an increasingly important attraction for the cloud market," said Rakesh Kumar, an analyst with Gartner, which advises companies such as Microsoft and Cisco.

"These companies... have got facilities, they're happy with them, they've got good skills and good languages... so when they have a choice to either expand and build out new sites in different regions, it makes a lot of sense to stick to what they have," he said.

(Writing by Lorraine Turner and Conor Humphries; Editing by Carmel Crimmins and David Stamp)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/irish-charms-keep-u-giants-sweet-now-180548418--finance.html

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Doctors question airplane medical reporting system

1 day

Is there a doctor on board? That is something airplane passengers don?t want to hear at 30,000 feet, but doctors say the number of people needing medical help on airplanes will increase as the flying population ages.

How often medical events actually happen in flight remains largely a secret to the public because the Federal Aviation Administration doesn't require airlines to report them. But the NBC Bay Area Investigative Unit discovered that medical emergencies may be happening more often than anyone knows. And now some doctors are putting pressure on the airline industry to make the data?publicly?available.

Video: Watch the investigative report on NBCBayArea.com

?Before I experienced this it never occurred to me that the airlines didn't collect this kind of data,? said Dr. Melissa Mattison.

The Harvard Medical School professor responded when a passenger had a seizure on her flight in January 2011. A few months later in a May issue of the?"Journal of the American Medical Association," Mattison and colleague, Dr. Mark Zeidel, advocated for a standardized recording system for all in-flight medical emergencies with mandatory reporting of each incident to the National Transportation Safety Board.

Read: Dr. Mattison's article on in-flight emergencies

They also called for the debriefing of anyone directly involved with an in-flight medical event. They wrote that ?collecting these records and disseminating lessons learned may help improve the care given during in-flight medical emergencies throughout the domestic airline fleet.? Their call has yet to be answered.?

?Anytime they ask for a medical professional on board to tend to another passenger they should be filling out a standard reporting form that should be filed in a database,? Mattison said. ?There are older, sicker people flying and we are not systematically addressing the problem of in-flight medical emergencies.?

Seventy-four-year-old Southern California resident Concepcion Venegas died on an airplane after having a heart attack onboard a Southwest Airlines flight traveling from Phoenix to Ontario, Calif., in May 2005.

?She was on a trip (and) was supposed to come home the next week,? said Venegas?s daughter, Rosa Arencibia. ?We never expected her to die.?

According to the family?s attorney, a retired EMT stepped up to help but was unable to revive her, and the pilot decided to continue on with 50 minutes left in flight.

Arencibia and her family sued Southwest Airlines for negligence after her mother?s death and a jury found that the airline did everything possible to care for her. The airline did not want to comment on the lawsuit.

?Maybe there was a chance for her to survive,? Arencibia said. ?I believe they didn't do everything they possibly could to save my mother?s life.?

When there are medical problems in the sky, 90 percent of commercial airlines in the United States will call MedAire, a global emergency response center that provides real-time medical assistance to pilots, flight attendants and medical professionals who may be on board. The company?s headquarters is based in the Banner Good Samaritan Medical Center in Tempe, Ariz., where doctors are available 24 hours a day to field phone calls that come in from flight crews. Other airlines have in-house medical crews to deal with in-flight emergencies.

?Every major airline in this country will have some sort of ground-based service to help them in dealing with in-flight medical events,? said Dr. Paulo Alves, MedAire?s Vice President of Aviation and Maritime Health.?

In 2011, MedAire received 22,594 calls for service, which the company claims represents about one medical event for every 30,000 passengers. The company said that in the same year less than three percent of calls resulted in an unplanned landing or emergency diversion to another airport. But these figures may reflect just a fraction of the in-flight emergencies that actually occur each year. The Investigative Unit found that many airlines do track in-flight medical emergencies, but choose not to make the information available to the public.

Kelly Skyles, safety coordinator with the Association of Professional Flight Attendants and current American Airlines flight attendant told NBC Bay Area that she receives reports for every medical event that happens on board American Airlines flights?from routine events such as when a passenger gets airsick to serious life-threatening instances.?

?There is a medical event that occurs every single day, seven days a week,? Skyles said. ?It may not be a major medical situation, but it gets documented and reports go out?it gets added to the database.?

NBC Bay Area tried for weeks to get the airlines to explain why they do not make data public, contacting 15 other air carriers by email and phone, but all declined to comment for the record on camera.

