Growing list of members calls on government to incorporate amendments agreed at spring conference Nick Clegg’s problems with the NHS reforms have dramatically resurfaced as his party’s grassroots threaten to force MPs to vote against the government unless their demands for changes to the bill were met in full. The deputy prime minister and prime minister David Cameron promised on Wednesday to “pause and listen” to growing concerns over the scale of reforms in the health bill. But in an escalation of the controversy that now threatens to destabilise the coalition, Liberal Democrat activists demanded that amendments spearheaded by Shirley Williams and endorsed by the party’s spring conference be taken on in full. In an unprecedented show of force about 1,200 Liberal Democrat party members, councillors, former parliamentary candidates, peers, conference representatives and council leaders instructed their leadership to “fully respect the declared view of the party”. Organisers of the Liberal Democrat revolt also condemned efforts by the government to “spin” their way out of the row. Since announcing a “pause” to the progress of the health bill, the government has suggested that some amendments would be tabled to clarify that GPs who do not want to take charge of the NHS budget for their patients would be able to leave it to other GPs in their area. The ability of private firms to “cherry pick” the most lucrative NHS services would also be restricted and a regulator will be told to prioritise value for money, rather than promote market competition, it emerged. However the Liberal Democrat grassroots made it clear that they want the government to go further and declared they will pressure their MPs to block the bill unless they are satisfied by future changes. Dr Evan Harris, the party’s former health spokesman, said: “The Liberal Democrats have already compromised on health policy in making the Coalition Agreement and we are not prepared to see our parliamentarians being put under pressure to vote for market reforms and other changes that go beyond the terms of the coalition agreement and the motion that we passed.” The Liberal Democrats voted almost unanimously at the party’s conference in Sheffield last month to give councillors a central role in GP commissioning and in scrutinising foundation trusts. They called for a ban on all cherry-picking by private companies offering treatment services. GP commissioning boards must construct annual plans in conjunction with new health and well-being boards. And they declared there should be a continued separation of commissioning and provision of services to prevent conflicts of interest. Faced with certain defeat, the party’s leadership promised to take the critical messages back to government. However, Liberal Democrat activists fear their leadership is not being tough enough with the Conservatives. Health policy NHS Health Shirley Williams Nick Clegg Liberal Democrats David Cameron Conservatives Daniel Boffey guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Growing list of members calls on government to incorporate amendments agreed at spring conference Nick Clegg’s problems with the NHS reforms have dramatically resurfaced as his party’s grassroots threaten to force MPs to vote against the government unless their demands for changes to the bill were met in full. The deputy prime minister and prime minister David Cameron promised on Wednesday to “pause and listen” to growing concerns over the scale of reforms in the health bill. But in an escalation of the controversy that now threatens to destabilise the coalition, Liberal Democrat activists demanded that amendments spearheaded by Shirley Williams and endorsed by the party’s spring conference be taken on in full. In an unprecedented show of force about 1,200 Liberal Democrat party members, councillors, former parliamentary candidates, peers, conference representatives and council leaders instructed their leadership to “fully respect the declared view of the party”. Organisers of the Liberal Democrat revolt also condemned efforts by the government to “spin” their way out of the row. Since announcing a “pause” to the progress of the health bill, the government has suggested that some amendments would be tabled to clarify that GPs who do not want to take charge of the NHS budget for their patients would be able to leave it to other GPs in their area. The ability of private firms to “cherry pick” the most lucrative NHS services would also be restricted and a regulator will be told to prioritise value for money, rather than promote market competition, it emerged. However the Liberal Democrat grassroots made it clear that they want the government to go further and declared they will pressure their MPs to block the bill unless they are satisfied by future changes. Dr Evan Harris, the party’s former health spokesman, said: “The Liberal Democrats have already compromised on health policy in making the Coalition Agreement and we are not prepared to see our parliamentarians