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Continue reading …**Written by Doug Powers This flashback could be coming to the campaign ads of many GOP hopefuls, not to mention Obama, fairly soon: ***** Reason.com points this out: One other thing to note is that Romney praises Kennedy for helping make the case that federal support was necessary to fund the state-based coverage expansion. Romney Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Michelle Malkin Discovery Date : 09/04/2010 23:00 Number of articles : 6
Continue reading …Months after moving into renovated theatre, Boyd and executive director Vikki Heywood to stand down in 2012, a ‘planned and slow departure’ The duo who have carried the Royal Shakespeare Company into both a fresh artistic era, and a new £112.8m theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon, are to step down by the end of next year. Michael Boyd , the company’s artistic director, and Vikki Heywood , its executive director, will step down simultaneously, they have announced. According to Boyd: “I have always said that it would take 10 years to make a genuine difference in the life and the soul of the company, and though 10 years will not be enough to achieve all that I would like, it will be time for me to pass the challenges on to a new artistic director.” Heywood added: “Michael and I have decided to leave at the same time because that is the right decision for the company. This is a planned and slow departure with a progressive transformation to a new leadership.” The new chairman of the RSC, Nigel Hugill, will put together a selection committee, which will hope to make an appointment in the first quarter of 2012. Running the RSC is, aside from the artistic directorship of the National Theatre, arguably the most powerful job in British theatre. A challenge for an incoming team will be to resolve the question of a permanent London home for the company, still left hanging after Boyd’s predecessor, Adrian Noble, removed the company from the Barbican shortly before his departure in 2003. Boyd inherited an organisation in crisis , with a deficit running at around £1.5m, and a demoralised staff. The redevelopment of the unsatisfactory Stratford Royal Shakespeare Theatre was also pressing. He rebuilt the RSC’s acting ensemble, establishing long-term companies-within-the-company to undertake projects – notably the 2006-8 Histories cycle, which saw Shakespeare’s eight English historical plays performed in sequence . And from 2006-7, the company staged a Complete Works festival – every word written by the playwright performed in Stratford over the course of a year. In the past year, the company has celebrated its 50th birthday and moved into the newly redeveloped Royal Shakespeare and Swan theatres in Stratford, and announced that it will be leading a World Shakespeare festival as part of next year’s Cultural Olympiad. It also opened Matilda: the Musical, with music by Tim Minchin and book by Dennis Kelly, which transfers to the West End on Tuesday . Publishing the company’s annual report, Boyd and Heywood also reported that 500,000 extra day visitors had come to the RST since it opened in November 2010. In the 2010-11 season, the company played to 90% capacity in Stratford, London and Newcastle. Heywood said: “I am immensely proud to have led the team that built arguably the finest theatre for Shakespeare in the world, which is loved by both artists and audiences.” Delivering the project “on time and on budget has been one of the greatest achievements of my career,” she added. Royal Shakespeare Company Theatre William Shakespeare Charlotte Higgins guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …A group of conservative evangelicals is reaching out to the Republican presidential field and imploring them to tone down their rhetoric on illegal immigration. Dr. Richard Land, a leader of the Southern Baptist Convention, and Dr. Matthew Staver, dean of Liberty University Law School, told reporters today that they admire Gov. Rick Perry for standing
Continue reading …New York City and Los Angeles–the nation’s two largest school districts–have faced criticism this week for failing to adequately educate students who are learning English. Los Angeles is now implementing a new plan mandated by the federal Education Department to tackle its problems, while New York City leaders have agreed to try a new approach
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Continue reading …The man accused of Yeates’s murder covers his face as jurors see pictures of her body and injuries The man accused of murdering the landscape architect Joanna Yeates broke down in tears as photographs of her bruised and bloodied body were shown at his trial on Friday. Vincent Tabak put his face in his hands and appeared to peer through his fingers when the graphic images were displayed on screens around the court, including one close to him in the dock. Tabak, 33, who has admitted manslaughter but denies murder, then took his glasses off and dabbed away tears. The court heard details of some of the 43 injuries Yeates is alleged to have suffered as Tabak attacked and strangled her at her flat in Bristol. A pathologist said she must have been alive when some of the injuries were caused. The prosecution alleges Tabak abducted his 25-year-old neighbour after she returned home after an evening in the pub, and that he bundled her body into his car and left her on the side of a country road, Longwood Lane at Failand, three miles from the scene of the murder in Clifton. Yeates’s body was found by a dog walker, Daniel Birch, on Christmas morning, eight days later. In a statement read out to court, Birch said: “I saw a lump in the snow and what appeared to be a denim jeans pocket on the left-hand verge. I didn’t think about it straightaway and continued walking. After about 10 paces, my mind was saying: ‘That’s a body.’ ” Yeates was lying with her knees pointing towards a quarry wall. Birch remembered the top of Yeates’ white knickers and part of her bare back being exposed through the snow. Mr Justice Field told the jurors they would have to see images of the body “in the interests of justice” . Among the photographs shown were ones of Yeates lying in a foetal position on Longwood Lane, her body covered in snow and leaves. The prosecution alleges Tabak tried to throw the body over the quarry wall but then concealed it beneath a pile of leaves. Images also showed her body being lifted on to a stretcher so that it could be removed from the scene. More pictures of the body were taken at a nearby mortuary. Yeates was still in a foetal position, her pink top pulled up to just under her shoulders. Her grey bra was visible as was part of her left breast. At this point Tabak broke down in the dock, turning towards a female Dutch interpreter helping him with medical terms. Yeates’s nose was bloodstained and a red-tinged icicle hung from it. Her eyes were puffy and red and there was bruising on her forehead, behind her ear and under her eyelids. Her cheeks and neck were also bruised. She had an abrasion on her lip and red bruises on her chin. Her blond hair was bloodstained. Home Office pathologist Russell Delaney said some of the injuries must have been suffered while Yeates was alive. Delaney said: “Bruising only occurs when the heart is beating – so the injuries occurred during life.” Her jeans were in place and Delaney told the court there was no indication they had been tampered with. A picture of Yeates’ right foot with the sock missing was also shown to the jury. The prosecution has alleged that Tabak took the sock. The trial at Bristol crown court continues. Joanna Yeates Crime Bristol guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The man accused of Yeates’s murder covers his face as jurors see pictures of her body and injuries The man accused of murdering the landscape architect Joanna Yeates broke down in tears as photographs of her bruised and bloodied body were shown at his trial on Friday. Vincent Tabak put his face in his hands and appeared to peer through his fingers when the graphic images were displayed on screens around the court, including one close to him in the dock. Tabak, 33, who has admitted manslaughter but denies murder, then took his glasses off and dabbed away tears. The court heard details of some of the 43 injuries Yeates is alleged to have suffered as Tabak attacked and strangled her at her flat in Bristol. A pathologist said she must have been alive when some of the injuries were caused. The prosecution alleges Tabak abducted his 25-year-old neighbour after she returned home after an evening in the pub, and that he bundled her body into his car and left her on the side of a country road, Longwood Lane at Failand, three miles from the scene of the murder in Clifton. Yeates’s body was found by a dog walker, Daniel Birch, on Christmas morning, eight days later. In a statement read out to court, Birch said: “I saw a lump in the snow and what appeared to be a denim jeans pocket on the left-hand verge. I didn’t think about it straightaway and continued walking. After about 10 paces, my mind was saying: ‘That’s a body.’ ” Yeates was lying with her knees pointing towards a quarry wall. Birch remembered the top of Yeates’ white knickers and part of her bare back being exposed through the snow. Mr Justice Field told the jurors they would have to see images of the body “in the interests of justice” . Among the photographs shown were ones of Yeates lying in a foetal position on Longwood Lane, her body covered in snow and leaves. The prosecution alleges Tabak tried to throw the body over the quarry wall but then concealed it beneath a pile of leaves. Images also showed her body being lifted on to a stretcher so that it could be removed from the scene. More pictures of the body were taken at a nearby mortuary. Yeates was still in a foetal position, her pink top pulled up to just under her shoulders. Her grey bra was visible as was part of her left breast. At this point Tabak broke down in the dock, turning towards a female Dutch interpreter helping him with medical terms. Yeates’s nose was bloodstained and a red-tinged icicle hung from it. Her eyes were puffy and red and there was bruising on her forehead, behind her ear and under her eyelids. Her cheeks and neck were also bruised. She had an abrasion on her lip and red bruises on her chin. Her blond hair was bloodstained. Home Office pathologist Russell Delaney said some of the injuries must have been suffered while Yeates was alive. Delaney said: “Bruising only occurs when the heart is beating – so the injuries occurred during life.” Her jeans were in place and Delaney told the court there was no indication they had been tampered with. A picture of Yeates’ right foot with the sock missing was also shown to the jury. The prosecution has alleged that Tabak took the sock. The trial at Bristol crown court continues. Joanna Yeates Crime Bristol guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Conservative minister apologises after being photographed binning papers but insists they contained