The Investigative Unit also discovered that airlines face a number of challenges when responding to in-flight medical emergencies. NBC Bay Area obtained NASA?s Aviation Safety Reporting System database where pilots and flight attendants can anonymously report problems on a voluntary basis. The database chronicles emergencies, including 576 incidents where passengers needed medical attention on board since 2001. The database represents just some of the in-flight medical emergencies that happen on commercial airplanes.

According to the database, some flight attendants reported having difficulties communicating with medical ground crews such as MedAire, calling the communication ?very poor.? Others reported that ?for medical consultants to be an effective tool in an emergency situation the flight attendants need a direct phone connection??

Even MedAire admitted communication can be a challenge because oftentimes calls are routed through the busy cockpit.

?The level of care that we can provide and the level of handling depends heavily on the quality of the communication,? Alves said.

He admitted that there is no current mandate from the FAA to improve this communication or to document the number of in-flight medical events that occur on board, but he says he supports a more transparent reporting system.

The FAA does require that flight attendants know basic life support skills such as how to administer CPR, and also mandates that airlines keep an automated external defibrillator (AED) on board. The agency also requires that airlines carry a medical kit during all flights and that they contain specific items including a stethoscope, tourniquet and certain medications.

Read: Document about FAA advisory on emergency medical kits

But the NBC Bay Area?Investigative Unit found out that the contents of medical kits vary because airlines often add to the FAA?s list of required items.

?So what happens is an emergency medical kit on one airplane is organized differently than an emergency medical kit on another airplane,? Mattison said. ?It?s my opinion that the kits be standardized and uniform across the board so that responders can know what is in the kits and how to find it.?

Mattison believes that if airlines make in-flight medical events public, the industry would be better informed about what kinds of medical emergencies really happen. She says that would dictate what kinds of items contained in a medical kit are the most necessary, and in turn, would make airlines better equipped to respond to sick passengers.?

?Are they cardiac?? Mattison asked. ?Related to breathing? We could use that information to inform what we should put in the emergency medical kit and make the kits standard across the board no matter what airlines you are on. Every kit will be the same. And then we can educate physicians and others who are responding.?

The FAA did collect data about airplane medical emergencies for five domestic air carriers during a 12-month period between 1996 and 1997, including how frequently air crews used medical kits.

Read: FAA evaluation of in-flight medical care

More from NBCBayArea.com:

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/travel/doctors-question-airplane-medical-reporting-system-1C7204770

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Sandy victims prepare for subdued Thanksgiving

In this Tuesday, Nov. 20, 2012 photo, Marge Gatti stands in front of her home, which was damaged by Superstorm Sandy, in the Midland Beach section of the Staten Island borough of New York. Of all things material, Gatti has nothing. And yet, on Thanksgiving Day, she will be counting her blessings this year. ?My sons are alive. They were trapped here,? says Gatti, 67, who lived in this beige-colored home down the block from the Atlantic Ocean for 32 years. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

In this Tuesday, Nov. 20, 2012 photo, Marge Gatti stands in front of her home, which was damaged by Superstorm Sandy, in the Midland Beach section of the Staten Island borough of New York. Of all things material, Gatti has nothing. And yet, on Thanksgiving Day, she will be counting her blessings this year. ?My sons are alive. They were trapped here,? says Gatti, 67, who lived in this beige-colored home down the block from the Atlantic Ocean for 32 years. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

In this Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 photo, Marge Gatti looks at a photograph she was able to salvage, while standing in her bedroom in her home, which was damaged by Superstorm Sandy, in the Staten Island borough of New York. Of all things material, Gatti has nothing. And yet, on Thanksgiving Day, she will be counting her blessings this year. ?My sons are alive. They were trapped here,? says Gatti, 67, who lived in this beige-colored home down the block from the Atlantic Ocean for 32 years. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

In this Tuesday, Nov. 20, 2012 photo, Anthony Gatti makes a call while resting the in a tent where he is living in the Midland Beach section of the Staten Island borough of New York. Gatti's home was severely damaged by Superstorm Sandy and he has been living in the tent in the yard of the house. While his younger brother is hosting a Thanksgiving dinner for the family, Anthony said he doesn't plan to go. ?I?m going to stay here and protect what we have left,? he said. ?Which isn?t much. But it?s still ours.? (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

In this Sunday, Nov. 18, 2012 photo, Ray Marten poses with the street number sign recovered from the ashes of his fire-destroyed home in the Belle Harbor section of the Queens borough of New York. Marten is thankful that his teenage children are alive. The three of them narrowly escaped a fire that swept through their community the night Superstorm Sandy slammed into the East Coast. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

(AP) ? The things that Marge Gatti once cherished are lying on what's left of her deck, spattered in mud, like a yard sale gone awry.