being put under pressure to vote for market reforms and other changes that go beyond the terms of the coalition agreement and the motion that we passed.” The Liberal Democrats voted almost unanimously at the party’s conference in Sheffield last month to give councillors a central role in GP commissioning and in scrutinising foundation trusts. They called for a ban on all cherry-picking by private companies offering treatment services. GP commissioning boards must construct annual plans in conjunction with new health and well-being boards. And they declared there should be a continued separation of commissioning and provision of services to prevent conflicts of interest. Faced with certain defeat, the party’s leadership promised to take the critical messages back to government. However, Liberal Democrat activists fear their leadership is not being tough enough with the Conservatives. Health policy NHS Health Shirley Williams Nick Clegg Liberal Democrats David Cameron Conservatives Daniel Boffey guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media I’m not sure exactly what Roger Ailes and his fellow poobahs at Fox News were thinking when they hired Glenn Beck to join them in January 2009, but it is a telling fact that Beck’s primary professional background was as a morning zoo-show host — someone who specializes in goofy stunts and wild-over-the-top envelope pushing. Because that, of course, is exactly what they got for the next couple of years, before they finally decided to cut their losses. Now, there are plenty of things to object to about Glenn’s trainwreck of a career at Fox, particularly the noxious and yet little-noticed way he almost effortlessly mainstreamed extremist ideas and rhetoric , most recently with his full-bore descent into promoting John Birch Society conspiracism . Undoubtedly, Beck’s relentless fearmongering and the vicious eliminationism of his rhetoric were important components of what made Beck so toxic. Media Matters has compiled an impressive list of the “50 Worst Things Glenn Beck Said On Fox News” that gives a pretty good rundown — but is really only a start. Ultimately, the worst damage he caused was to the shape of our national discourse — from all these factors, but especially in the way he wrapped it up in a “zany” morning-zoo-show format, dragging that discourse down to the level of a prearranged pro-wrestling match. As Will Bunch puts it : Because the truth is that Beck’s ouster isn’t really the end of the nightmare, but just the beginning of the end. Over the last 27 months, Beck — and let’s be clear that he had a lot of help from the likes of Rush Limbaugh and Sarah Palin and Sean Hannity and Rand Paul and all the folks in the Tea Party Movement — managed to do incalculable harm to the American body politic, that Beck was exactly like Tom and Daisy Buchanan in “The Great Gatsby” who “smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness..” You’ll probably hear a lot about how Beck coarsened the political debate and how his words may have incited violence, but I think the wreckage is a lot more substantive, to actual policies that affect Americans every day. You see, there was a reason that Beck was so fond of a political theory called the Overton Window– so enamored, in fact, that he made it the title of his (officially) fictional “thriller” novel last summer. The Overton Window is a notion that you can radically move the parameters of political debate by pushing talk to the outer limits, so that ideas that were once deemed extreme suddenly appeared to be normal. Ironically, no one mastered the use of the Overton Window better than Beck. With all the focus on the leading edge of Beck’s craziness — the “caliphate” stuff, the flirtation with “the FEMA camps,” or President Obama’s “deep-seated hatred” of white people — it’s easy to foget how he rationalized once out-there ideas to millions of American conservatives, and how those ideas became ingrained in the Republican agenda that has thwarted progressivism from virtually the day Obama took office. … You could go on and on — the talk-radio jihad against big government that has put gutless Democrats so on the defensive that they no longer fight to protect vital programs but only over whether to agree to “steep” spending cuts or “draconian” ones, or the fear-mongering on terrorism and Gitmo that made quivering members of Congress afraid to house terror suspects in our supermax prisons. Don’t think that Beck’s nightly burst of insanity didn’t have a lot to do with these things, because they did. Don’t believe me? Then ask a fellow in South Carolina named Bob Inglis who was a Republican congressman until he told his constituents to “turn off Glenn Beck,” and lost a primary to an upstart who got 71 percent of the vote. Why do you think the Republicans in Washington remain in lock step, even as 90 percent of what they stay in lock step for is bat-guano crazy? As Amato said , Beck inflicted the damage that conservatives needed him to inflict. Now the rest of us get to pay for the long, slow, and perhaps impossible job of repairing it.
