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Vol. LIX, Issue 874
Thursday, July 9, 2015
Fall of the machines While Greece asks for a three-year debt bailout from the European Union the New York Stock Exchange crashed for four hours after technical glitches. By Madison D’Ornellas Opinions Editor
Photos by Sean Gallagher | Daily 49er
The New York Stock Exchange was shut down for four hours Wednesday morning after reported technical glitches halted all activity until midday. The same morning an economic-collapsing Greece’s requested for a three-year bailout from the European Union. At 9:30 a.m. Wednesday morning orders from numerous small stocks failed to send. Traders on the floor of the NYSE had no warning of the crash, according to the New York Times. “The issues we are experiencing is an internal technical issue and is not the result of a cyber breach,” the NYSE tweeted after the initial technical problems. The shut down occurred soon after the United Airlines grounded all of its current flights due to technical issues and a brief crash of the Wall Street Journal’s website. “There’s a lot of uncertainty at the moment. You just don’t know what happened in New York,” said Wade Martin, Chair of the Economics Department at California State University, Long Beach. “If you rely more on a software-driven world we’re going to have more glitches in the software.” Later that morning the problems at the NYSE were more widespread and started to affect more
After 600 man-hours and a quarter million LEGO parts, a Queen Mary made of children’s blocks looks almost as seaworthy as the real deal.
Q ueen of the L ego age A 21-foot long professionally built model of the Queen Mary is being displayed to the public on board its inspiration ship.
See SHUTDOWN, page 2
By Sean Gallagher Contributing Writer
A DAY OF GLITCHES?! 8:00 a.m. - United orders grounding of all domestic flights. 9:30 a.m. - The New York Stock Exchange opening bell rings.Soon after orders for smaller stocks fail to go through. Panic and a loss of control ensue amongst traders. 9:49 a.m. - Service resumes for all United Airlines domestic flights. 11:32 a.m. - NYSE announces that it will shut down all trading. 3:10 p.m. - Trading resumes.
News 2
(Above) The smallest seafarers in the world stand atop the world’s largest LEGO model ship. (Below) A sailor contemplates the perplexities of the universe while standing on the deck of a Queen Mary LEGO replica housed inside the real Queen Mary.
Diversions 4
Opinions 5
A 600-pound LEGO model of the Queen Mary has rendezvoused with the mother ship. The model, made up of over 250,000 LEGO parts, is being displayed in an exclusive space called the Shipyard aboard the Queen Mary’s fourth floor. Bright Bricks Inc., the company behind the creation is one of only a handful of model builders certified by LEGO. “I chose the Queen Mary because I visited it about 15 years ago and I had always liked its design,” Bright Bricks Inc. co-founder and master builder Ed Diment said. Complete with it’s own portholes, lifeboats and even a tiny top-hatted Sir Winston Churchill, the ocean liner’s diminutive double is being called the world’s largest LEGO Brick model ship. From stem to stern the model comes in at just under 26 feet long. Diment, his wife, and two other colleagues spent 600 hours constructing the plastic replica. Diment said that the Queen Mary’s administration found his work through an Internet search and contacted Bright Bricks Inc. to unite the model and ship. Diment, who has a master’s degree in statistics, founded Bright Bricks Inc. about four years ago after meeting co-founder and fellow LEGO-maniac Duncan Titmarsh at a LEGO fan club in the UK. “It was a bit of a gamble at first going from making good money as a consultant to doing LEGO models based on commission, but growth has been exponential,” Diment said.
See LEGO, page 4
Sports 7