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Police Pepper Spray Haka Dancers At Football Game In Utah (VIDEO)

ROOSEVELT, Utah — Police in a small Utah town are being accused of overreacting after using pepper spray to break up a group of Polynesian men and boys performing a traditional dance called the Haka after a high school football game. The police action came after a pair of officers unsuccessfully attempted to disperse the dozen or so performers who were blocking an exit after the Union-Uintah game Thursday night, the Deseret News and Salt Lake Tribune reported. A form of the Haka has been popularized by rugby players in New Zealand who chant, beat their chests and gesture aggressively before matches. The Maori tradition also can include fierce facial expressions. Haka are now performed at football and rugby games around the world. The group in Roosevelt, a town of 8,000, had traveled about 125 miles east from the Salt Lake City area to watch a relative play his final game for Union, which lost to rival Uintah and finished the season without a victory. The group reportedly was trying to boost Union’s morale with the Haka as the players left the field. Spectators, coaches and players told police that everything was fine and they should let the men perform, Jessica Rasmussen said, but officers asked them to make room and started using pepper spray. Rasmussen said she and other bystanders also got spray in their eyes, ears and mouths. Union fan Jason Kelly said the way police reacted was an embarrassment to the community of Roosevelt. “I’ve never seen anything like it,” Kelly said. “It was totally unprovoked.” Police said the incident is under investigation, and anyone wanting to lodge a complaint should contact the department. Police said many people in the crowd knew the group was going to dance, but the two officers and others didn’t. Spectator Shawn Mitchell said while he didn’t view the dancers as a threat, the impromptu performance might have played a role in how police responded. “If they’re going to do something like (the Haka), maybe some planning could be done ahead of time,” he said.

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Police Pepper Spray Haka Dancers At Football Game In Utah (VIDEO)

ROOSEVELT, Utah — Police in a small Utah town are being accused of overreacting after using pepper spray to break up a group of Polynesian men and boys performing a traditional dance called the Haka after a high school football game. The police action came after a pair of officers unsuccessfully attempted to disperse the dozen or so performers who were blocking an exit after the Union-Uintah game Thursday night, the Deseret News and Salt Lake Tribune reported. A form of the Haka has been popularized by rugby players in New Zealand who chant, beat their chests and gesture aggressively before matches. The Maori tradition also can include fierce facial expressions. Haka are now performed at football and rugby games around the world. The group in Roosevelt, a town of 8,000, had traveled about 125 miles east from the Salt Lake City area to watch a relative play his final game for Union, which lost to rival Uintah and finished the season without a victory. The group reportedly was trying to boost Union’s morale with the Haka as the players left the field. Spectators, coaches and players told police that everything was fine and they should let the men perform, Jessica Rasmussen said, but officers asked them to make room and started using pepper spray. Rasmussen said she and other bystanders also got spray in their eyes, ears and mouths. Union fan Jason Kelly said the way police reacted was an embarrassment to the community of Roosevelt. “I’ve never seen anything like it,” Kelly said. “It was totally unprovoked.” Police said the incident is under investigation, and anyone wanting to lodge a complaint should contact the department. Police said many people in the crowd knew the group was going to dance, but the two officers and others didn’t. Spectator Shawn Mitchell said while he didn’t view the dancers as a threat, the impromptu performance might have played a role in how police responded. “If they’re going to do something like (the Haka), maybe some planning could be done ahead of time,” he said.

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AP Item About Obama’s Upcoming Vegas Visit Calls the Town ‘Sin City’ Three Times