Continue reading …Footage leaked to the Observer shows Welsh Assembly candidate setting fire to Islamic holy book in his garden A senior member of the BNP who burned a copy of the Qur’an in his garden has been arrested following an investigation by the Observer . Footage of the burning shows Sion Owens, 40, from south Wales and a candidate for the forthcoming Welsh Assembly elections, soaking the Qur’an in kerosene and setting fire to it. A video clip of the act, leaked to the Observer and passed immediately to South Wales police, last night provoked fierce criticism from the government. A statement from the Home Office said: “The government absolutely condemns the burning of the Qur’an. It is fundamentally offensive to the values of our pluralist and tolerant society. “We equally condemn any attempts to create divisions between communities and are committed to ensuring that everyone has the freedom to live their lives free from fear of targeted hostility or harassment on the grounds of a particular characteristic, such as religion.” Owens, who has previously stood for a council seat, was last Tuesday unveiled by the BNP as a candidate for next month’s assembly elections. Several photographs place him alongside party leader Nick Griffin, including one showing the pair embracing during a party conference. The footage comes at a time of heightened tensions. Internationally, protests continued in Afghanistan last week against the recent Qur’an burning by the US pastor Terry Jones in his Florida church. Jones’s act triggered a wave of global violence that nine days ago led to protesters storming a UN Afghan compound, killing three UN staff members and four Nepalese guards. Police had feared that far-right British extremists might attempt to stir tensions here by replicating Jones’s stunt. Superintendent Phil Davies of South Wales police, who led the investigation, said: “We always adopt an extremely robust approach to allegations of this sort and find this sort of intolerance unacceptable in our society.” Owens was arrested within hours of police receiving the video. A second person, believed to have filmed the Qur’an burning, is also in police custody. It is unclear when the incident took place, but the five-minute footage is already understood to have been circulated to extremists. There is no evidence that Griffin was aware of the film. When Jones went ahead with his “punishment” of the Qur’an on 20 March it was initially largely ignored until it was streamed on the internet and preserved on YouTube. The footage of the burning in Britain clearly identifies Owens, who is wearing a “Whitelaw No Surrender” T-shirt. The film starts with the Qur’an lying in a Quality Street tin before Owens begins dousing the holy book in flammable liquid and then setting fire to it. The camera zooms in as the Qur’an burns. Saqed Mueen of the international security thinktank, the Royal United Services Institute, described the act as proof of the “globalisation of outrageous stunts”. Concern over Islamophobic provocation among far-right elements is epitomised by the rise of the English Defence League, which was founded in 2009 and claims to have thousands of members in scores of regional branches. The EDL’s rise coincides with the decline of the BNP as a political force, evident during last year’s poor general election performance. Although Griffin’s party had 338 candidates in the parliamentary elections, a record number for a far-right party in Britain, its share of the vote in key seats fell. The BNP fared little better in the council elections, failing in its concerted attempt to win control of Barking and Dagenham council and losing all but two of its 28 wards. The news that a senior BNP figure has been arrested after a film showing him burning the Qur’an will only discredit the party further, according to anti-fascist campaigners. Photographs show Owens at a Welsh Defence League demonstration with a group of alleged Nazis including Wayne Baldwin, who has been pictured posing in front of a swastika flag. The Observer has also been passed images that show Owens’s face apparently superimposed on Hitler’s body. Owens was officially announced last week as the BNP’s number three candidate for the South Wales West constituency of the Welsh assembly. In 2008 he stood for the BNP in council elections, polling almost a fifth of votes in his ward but finishing last out of three candidates. His campaign posters at the time show him standing on a ticket against “mass immigration, enforced multiculturalism, political correctness”. Although the BNP announced a record number of candidates for the Welsh assembly elections last week, anti-fascist groups maintain the party is a fading force, claiming that it has struggled to field candidates in the forthcoming local elections in areas that used to be target seats. BNP Islam Religion Wales Mark Townsend guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Shane Chowen – favourite in race to be new NUS president – would be the first non-graduate After months in which the battle over tuition fees has left Britain’s student movement battered and divided, the challenge of steering the NUS in a time of austerity could go to a candidate who has never been to university. Shane Chowen, 22, who has four science A-levels from City College Plymouth, is the frontrunner in the race to be the next NUS president, a contest which will be decided when student delegates gather for a national conference in Gateshead this week. The new president will take over from Aaron Porter, who decided against seeking re-election after facing fierce criticism that he had not done enough to stop the tripling of university tuition fees. If elected, Chowen would be the first NUS president without a degree. He argues that university students made common cause with further education colleges over fees. “I’m coming from the background of the majority of NUS members – two-thirds of NUS members are in FE,” said Chowen, who is currently vice-president for further education. His close relationship with Porter – the outgoing NUS president has endorsed him – may tarnish him in some eyes. The split in the student movement was laid bare after the NUS leadership took several days to show public support for direct action protest. Porter was also criticised for failing to attend the national day of action at which students were kettled for hours. Chowen said he was not “romantic” about university occupations. “I see them as a valid form of protest, a way of creating change, but only in certain circumstances.” He agrees that it is vital the NUS reaches out to the left of the student movement. At present, he says, there’s an “us and them culture”. If elected, he will campaign for the creation of an education system that “no longer has an academic, vocational divide”. He said: “It’s actually a class divide that starts at school, is reinforced at college and reinforced again at university. I want middle-class families to be OK with their young people coming home and saying, I want to do an apprenticeship.” His closest rival is Liam Burns, 26, a physics graduate from Heriot-Watt university and the current president of NUS Scotland. Both candidates oppose tuition fees, and argue that the rush by universities to charge the maximum fee will help to expose how a market in higher education is untenable. Burns said: “I don’t think they’re a done deal for very long. I don’t think I’ve ever seen legislation be so shaky in terms of implementation as fees.” He is critical of the NUS’s current leadership for allowing a rift to grow in the opposition to fees. “The NUS has retrenched back into the old narrative that there is a hard left and moderates, and that we have to do everything we can to marginalise them,” he said. “When we said we condemned everything that happened at Millbank, that was 30 or 40 people who were smashing windows. But there are far more people who have an affinity with direct action and we have to reach out to them.” Also standing in the election is Mark Bergfeld, a member of the Socialist Workers Party, and Thomas Byrne, a Conservative supporter who backs the tuition fees rise. The battle over fees is unlikely to be revisited in the lifetime of this parliament. A bigger challenge for the next NUS president will be the threat of diminished teaching hours at universities as government cuts bite. Student places could also be cut at institutions that ministers regard as over-priced. Wes Streeting, a former NUS president and now chief executive of the Helena Kennedy Foundation, said: “I think they’re going to be confronted with an immediate change which will shift the debate. There will be a university places crisis if [business secretary] Vince Cable follows through on the threat to cut places. “Much as they may want to challenge the fees model, the threat of cutting places is a serious threat to the widening participation agenda, and something I’m sure the NUS will have something to say about.” Students Tuition fees University funding Student politics Higher education Aaron Porter Jeevan Vasagar guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Police say bomb found in van on main Belfast to Dublin road could have resulted in huge devastation and loss of life Dissident republicans who prepared a 500lb (227kg) van bomb risked causing an Omagh-style massacre, politicians in Northern Ireland have said. Detectives believe the bomb, found at an underpass near the border on the main Belfast to Dublin road, may have been destined for a town centre attack. 