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The New York Times - Breaking News, World News & Multimedia
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20121031191423/http://www.nytimes.com/
Edition: U.S. / Global

Wednesday, October 31, 2012 Last Update: 3:13 PM ET

Halting Return as Region Tallies Loss and Copes With Gridlocked Traffic

With City Struggling for Footing, Some Transit Is Restored

New York officials said that limited service would be restored to the subways on Thursday and to the Metro-North Railroad and the Long Island Rail Road on Wednesday afternoon.

Getting Around the City

Did you experience a nightmare commute? Tell us your tales of woe using the hashtag #TellNYT.

Readers’ Photos

Photographs: Images From Hurricane Sandy

See photographs captured by Times readers, and submit your own.

Graphic: Assessing Damage From Hurricane Sandy

More than six million utility customers lost power as Hurricane Sandy felled trees, downed power lines and flooded electrical substations.

For Builders, the Storm Is Good for Business

Damage will help construction companies and the workers they plan to hire, who were affected by the housing bust.

Interactive A Close Look at Power Failures

Hurricane Sandy knocked out power to hundreds of thousands of people in the New York City area. Updated: 1:45 PM ET

The Lede Blog
State-by-State Guide to Hurricane Sandy

Check back for regular updates on evacuations, closings, power failures and flooding and wind damage from North Carolina to Rhode Island.

F.C.C. Describes 911 and Cellphone Problems

Many of the wireless transmission towers knocked out by the hurricane are not expected back online for several days, the agency said.

Election 2012

Ohio Working Class May Offer Key to Obama’s Re-election

With the 18 electoral votes of Ohio seen by both sides as critical, President Obama’s ability to prevent erosion among working-class voters may be his best path to winning a second term.

FiveThirtyEight

What State Polls Suggest About the National Vote

Nearly every evaluation method based on state polls hints at a very slight lead in the popular vote, and an Electoral College victory, for President Obama.

Architecture Review
An Arena as Tough as Brooklyn. But Street Smart?
Architecture Review
An Arena as Tough as Brooklyn. But Street Smart?

Two architecture reviews in one: a rave for the Barclays Center arena, a pan for the larger development and a plea to make the second worthy of the first.

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Nets’ Opener in Brooklyn Is Postponed

The Nets’ regular-season debut at Barclays Center, scheduled for Thursday night, was postponed because of the lingering effects of Hurricane Sandy.

DealBook
JPMorgan Sues Boss of Trader Who Lost Billions

Javier Martin-Artajo supervised Bruno Iksil, the so-called “London Whale” whose outsize positions prompted the loss.

On Basketball
Worst Deal in New York Sports? Not Rodriguez’s

Amar’e Stoudemire, who appears to be having a deleterious effect on the Knicks’ ability to sniff championship contention, is giving Alex Rodriguez a run for his money.

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Now Playing

Holiday Movies
Abe Lincoln as You’ve Never Heard Him

Daniel Day-Lewis, known as a picky film actor with obsessive work habits, talks (a bit) about his process in preparing for Steven Spielberg’s “Lincoln.”

The Conversation
Sandy and Politics

Brooks and Collins on Twitter vs. the media, Romney vs. FEMA and what the storm did to us.

Op-Ed
Zombie Is a Slave Forever

These creatures originated in the brutal sugar plantations of Haiti.

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Travel »

Frescoes and Festivals in an Umbrian Town

Drive three hours north of Rome and you’ll reach Gubbio, a mountain town with expansive views, medieval buildings and lively celebrations.

 

From Dublin to Dingle

Pubs, dramatic sea views and an ethereal plate of fish-and-chips on a trip across Ireland.

Living In | Byram, Conn.
Map Says Greenwich, Mood Says Port Chester

The fortunes of Byram, a tiny spit of land in Greenwich, Conn., have over the years more or less risen and fallen with Port Chester, N.Y., just across the Byram River.

A Taste of the Next Corvette: G.M. Offers Peek at New V-8

The next Corvette is scheduled to be introduced in January, but on Thursday the company showed off the car’s new engine. The 6.2-liter V-8 is expected to be the most powerful standard engine ever offered in a Corvette.

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NYTimes.com / Monster

Corner Office
Mistakes Are O.K., but Never, Ever Lose Your Passion

Kevin Liles of KWL Enterprises, a talent management and brand development firm, says it’s important to take “ownership of every single thing you do.”

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