If you didn't know any better (actually, I think I do), you would think that perhaps Cristina Silva at the Associated Press is doing all she can to minimize the tourism-damaging things President Barack Obama has said about Las Vegas while tasked with reporting on his upcoming visit there. Three times in her short afternoon report — once in the item's headline and twice in the item's first two paragraphs — Silva refers to Las Vegas as “Sin City.” I realize that it's a legitimate nickname and that the town isn't seen as a mecca of virtue, but whatever happened to referring to the place as, well, “Vegas” — especially since Obama has never used the “Sin City” nickname in a speech? A graphic capture of the short item's first four paragraphs follows (link will probably be revised during the evening): Silva didn't quote either of Obama's suggestions about avoiding Vegas. As seen in the excerpts which follow, his 2009 statement definitely did damage: February 2009 ( BNET ; “Obama's Las Vegas Remark Inflames Industry”) It was only a five-second soundbyte, meant for Wall Street fat cats asking for government bailouts. “You can’t get corporate jets. You can’t go take a trip to Las Vegas or go down to the Super Bowl on the taxpayer’s dime, ” President Barack Obama said to a town hall meeting in Elkhart, Ind. last week. But the remark caused a hailstorm of anger from Las Vegas officials, members of the travel industry and even residents. And now the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority will launch a six-figure campaign with ads in The Wall Street Journal, USA Today and other publications featuring company testimonials. “People are telling me that they’re not coming to Las Vegas because the president doesn’t want them to,” Mayor Oscar B. Goodman told the New York Times. February 2010 (AP, “Obama responds to ire over 2nd anti-Vegas remark”) “When times are tough, you tighten your belts,” Obama said, according to a White House transcript of his appearance Tuesday at a high school in Nashua, N.H. “You don't go buying a boat when you can barely pay your mortgage,” Obama said. “You don't blow a bunch of cash on Vegas when you're trying to save for college. You prioritize. You make tough choices.” AP reporter Silva seemed so determined to maximize her “Sin City” references that she did so in her second paragraph rather than actually quote what Obama said about, well, “Vegas.” Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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AP Item About Obama’s Upcoming Vegas Visit Calls the Town ‘Sin City’ Three Times

If you didn't know any better (actually, I think I do), you would think that perhaps Cristina Silva at the Associated Press is doing all she can to minimize the tourism-damaging things President Barack Obama has said about Las Vegas while tasked with reporting on his upcoming visit there. Three times in her short afternoon report — once in the item's headline and twice in the item's first two paragraphs — Silva refers to Las Vegas as “Sin City.” I realize that it's a legitimate nickname and that the town isn't seen as a mecca of virtue, but whatever happened to referring to the place as, well, “Vegas” — especially since Obama has never used the “Sin City” nickname in a speech? A graphic capture of the short item's first four paragraphs follows (link will probably be revised during the evening): Silva didn't quote either of Obama's suggestions about avoiding Vegas. As seen in the excerpts which follow, his 2009 statement definitely did damage: February 2009 ( BNET ; “Obama's Las Vegas Remark Inflames Industry”) It was only a five-second soundbyte, meant for Wall Street fat cats asking for government bailouts. “You can’t get corporate jets. You can’t go take a trip to Las Vegas or go down to the Super Bowl on the taxpayer’s dime, ” President Barack Obama said to a town hall meeting in Elkhart, Ind. last week. But the remark caused a hailstorm of anger from Las Vegas officials, members of the travel industry and even residents. And now the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority will launch a six-figure campaign with ads in The Wall Street Journal, USA Today and other publications featuring company testimonials. “People are telling me that they’re not coming to Las Vegas because the president doesn’t want them to,” Mayor Oscar B. Goodman told the New York Times. February 2010 (AP, “Obama responds to ire over 2nd anti-Vegas remark”) “When times are tough, you tighten your belts,” Obama said, according to a White House transcript of his appearance Tuesday at a high school in Nashua, N.H. “You don't go buying a boat when you can barely pay your mortgage,” Obama said. “You don't blow a bunch of cash on Vegas when you're trying to save for college. You prioritize. You make tough choices.” AP reporter Silva seemed so determined to maximize her “Sin City” references that she did so in her second paragraph rather than actually quote what Obama said about, well, “Vegas.” Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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Harold Pinter’s forgotten sketch rediscovered after more than 50 years

