oneday I flyaway / 収穫 | eahaのブログ
今日は涼しくてなんかゆったりした気分の朝です。素敵な7/1の朝です。午後からは雨で、週末は雨天気だとか、なかなかいいタイミングで降ってくれるじやないか。週末は体を休めよう…。
テレビで言ってましたが、AKB『ヘビーローテーション』の監督って蜷川実花さんなんですね目
ところで

暫くぶりに『ムーランルージュ』見ました。
ブルーレイやらなんやら画質が上がったせいか、以前見た時と比べてめちゃくちゃ派手な映像に感じました。
最後ニコール・キッドマン死んでしまって、「心から愛した女の物語をタイプライターで書きはじめるのだった…」で終わるのですが、画面は派手派手しいけど終わり方はなかなか深いです。
"song for"のテロップがこんな感じになってました。
「君がいるから」感が私の日本語感からだとイマイチ伝わってこないんですが、もう少し年上の方だとこうなんでしょうかね。


生きてるってすばらしい。
君と分かち合うこの世界

君の様な人がこの歌に命を吹き込む

ただわかるのは君にささげる想い

ボクは君の永遠のとりこ



家庭菜園の夏野菜が収穫でき始めました。トマトはまだなのですが、なす・ピーマンが順調に一日2~3個づつとれてます。沢山必要な時は一日冷蔵庫に保管しておいて食べております。
 そんな茄子を使って昨日の晩ご飯は「なすの丸焼き」にしました。やっぱり獲りたては美味しいですね。

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 ところで藤巻健史さん久々に本を出されたんですね。口コミの評価はかなりいいんですが、熱烈な?ファンの方もいらっしゃるみたいですし、今回はどんなんなんでしょうね。

クリック!
fujimaki-japanの画像にリンクしてみましたので有名な?プロパガンダも読めますよ


昨日の新聞はこんなんでした。7月は下に動くような気がしてたんですが、このまま上がり基調なのか、8月前くらいに又下がるのか…。(そうそう先月から紙の新聞止めてみたんですが、とくに不自由しません。やっはりそのうち無くなっちゃんでしょうか…。)

ちなみに austerity オーストラリア政府のとかじゃなくて"国家についての緊縮経済"ですよねん。

US stocks advanced for a third straight session, as investors cheered a Greek austerity package and financial stocks jumped following a major settlement on toxic mortgage securities.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 72.73 points, or 0.60 per cent, to 12,261.42, the blue-chip measure's third consecutive gain.

The S&P 500 index rose 10.74 points, or 0.83 per cent, to 1307.41. The financial and materials sectors were strongest. The Nasdaq Composite gained 11.18 points, or 0.41 per cent, to 2740.49.

The moves put the Dow and Nasdaq on track for their biggest weekly gains since March and the S&P 500 for its biggest since November.

In response, the Australian share price futures September contract rose 30 points, suggesting the benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index will climb about 0.7 per cent in early trade today.

Bank of America climbed 3 per cent and other big banks gained ground after BofA reached an $US8.5 billion ($7.96bn) settlement on investor claims over securities purchased before the US housing-market collapse. The pact was viewed as removing a persistent drag on the shares.


Stocks have swung up and down for weeks on worries that Greece poses a contagion risk to European banks and other heavily indebted euro-zone countries.

The passage of unpopular austerity measures last night was seen paving the way for the heavily indebted country to get another round of aid. It was also viewed as moving the euro zone closer to containing its debt crisis.

"It's a step in the right direction, but we might find in one year's time we're back in the same spot," said Frank Germack, capital management group director at Rehmann Financial.

In US economic data, the number of people who signed contracts to buy previously occupied homes rose last month, though the figures were still low from an historical perspective.

"I tend to believe that we have found a bottom for the housing market, but just because we found a bottom doesn't mean we will have a bounce from here," said Brian Jacobsen, chief portfolio strategist at Wells Fargo Funds Management.

In corporate news, Monsanto gained 5 per cent. The world's largest seed maker by revenue raised its fiscal 2011 profit guidance and reported a 77 per cent rise in profit for its third quarter, beating analysts' expectations. The company also disclosed that US regulators are probing customer incentives in its restructured weed-killer business.

Visa surged 15 per cent and Mastercard rose 11 per cent after the Federal Reserve unveiled a more lenient plan to curb debit-card "interchange" fees that banks can charge retailers.

In the bond markets, Treasuries’ three-month bull run came one step closer to an end, with a third-consecutive weak auction pushing prices down for the third-straight session.

The sell-off this week is easily the biggest setback for the market since it started its historic rally in early April. The benchmark 10-year note's yield hit a one-month high of 3.132 per cent after a $US29bn, seven-year note auction got weak demand-just two days earlier the yield stood at a six-month low of 2.842 per cent. Yields move inversely to prices.

The market was already under pressure because of a shift into risky assets after Greek politicians passed an austerity package, giving hope that the country would get a bailout. Some investors argue that policymakers are simply kicking the can down the road, but the short-term relief spurred investors out of the overbought Treasury market.

"Bad auction week," said Michael Franzese, head of Treasury trading at Wunderlich Securities in New York. "The fire in Greece is being slowly put out." In New York trading, the benchmark 10-year note was 20/32 lower in price to yield 3.121 per cent.

Demand for all three auctions this week -- including the two-year and five-year sales -- dropped sharply from the past few months, suggesting yields have finally dropped to levels low enough to repel buyers.

The sell-off in the bond market comes as the Federal Reserve completes its $US600bn Treasury bond-buying program this week. While the Fed will continue buying Treasuries via proceeds from its maturing mortgage-backed securities, the amount it plans to buy would be much smaller on a monthly basis.

The bond market's weakness could also accelerate because of the political impasse on tax issues that is preventing US politicians from reaching a deficit-reduction deal to raise the US debt ceiling.

If there is no resolution by August 2, the Treasury Department has warned that the US may default -- something that President Barack Obama warned could have significant and unpredictable consequences for the global economy.