maybe some dis-connection effect...

Big Ben's Silence Baffles Engineers
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May 28, 9:27 AM (ET)

By THOMAS WAGNER
LONDON (AP) - Big Ben, the landmark London clock renowned for its
accuracy and chimes, 
stopped ticking for 90 minutes, an engineer said Saturday.
Officials do not know why the 147-year-old clock on the banks of the
River Thames 
stopped at 10:07 p.m. Friday. It resumed keeping time, but stalled
again at 10:20 p.m. 
and remained still for about 90 minutes before starting up again, a
spokeswoman for the 
House of Commons said on condition of anonymity, citing government
policy.
There has been speculation a recent spell of hot weather may have
been to blame. 
Temperatures in London reached 90 Saturday, and forecasters called it
England's hottest 
day in May since 1953.
Big Ben, which is operated by the Palace of Westminster, survived
attacks by German 
Luftwaffe bombers during World War II, continuing to mark the time to
within 1 1/2 
seconds of Greenwich Mean Time.
However, the clock has experienced occasional problems.
In 1962, snow caused the clock to ring in the New Year 10 minutes
late. In 1976, the clock 
stopped when a piece of its machinery broke. Big Ben also stopped on
April 30, 1997, and 
once more three weeks later.
Big Ben is actually the clock's 13-ton bell, which was named after
Sir Benjamin Hall, the 
British commissioner of works at the time the clock was built.
The official name for the Gothic tower holding Big Ben is St.
Stephen's Tower. Standing 
315 feet tall, it was completed in 1858 after an 1834 fire destroyed
most of the Palace of 
Westminster. 




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