Surprise find at British Library is the script of ‘Umbrellas’, part of a 1960 revue performed only once at the Nottingham Playhouse It was part of a 1960 revue at the Nottingham Playhouse called You, Me and the Gatepost, performed for one night only, and then promptly forgotten. But the sketch, written by a 29-year-old Harold Pinter and lost for more than half a century, has re-emerged as a result of some diligent detective work and is published by the Guardian for the first time and in full. The sketch, set on the sunbathed terrace of a large hotel and called Umbrellas, is very Pinter, and if there was any doubt who the author was, then the 12 designated pauses are something of a giveaway. Pinter’s widow, Lady Antonia Fraser, said she had been “completely unaware” of the existence of Umbrellas. “It’s fun. We’ve all been quarrelling over acting it in the family. I want to act B, which is the better part, but so far I’ve only managed to act A, so we’re waiting for some really good actors to do it.” The sketch was discovered by Ian Greaves, who works on the archive of the absurdist playwright NF Simpson. Simpson contributed to You, Me and the Gatepost. Jamie Andrews, head of English and drama at the British Library, said once it was known the revue had been staged, the scripts had to be somewhere in the collections because every script was submitted to censors at the lord chamberlain’s office – and the library holds them all. The scripts were duly found and, to the amazement of everyone involved, there was Umbrellas, among 25 sketches performed that night. Greaves recalls feeling “astonishment. And wanting to get home and check every book I had on Pinter to try to get to the bottom of it. It is extraordinary that things like this can crop up.” While archivists do not think there are many more Pinter surprises in the British Library, they are fairly sure more may emerge about other writers from the archive of something like 56,000 20th-century scripts submitted to the lord chamberlain’s office, which finally lost its vetting role in 1968. The sketch was performed in a good year for the young Pinter, with A Night Out getting a huge ITV audience in the Armchair Theatre slot while The Caretaker was taking the West End by storm. Quite why the revue in Nottingham got hardly any coverage is another question – although the London-centrism of national newspaper critics is as good a reason as any. “It seems peculiar and incredible that a work by the West End’s ‘triumph’ Harold Pinter was just passed by,” said Greaves. The scripts come with a short “reader’s report” by someone called CD Heriot which recommends that the revue is allowed to go ahead without cuts. The report calls it “an excellent revue containing the best of all the fashionable ‘off-beat’ writers” – people such as Pinter, John Mortimer, Ann Jellicoe and Shelagh Delaney. The sketch’s existence was revealed as the theatre with which Pinter was most closely associated, the 130-year-old Comedy theatre, was officially renamed the Harold Pinter theatre. Fraser said she burst into tears when she heard of the plan at the end of the recent run of Pinter’s Betrayal. “It is an extremely moving day for me. Harold would have been completely thrilled, there’s no question at all about that.” Fittingly, the first play to be staged in the newly renamed theatre is Ariel Dorfman’s Death and the Maiden, starring Thandie Newton, which had its first night on Monday night. Dorfman said Pinter was the play’s mentor, using his influence to get it performed at the Royal Court after seeing a read-through at the ICA in 1990. “For me, it’s magical,” said Dorfman. “That the first play in the Pinter theatre should not be a Pinter play, but a play that is possible because he existed is the most enduring testimony to his legacy.” “It is as if the gods of theatre and the arts are conspiring to make this a very significant event. I’m sentimental about these things but I do believe in these magical coincidences. Dorfman, a good friend of Pinter and Fraser, has also read Umbrellas. “I loved it,” he said. “It is so much Harold. I love these two old gents in the sun speaking about umbrellas. It somehow is absurd, but everyday absurd; the sort of thing you could overhear.” Critic’s view We tend to forget that, between the failure of The Birthday Party in 1958 and the success of The Caretaker in 1960, Harold Pinter wrote many revue-sketches. While this latest example to come to light may be a squib, it’s certainly not a damp one: try reading it aloud with someone and you’ll see how it works. For a start it depends heavily for comic effect on the pauses between the lines: a skill which Pinter told me he’d acquired from seeing Jack Benny at the London Palladium in the late 1940s. As in all Pinter’s sketches, you also get a hint of themes he was to explore in his plays. This one clearly is about power: character A smugly rejoices in the fact that he has it, while character B is left in a state of impotent envy. I wouldn’t place this sketch on the same level of Pinter’s miniature masterpiece, Last To Go, in which a coffee-stall owner and a newspaper seller fend off fear of loneliness and death through desultory chat. But it’s wonderful to have a bit of newly-discovered Pinter. It also reminds us that, along with Peter Cook, Pinter was a prolific revue-sketch writer who used a popular form to explore the oddities of human behaviour. Michael Billington Umbrellas, by Harold Pinter Two gentlemen in deckchairs on the terrace of a large hotel. Wearing shorts and sunglasses. Sunbathing. They do not move throughout the exchange A: The weather’s too much for me today. PAUSE B: Well, you’re damn lucky you’ve got your umbrella. A: I’m never without it, old boy. PAUSE B: I think I’d do well to follow your example. A: Yes, you would. Means the world to me. I never find myself at a loss. You understand what I mean? B : You’re a shrewd fellow, I’ll say that for you. PAUSE A : My house is full of umbrellas. B : You can’t have too many. A : You’ve never said a truer word, old boy. PAUSE B : I haven’t got one to bless myself with. PAUSE A : Well, I can forsee [sic] a time you’ll regret it. B : I think the time’s come, old boy. A : You can’t be too careful, old boy. PAUSE B : Well, you’ve got your feet firmly planted on the earth, there’s no doubt about that. PAUSE A : I certainly feel secure, old boy. B : Yes, you know where you stand, all right. You can’t take that away from you. PAUSE A : You’ll find they’re a true friend to you, umbrellas. PAUSE B : Maybe I’ll buy one. PAUSE A : Don’t come to me. It would be like tearing my heart out, to part with any of mine. PAUSE B : You find them handy, eh? PAUSE A : Yes … Oh, yes. When it’s raining, particularly. Blackout © The estate of Harold Pinter 2011 All rights reserved Harold Pinter Theatre British Library Mark Brown guardian.co.uk