29 people were killed and 220 were injured in a bomb attack in the centre of Omagh in August 1998. While it is believed the presence of a police checkpoint forced the latest bombers to abandon the vehicle, hundreds of motorists drove past the device unaware of the danger after traffic cones and warning signs had been removed, and even driven over, by others on the road. The blue Ford transit van, stolen in Maynooth outside Dublin in January and carrying false Donegal registration plates, was found near Newry and contained a wheelie bin packed with 500lbs of homemade explosives. The foiled attack is being blamed on dissident republicans opposed to the peace process, who last Saturday killed constable Ronan Kerr in a booby-trap bomb in Omagh. The device that killed the officer detonated not long after a fun run had passed the scene.Politicians have condemned the latest attempted bombing. Policing Board member and DUP representative Jonathan Bell said: “500lbs of explosives were planted to kill and we could have had another example of mass murder on our hands today. “Just as last week we had many children and families running past the explosive device that robbed our society of the life of a talented young officer, so today we could have had serious fatalities. “As our police raise their activities commensurate with the threat they face, so we must give them our full support.” The van was found on Thursday night and was made safe during a lengthy overnight security operation. Chief Superintendent Alasdair Robinson, commander for the area where the attack was uncovered, said poor warnings from the gang responsible had meant police only located the device after the van was spotted by a member of the public. He said the exact target was unclear, but added: “What we do know is that we had a police operation in place that evening, so it is our belief that the van was being moved to another location, but it was thwarted by the police operation at the time.” He added that the bomb may have been destined for a landmark building or a town centre, and could have caused “huge devastation and loss of life”. “This was a sophisticated device and I am disappointed, particularly in a week where we buried one of our colleagues, that there are still people who feel that there is legitimate cause to take forward the use of violence,” said the senior officer. “The device itself was viable and it was a sophisticated device and it would have been devastating had it reached its destination.” He also issued a warning to people to observe police cordons after motorists removed or drove over traffic cones, causing hundreds of other unsuspecting vehicles to drive right through the bomb scene. Northern Ireland UK security and terrorism guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Click refresh to update or click the auto-update button • Email your thoughts to scott.murray@guardian.co.uk • Read Lawrence Donegan’s day two report • Official Masters leaderboard • And in case you’re desirous of more golf reading… 6.55pm: Matsuyama is still the day’s main mover, having picked up three to move to -2, but perhaps not the most significant. The heroic Ryo Ishikawa, and Adam Scott with his stupid bloody broomhandle putter, are both two under through 4, and -4 for the tournament. And the defending champion Phil Mickelson is doing his usual Keystone Kops skittering up and down the leaderboard: he came out of the blocks flying, with birdies at 2 and 3, but has just dropped one at the short 4th; still, he’s in credit for the day at -3 for the tournament. 6.40pm: You’re all out in the hazy orange evening sun, getting slowly gaddered on crisp rosé, aren’t you. Hoy! Masters golf on over here! 6.35pm: Seven years ago, Ernie Els and Phil Mickelson played out one of the greatest duels in Masters history. Els’ final-day 67 looked to have won it, but Mickelson, a few groups behind, came back with a late flurry of birdies to snatch the green jacket. Els has never won at Augusta – he was also second in 2000 – and now he’s reduced to going round on his own, the first out today, the odd man in the draw after the cut. It’s sad to see. He’s just this minute nearly drained a 40-footer on 15 for birdie, but it didn’t quite drop, and you get the sense neither the crowd, nor the man himself, gave much of a toss either way. Els is two over for the day, +3 for the championship. The 7 he carded on this 15th hole on the first day really took the puff out of him. 6.25pm: Unfortunate Juxtaposition alert! Kim’s playing partner Matsuyama has just sunk a birdie putt on 10 to move to -2. His is the best showing of the day so far: three birdies, no blemishes on the card yet. 6.20pm: Horror showing of the day so far comes courtesy of Kim Kyung-Tae. The young Korean bogeyed the 1st, steadied himself awhile, then dropped four more strokes between 5 and 9 to go out in an ugly 41. He was three under for the tournament after 14 holes of his first round, at which point a double-bogey 7 at 15 took the wind out of his sails. He recovered that day with a birdie 2 at 16, to card a very acceptable opening day 70, but yesterday took 75 strokes, and this sad trend appears to be continuing today. He’s now +6, after starting the day +1. 