The white fur coat she bought for $80 at an auction. Family videos. A peach-colored glass creamer from England. Books she never got a chance to read.

The stuff is ruined, just like her sodden Staten Island home, which was ravaged by Superstorm Sandy's floodwaters and will be demolished in the coming weeks. Of all things material, Gatti has nothing.

And yet, on Thanksgiving Day, she will be counting her blessings.

"My sons are alive. They were trapped here," said Gatti, 67, who lived in the beige home down the block from the Atlantic Ocean for 32 years. "I'm thankful that I have all my family. And that my friends are still here, you know? We're all friends now. There's no strangers in life anymore."

It will be a subdued Thanksgiving for families hit hard by the storm as they gather with friends and strangers alike, seeking to celebrate the people and things that were spared when so much was lost. But they will not be left to fend for themselves.

Restaurants are donating meals, strangers and churches are opening their doors, and people from across the nation have sent an outpouring of donations for those unable to roast their own turkey.

New York City and Macy's have set aside 5,000 bleacher seats along the Thanksgiving Day Parade route for families affected by Superstorm Sandy. Occupy Sandy, the storm-relief offshoot of the Occupy Wall Street movement, will host a Thanksgiving dinner in lower Manhattan.

Jennifer Kaufman of Washington Township, N.J., started a Facebook page called "A Place at the Table" that matches willing Thanksgiving hosts with families who have been displaced by Sandy.

"No one should eat alone on Thanksgiving," Kaufman said.

In the Belle Harbor section of the Rockaways, Ray Marten is thankful his two teenage children are alive. At the height of the storm, he saw flames from burning homes dancing over the floodwaters. The three of them narrowly escaped just before the blaze engulfed their house. A neighbor in a scuba suit materialized out of the darkness and towed Marten's 13-year-old daughter to safety on a surfboard.

A restaurant in New Jersey is donating a catered Thanksgiving dinner for his family and other displaced relatives at his mother's overcrowded Brooklyn home, where they are staying. His wife's sister lost her home in the post-storm fire that destroyed more than 100 houses in the city's Breezy Point section.

"We won't be sitting at a dining room table. We'll be eating off of paper plates," said his wife, Linda. "But at least we'll be together."

The kitchen stove is still caked in mud at the mildewed Staten Island home of Amin and Rachael Alhadad, who have been running a borrowed generator for a few hours every night to keep themselves and their four children warm. In the living room, a dark line marks where the water rose almost to the ceiling. Their furniture consists of a couple of donated wicker chairs and a bench draped with Red Cross blankets and towels.

The Alhadads say they have nowhere else to go, no family or friends to rely on. And they refuse to live in a shelter.

"They keep asking, 'Are we going to have turkey?'" said Rachael Alhadad, indicating her sons, ages 14 and 15, who were playing restlessly on their smartphones. "Nope. We can't."

For Marge Gatti, who has blisters on her lips brought on by anxiety, the kindness of strangers has been almost too much to handle. There was the Australian man who raised $35,000 and handed out gift packages on the street from a U-Haul truck. An elderly rich man pulled up in a black Mercedes and peeled off $100 bills for everybody on the block. Dozens of girls cleaned debris off her front lawn.

"The caring was really from here," she said, putting a hand over her heart.

Her younger son has invited the entire block over for Thanksgiving dinner at his house. But the Gatti family will not be completely reunited for the holiday. Her oldest son, Anthony, has been sleeping in a tent that he pitched among the ruins on the front lawn of the house where he grew up.

"I'm going to stay here and protect what we have left," he said, his eyes filling with tears. "Which isn't much. But it's still ours."

___

Associated Press writers Karen Matthews in New York and Katie Zezima in Newark, N.J., contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-11-21-Superstorm-Thanksgiving/id-b35ba8f1a7e14450a58778bc2a89fa16

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