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Harold Pinter’s forgotten sketch rediscovered after more than 50 years

Surprise find at British Library is the script of ‘Umbrellas’, part of a 1960 revue performed only once at the Nottingham Playhouse It was part of a 1960 revue at the Nottingham Playhouse called You, Me and the Gatepost, performed for one night only, and then promptly forgotten. But the sketch, written by a 29-year-old Harold Pinter and lost for more than half a century, has re-emerged as a result of some diligent detective work and is published by the Guardian for the first time and in full. The sketch, set on the sunbathed terrace of a large hotel and called Umbrellas, is very Pinter, and if there was any doubt who the author was, then the 12 designated pauses are something of a giveaway. Pinter’s widow, Lady Antonia Fraser, said she had been “completely unaware” of the existence of Umbrellas. “It’s fun. We’ve all been quarrelling over acting it in the family. I want to act B, which is the better part, but so far I’ve only managed to act A, so we’re waiting for some really good actors to do it.” The sketch was discovered by Ian Greaves, who works on the archive of the absurdist playwright NF Simpson. Simpson contributed to You, Me and the Gatepost. Jamie Andrews, head of English and drama at the British Library, said once it was known the revue had been staged, the scripts had to be somewhere in the collections because every script was submitted to censors at the lord chamberlain’s office – and the library holds them all. The scripts were duly found and, to the amazement of everyone involved, there was Umbrellas, among 25 sketches performed that night. Greaves recalls feeling “astonishment. And wanting to get home and check every book I had on Pinter to try to get to the bottom of it. It is extraordinary that things like this can crop up.” While archivists do not think there are many more Pinter surprises in the British Library, they are fairly sure more may emerge about other writers from the archive of something like 56,000 20th-century scripts submitted to the lord chamberlain’s office, which finally lost its vetting role in 1968. The sketch was performed in a good year for the young Pinter, with A Night Out getting a huge ITV audience in the Armchair Theatre slot while The Caretaker was taking the West End by storm. Quite why the revue in Nottingham got hardly any coverage is another question – although the London-centrism of national newspaper critics is as good a reason as any. “It seems peculiar and incredible that a work by the West End’s ‘triumph’ Harold Pinter was just passed by,” said Greaves. The scripts come with a short “reader’s report” by someone called CD Heriot which recommends that the revue is allowed to go ahead without cuts. The report calls it “an excellent revue containing the best of all the fashionable ‘off-beat’ writers” – people such as Pinter, John Mortimer, Ann Jellicoe and Shelagh Delaney. The sketch’s existence was revealed as the theatre with which Pinter was most closely associated, the 130-year-old Comedy theatre, was officially renamed the Harold Pinter theatre. Fraser said she burst into tears when she heard of the plan at the end of the recent run of Pinter’s Betrayal. “It is an extremely moving day for me. Harold would have been completely thrilled, there’s no question at all about that.” Fittingly, the first play to be staged in the newly renamed theatre is Ariel Dorfman’s Death and the Maiden, starring Thandie Newton, which had its first night on Monday night. Dorfman said Pinter was the play’s mentor, using his influence to get it performed at the Royal Court after seeing a read-through at the ICA in 1990. “For me, it’s magical,” said Dorfman. “That the first play in the Pinter theatre should not be a Pinter play, but a play that is possible because he existed is the most enduring testimony to his legacy.” “It is as if the gods of theatre and the arts are conspiring to make this a very significant event. I’m sentimental about these things but I do believe in these magical coincidences. Dorfman, a good friend of Pinter and Fraser, has also read Umbrellas. “I loved it,” he said. “It is so much Harold. I love these two old gents in the sun speaking about umbrellas. It somehow is absurd, but everyday absurd; the sort of thing you could overhear.” Critic’s view We tend to forget that, between the failure of The Birthday Party in 1958 and the success of The Caretaker in 1960, Harold Pinter wrote many revue-sketches. While this latest example to come to light may be a squib, it’s certainly not a damp one: try reading it aloud with someone and you’ll see how it works. For a start it depends heavily for comic effect on the pauses between the lines: a skill which Pinter told me he’d acquired from seeing Jack Benny at the London Palladium in the late 1940s. As in all Pinter’s sketches, you also get a hint of themes he was to explore in his plays. This one clearly is about power: character A smugly rejoices in the fact that he has it, while character B is left in a state of impotent envy. I wouldn’t place this sketch on the same level of Pinter’s miniature masterpiece, Last To Go, in which a coffee-stall owner and a newspaper seller fend off fear of loneliness and death through desultory chat. But it’s wonderful to have a bit of newly-discovered Pinter. It also reminds us that, along with Peter Cook, Pinter was a prolific revue-sketch writer who used a popular form to explore the oddities of human behaviour. Michael Billington Umbrellas, by Harold Pinter Two gentlemen in deckchairs on the terrace of a large hotel. Wearing shorts and sunglasses. Sunbathing. They do not move throughout the exchange A: The weather’s too much for me today. PAUSE B: Well, you’re damn lucky you’ve got your umbrella. A: I’m never without it, old boy. PAUSE B: I think I’d do well to follow your example. A: Yes, you would. Means the world to me. I never find myself at a loss. You understand what I mean? B : You’re a shrewd fellow, I’ll say that for you. PAUSE A : My house is full of umbrellas. B : You can’t have too many. A : You’ve never said a truer word, old boy. PAUSE B : I haven’t got one to bless myself with. PAUSE A : Well, I can forsee [sic] a time you’ll regret it. B : I think the time’s come, old boy. A : You can’t be too careful, old boy. PAUSE B : Well, you’ve got your feet firmly planted on the earth, there’s no doubt about that. PAUSE A : I certainly feel secure, old boy. B : Yes, you know where you stand, all right. You can’t take that away from you. PAUSE A : You’ll find they’re a true friend to you, umbrellas. PAUSE B : Maybe I’ll buy one. PAUSE A : Don’t come to me. It would be like tearing my heart out, to part with any of mine. PAUSE B : You find them handy, eh? PAUSE A : Yes … Oh, yes. When it’s raining, particularly. Blackout © The estate of Harold Pinter 2011 All rights reserved Harold Pinter Theatre British Library Mark Brown guardian.co.uk