6.10pm: Bothering the lower echelons with mini-moves are Adam Scott and Ryo Ishikawa, both one under for the day and -3 overall. Martin Laird of Scotland, but America really, is one under for the day and -2 for the tournament, alongside the aforementioned Mr Palmer, who after his eagle at 2 has dropped one at 5. Tum te tum. Six O’Clock News with Sue Lawley, Nicholas Witchell and some troublemaking militant lesbians : Also two under for the day is Hideki Matsuyama, with birdies on 3 and now 8: he’s -1 for the tournament. I warn you, this is unlikely to hot up for a while. News at 5.45 with Leonard Parkin : Not a whole lot of early movement today. Only two men have picked up two shots on their travels so far: Ryan Palmer, now -3, and his compatriot Bubba Watson, at -2. The Ian Poulter rollercoaster continues apace: he bogeyed the 1st, but picked the shot back up again on 3, to return to -1 for the tournament. 5.40pm. Selected top tee times, worked out in the British money: Phil Mickelson is out at 5.55pm. Paul Casey at 6.05pm. SERGIO at 6.25pm. Ross Fisher at 6.35pm. Luke Donald at 6.45pm. Lee Westwood at 6.55pm. Freddie Couples and Rickie Fowler at 7.05pm. YE Yang and Ricky Barnes at 7.15pm. Geoff Ogilvy and Alvaro Quiros at 7.25pm. KJ and Tiger at 7.35pm. And Rory wanders round with his good mate Jason Day – an Augusta virgin this year, remember – at 7.45pm. As for the others – and let’s face it, everyone wants Tiger and Rory in the final pairing tomorrow, landing haymakers on each other as they both go on birdie blitzes down the back nine – there’s plenty of talent hovering. Lee Westwood. KJ Choi. Geoff Ogilvy. Luke Donald. YE Yang. Jason Day. Rickie Fowler. FREDDIE COUPLES. Alvaro Quiros. SERGIO. Someone’s likely to come bursting out of the pack to make a determined tilt at the top of the leaderboard; well, it is Moving Day, after all. Awww-gusta, it’s you that I love… Rory McIlroy will have plenty to say about that, however. He’s leading after 36 holes, having followed up his stunning 65 on Thursday with a staunch 69. After a lucky escape at 11 yesterday followed by his first dropped shot of the tournament so far at 12, he showed minor signs of nerves, putting very averagely indeed, but he got round without any more drama to hold onto his advantage. Hopefully he’ll have regrouped, ready to attack (sensibly) today. Now then, it’s Moving Day today, when the serious contenders traditionally elbow their way into position, ready for the big push on Sunday. Tiger Woods, however, couldn’t be bothered to wait for it. Yesterday, languishing at level par after seven holes, he decided 18 months of being a laughing stock was more than enough for the greatest sports star on the planet, and got relentless. Eleven holes and seven birdies later, he’d carded a 66, and from a nondescript position in the pack, suddenly found himself three off the lead. Now, if any other golfer struggling with their game had done this, you’d put yesterday down as a blip, and expect the vagaries of form to send them crashing back into the pack today. But this is Tiger. And this is Augusta. He’s got to be the favourite to win this, hasn’t he? It’s Masters weekend! All together now: “Awww-gusta, it’s you that I love…” Masters 2011 The Masters Golf Scott Murray guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Click refresh to update or click the auto-update button • Email your thoughts to scott.murray@guardian.co.uk • Read Lawrence Donegan’s day two report • Official Masters leaderboard • And in case you’re desirous of more golf reading… 6.55pm: Matsuyama is still the day’s main mover, having picked up three to move to -2, but perhaps not the most significant. The heroic Ryo Ishikawa, and Adam Scott with his stupid bloody broomhandle putter, are both two under through 4, and -4 for the tournament. And the defending champion Phil Mickelson is doing his usual Keystone Kops skittering up and down the leaderboard: he came out of the blocks flying, with birdies at 2 and 3, but has just dropped one at the short 4th; still, he’s in credit for the day at -3 for the tournament. 6.40pm: You’re all out in the hazy orange evening sun, getting slowly gaddered on crisp rosé, aren’t you. Hoy! Masters golf on over here! 6.35pm: Seven years ago, Ernie Els and Phil Mickelson played out one of the greatest duels in Masters history. Els’ final-day 67 looked to have won it, but Mickelson, a few groups behind, came back with a late flurry of birdies to snatch the green jacket. Els has never won at Augusta – he was also second in 2000 – and now he’s reduced to going round on his own, the first out today, the odd man in the draw after the cut. It’s sad to see. He’s just this minute nearly drained a 40-footer on 15 for birdie, but it didn’t quite drop, and you get the sense neither the crowd, nor the man himself, gave much of a toss either way. Els is two over for the day, +3 for the championship. The 7 he carded on this 15th hole on the first day really took the puff out of him. 6.25pm: Unfortunate Juxtaposition alert! Kim’s playing partner Matsuyama has just sunk a birdie putt on 10 to move to -2. His is the best showing of the day so far: three birdies, no blemishes on the card yet. 6.20pm: Horror showing of the day so far comes courtesy of Kim Kyung-Tae. The young Korean bogeyed the 1st, steadied himself awhile, then dropped four more strokes between 5 and 9 to go out in an ugly 41. He was three under for the tournament after 14 holes of his first round, at which point a double-bogey 7 at 15 took the wind out of his sails. He recovered that day with a birdie 2 at 16, to card a very acceptable opening day 70, but yesterday took 75 strokes, and this sad trend appears to be continuing today. He’s now +6, after starting the day +1. 