nothing sensitive Oliver Letwin, a minister in the Cabinet Office, has apologised after being photographed dumping work-related documents in bins in a park close to Downing Street but insisted that none of the ditched papers contained classified information. David Cameron’s chief policy adviser gave the assurance after the revelations , backed by photographs of one piece of correspondence thrown away and of the minister putting papers in different bins, sparked concern about potential security risks as well as data protection breaches. On Friday morning, the office of the Information Commissioner said that it was launching an investigation into potential breaches of the Data Protection Act. The Daily Mirror reported that Letwin was seen on five separate days binning sensitive correspondence on terrorism, national security as well as constituents’ private details in the park near No 10. In all, the Mirror claimed that Letwin threw away more than 100 papers containing private information, including five intelligence and security committee letters. In one, MP Andrew Tyrie reportedly tells the ISC chairman, Sir Malcolm Rifkind, the committee “failed to get to the truth on UK involvement in rendition”. Another discarded document refered to al-Qaida links to Pakistan, the newspaper claimed. Cameron, the Liberal Democrat leader, Nick Clegg, and the chancellor, George Osborne, are all said to be mentioned in the dumped papers, as are organisations including the Ministry of Defence, the Home Office and the NHS. The paper described the Cabinet Office minister’s actions as a security breach, but a spokesman for Letwin insisted on Thursday evening that the papers were not of a sensitive nature. The newspaper reports triggered a letter from Labour MP and shadow minister without portfolio Michael Dugher to the cabinet secretary, Gus O’Donnell, calling on him to investigate the classification of any discarded documents and whether strict procedures for the disposal of government documents were breached. By late Friday morning, Downing Street confirmed that the Cabinet Office was looking into whether any sensitive material had been among the papers dumped. “Our understanding is that there were no classified documents,” a spokeswoman for No 10 said. “Most of the business Mr Letwin does in the park is constituency based. In the light of what has been reported, the Cabinet Office is looking into it.” Asked what the prime minister’s view was, she added: “Clearly, it’s not a sensible way to dispose of documents. Mr Letwin has agreed he will not dispose of documents in this way again.” The Labour leader, Ed Miliband, accused the minister of “treating important papers with contempt” and engaging in “very strange behaviour”. A fresh statement was issued by an aide to Letwin with an apology attached and the insistence that none of the information ditched had related to “official government business”. “Oliver Letwin is an incredibly hardworking constituency MP,” the spokesman said. “He does some of his parliamentary and constituency correspondence in the park before going to work in the morning and sometimes disposed of copies of letters there. These documents related to constituency and parliamentary rather than official government business, and did not contain any classified information. “Mr Letwin sincerely apologises to any concerned constituents and would like to make assurances that he will no longer dispose of copies of documents and constituency correspondence in this way.” Letwin, the MP for West Dorset, is an early riser who does a morning circuit of St James’s Park, usually starting at 5.30am. In this period he dictates letters for typing by his secretary during the day. The Labour backbencher Jeremy Corbyn told Radio 5 Live that while he enjoyed the “idea of ministers walking around the park in the morning”, carrying confidential documents was wrong. “It’s a remarkably silly thing to do,” the MP for Islington North said. “To then dump them all in a bin is really very stupid, because he could easily be spotted and followed and anybody could then pick them up.” A spokeswoman for the office of the Information Commissionersaid: “We are aware of the allegations and are making inquiries. Keeping personal data secure is a key principle of the Data Protection Act, and the ICO takes any breach of that principle very seriously.” Speaking in Leeds, Miliband said: “If it’s true that there were constituents who’d written to him and he was looking at constituency letters and they just ended up in the bin, I don’t think it’s the right way to act and the right way to treat people and people’s concerns. “I think he’ll have learnt his lesson, and I hope he does learn his lesson. I think most people would think, you’re dealing with sensitive correspondence, you should treat it in a sensitive way.” “There are plenty of ways of getting rid of sensitive documents. All the parliamentary papers are shredded and so are the ones in the House of Commons and presumably the ministry as well.” The revelations present a further headache for Cameron in a week during which Downing Street has been forced onto the back foot over the defence secretary, Liam Fox who was forced to resign on Friday. Zac Goldsmith, the Tory MP for Richmond, tweeted: “How is Oliver Letwin working in the park newsworthy?! Whoever in Labour has asked for (yet another) inquiry should be put to sleep.” Oliver Letwin Conservatives Hélène Mulholland Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk
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