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Bringing Up Baby Organically

There’s a new movement under way to go green – starting from the first days of life.

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Supernote lets you take some pretty super notes on your ASUS tablet (video)

Sit back and take notes while we… talk about Supernote. This note-taking app quietly debuted on the Eee Pad Transformer and Slider earlier this month, when ASUS rolled out an OTA update to Android 3.2.1, but the company has now provided substantially more details on the feature, which promises to “revolutionize the way you take notes in class.” With Supernote onboard, students can write or scribble using either the keyboard or their own fingers. That isn’t exactly enthralling, in and of itself, but what’s cool is the fact that Supernote will convert each hand-drawn item into an image, allowing users to seamlessly modify or delete their own characters as if they were typed text. The tool also makes it easy to insert graphs or charts, thanks to an “Add Annotation” option that integrates diagrams directly into your lecture notes. And, perhaps best of all, the app will even let you insert photos, meaning you can just take a shot of your professor’s blackboard and worry about understanding it later. Intrigued? Check out a demo video, after the break. Continue reading Supernote lets you take some pretty super notes on your ASUS tablet (video) Supernote lets you take some pretty super notes on your ASUS tablet (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 Oct 2011 17:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Ryanair crew members used tape to fix a pilot’s window before takeoff—only to turn around when the tape came loose 20 minutes into the flight, the Sun reports. “We were kept in the dark, and were terrified. I could see guys taping in the windscreen with what looked like…

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Watch: Disgruntled Employee Quits Job, Backed by Brass Band

It’s one thing to go out with a bang. It’s quite another to go out with a band. Joey DeFrancesco, who says he spent three miserable years at the Providence Renaissance hotel in Rhode Island, decided to quit in style by taking a camera crew and a brass band to punctuate his grand exit. His

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