6.10pm: Bothering the lower echelons with mini-moves are Adam Scott and Ryo Ishikawa, both one under for the day and -3 overall. Martin Laird of Scotland, but America really, is one under for the day and -2 for the tournament, alongside the aforementioned Mr Palmer, who after his eagle at 2 has dropped one at 5. Tum te tum. Six O’Clock News with Sue Lawley, Nicholas Witchell and some troublemaking militant lesbians : Also two under for the day is Hideki Matsuyama, with birdies on 3 and now 8: he’s -1 for the tournament. I warn you, this is unlikely to hot up for a while. News at 5.45 with Leonard Parkin : Not a whole lot of early movement today. Only two men have picked up two shots on their travels so far: Ryan Palmer, now -3, and his compatriot Bubba Watson, at -2. The Ian Poulter rollercoaster continues apace: he bogeyed the 1st, but picked the shot back up again on 3, to return to -1 for the tournament. 5.40pm. Selected top tee times, worked out in the British money: Phil Mickelson is out at 5.55pm. Paul Casey at 6.05pm. SERGIO at 6.25pm. Ross Fisher at 6.35pm. Luke Donald at 6.45pm. Lee Westwood at 6.55pm. Freddie Couples and Rickie Fowler at 7.05pm. YE Yang and Ricky Barnes at 7.15pm. Geoff Ogilvy and Alvaro Quiros at 7.25pm. KJ and Tiger at 7.35pm. And Rory wanders round with his good mate Jason Day – an Augusta virgin this year, remember – at 7.45pm. As for the others – and let’s face it, everyone wants Tiger and Rory in the final pairing tomorrow, landing haymakers on each other as they both go on birdie blitzes down the back nine – there’s plenty of talent hovering. Lee Westwood. KJ Choi. Geoff Ogilvy. Luke Donald. YE Yang. Jason Day. Rickie Fowler. FREDDIE COUPLES. Alvaro Quiros. SERGIO. Someone’s likely to come bursting out of the pack to make a determined tilt at the top of the leaderboard; well, it is Moving Day, after all. Awww-gusta, it’s you that I love… Rory McIlroy will have plenty to say about that, however. He’s leading after 36 holes, having followed up his stunning 65 on Thursday with a staunch 69. After a lucky escape at 11 yesterday followed by his first dropped shot of the tournament so far at 12, he showed minor signs of nerves, putting very averagely indeed, but he got round without any more drama to hold onto his advantage. Hopefully he’ll have regrouped, ready to attack (sensibly) today. Now then, it’s Moving Day today, when the serious contenders traditionally elbow their way into position, ready for the big push on Sunday. Tiger Woods, however, couldn’t be bothered to wait for it. Yesterday, languishing at level par after seven holes, he decided 18 months of being a laughing stock was more than enough for the greatest sports star on the planet, and got relentless. Eleven holes and seven birdies later, he’d carded a 66, and from a nondescript position in the pack, suddenly found himself three off the lead. Now, if any other golfer struggling with their game had done this, you’d put yesterday down as a blip, and expect the vagaries of form to send them crashing back into the pack today. But this is Tiger. And this is Augusta. He’s got to be the favourite to win this, hasn’t he? It’s Masters weekend! All together now: “Awww-gusta, it’s you that I love…” Masters 2011 The Masters Golf Scott Murray guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Oscar Time runner-up for Gold Cup winner Waley-Cohen • Race marred by two fatalities as fences are missed out Ballabriggs at 16-1 gave the new generation of the McCain family victory in a race which will always be associated with their name when grinding out success in a bruising renewal of the John Smith’s Grand National. Donald McCain, whose father trained Red Rum to win the race three times, successes which helped elevate the contest into a national institution, enjoyed his first victory in the world’s most famous jumps race since taking over the licence from his father in 2006. But the race came not without its share of unwanted controversy, with two horses killed and the winning horse heading straight back to the racecourse stables after the race after showing signs of dehydration after the winning post. Instead it was left to jockey Jason Maguire to take the cheers of the sell-out crowd as he walked back to the winner’s enclosure with Ballabriggs left to enjoy being splashed in buckets of cold water, which were thankfully in ready supply given the unseasonal high temperatures at the track. Having taken up the lead at halfway, Maguire’s mount relished the challenge of the fences and produced some impressive jumps in front after one memorable bad blunder at Valentine’s Brook. Going to the second-last fence, there were still five runners in with a clear chance, Niche Market doing his best to get past the leader but under maximum pressure. It was only after the final fence that Irish National runner-up Oscar Time (14-1) emerged as the greatest danger to the winner and the pair set down to battle it out up the run-in. For one brief moment at the Elbow when Sam Waley-Cohen switched Oscar Time out to challenge, it looked as if he might reel in the leader, but Ballabriggs found more and scored by 2¼ lengths. Don’t Push It (9-1) tried gallantly to become the first horse since Red Rum himself to win the race twice and kept on bravely under Tony McCoy for third place, while State of Play (28-1) came from a long way back to finish fourth and make the frame in the race for the fourth consecutive years. A total of 19 horses completed the course. Favourite The Midnight Club finished sixth. Maguire rode the race with his right hand heavily bandaged after a heavy fall on the opening day of the meeting. “This is crazy,” said the jockey. “I’ve got to thank Donald, Mr Hemmings, my mother and father, everybody. It’s a dream come true. I tried to get in the first 10 early on so that if he did make a mistake we hadn’t as much ground to make up. He loved it and was jumping from fence to fence. He was attacking every one. “I got him to the front to get him relaxed and put breathers into him and that helped him get the trip. There was a question mark about him getting the trip, but Donald has done a great job. I don’t know what I feel. I’m just overwhelmed.” McCain, for whom Maguire rides as stable jockey, added: “We’ve always thought this might be an Aintree horse and you only need to see the way he’s taken to this place today. Good horses are easy to train. Everything has gone smoothly all year and he had a nice prep at Kelso last time. “He’s just an absolute pleasure to deal with, I know he’s won a Grand National, but he is. I’ve been involved in Grand Nationals all my life and you come here and you realise what this place is all about. It’s hot out there and he had been up there all the way. He gives his everything, he doesn’t hold anything back. He is coming round fine now thankfully, he was just tired.” Grand National 2011 Horse racing Grand National Aintree Will Hayler guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …US director of 12 Angry Men, The Pawnbroker and Dog Day Afternoon dies at home in Manhattan Sidney Lumet, arguably the greatest director of the American crime drama, has died at the age of 86. His stepdaughter, Leslie Gimbel, said Lumet died of lymphoma at his home in Manhattan, the New York Times reported. Lumet was nominated for the best director Oscar on four separate occasions between the late 50s and early 80s before picking up an honorary Academy Award in 2005. Born in Philadelphia, the son of two Yiddish stage performers, Lumet served as a radar repair man in the second world war before directing theatre productions in New York. This apprenticeship would form the basis for his later screen career. Lumet typically corralled his actors through a lengthy rehearsal period and then shot the film at speed. He made his feature debut with the acclaimed 12 Angry Men, a claustrophobic courtroom drama that starred Henry Fonda as a rogue juror. Lumet’s preferred location was the cauldron of inner-city New York and his favoured subject matter tended to be the porous line between order and criminality. Many of his most famous pictures – The Pawnbroker, Serpico, Dog Day Afternoon and The Verdict – stand as tense, earthy morality plays. But the director also took the occasional detour along the way, as evidenced by his plush version of Murder on the Orient Express, his Oscar-winning media satire Network, or 1978′s The Wiz, a Motown musical update of The Wizard of Oz, starring Michael Jackson and Diana Ross. His career spanned six decades and more than 50 films. “All I want is to get better and quantity can help me solve my problems,” he once admitted. “I’m thrilled by the idea that I’m not even sure how many films I’ve done. If I don’t have a script I adore, I do the one I like. If I don’t have one I like, I do one that has an actor I like or that presents some technical challenge.” Along the way, he worked with the likes of Marlon Brando, Katharine Hepburn, Paul Newman, Sean Connery, Albert Finney, Ingrid Bergman and Al Pacino. Lumet took a memorable final bow with Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead, an acclaimed crime saga that proved its creator was still a force to be reckoned with. “The veteran director Sidney Lumet may be 84 years old,” wrote Guardian film critic Peter Bradshaw in January 2008. “But in this superb heist thriller, he breaks out the shocks – and the twists – with the ferocity of a hungry youngster.” Sidney Lumet Crime Xan Brooks guardian.co.uk
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