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Amy Winehouse: private funeral to be held

Jewish ceremony for Amy Winehouse will take place in undisclosed location after postmortem results are inconclusive The family of Amy Winehouse will hold a private funeral for the singer, who was found dead on Saturday at the age of 27. The funeral will be held in an undisclosed location with only family members and close friends present, said family spokesman Chris Goodman. It is understood it will be held in three different stages, with the body of the singer expected to be cremated. The Jewish ceremony of bereavement, shiva, will be observed at a synagogue and later at the family home. A postmortem carried out on Monday following the sudden death of the singer did not establish the cause of her death. Further toxicology tests will be carried out with a definitive result expected in two to four weeks. A postmortem was carried out on Monday, hours after Winehouse’s parents formally identified her body, paving the way for a funeral. According to Jewish tradition the funeral of a deceased loved one should be happen as soon as possible after the death, with the mourning period lasting for seven days. An inquest into the singer’s death was opened at St Pancras coroner’s court and adjourned until 26 October. The 27-year-old singer, who fought a well-documented battle with drugs and alcohol, was found dead at her home in Camden Town by her bodyguard at around 4pm on Saturday afternoon. Police have said only that her death is unexplained, and that speculation regarding an overdose is “inappropriate”. Janis and Mitch Winehouse made a tearful appearance outside their daughter’s north London home and spoke to mourners, thanking them for their support. Mitch Winehouse, who flew back from New York immediately after hearing the news of his daughter’s death, told her fans, leaving handwritten notes and bouquets in memory of the singer: “I can’t tell you what this means to us – it really is making this a lot easier for us. Amy was about one thing and that was love, her whole life was devoted to her family and her friends and to you guys as well. We’re devastated and I’m speechless but thanks for coming.” He appeared also to address reporters, many of whom he has known for several years. “You’ve got to do what you’ve got to do. I know a lot of you, we’ve been together for five, six years. I’m glad you’re all here anyway,” he said. The impromptu shrine outside her home features photos as well as cards and notes, including an image of Winehouse posing in a bar. There is also a picture amended by artist Mysterious Al, showing her face with monochrome cartoon eyes and a white lightning strike in her beehive hair. Other less wholesome tributes were also on display, including half-full bottles of vodka and packets of cigarettes. Camera crews from around the world gathered outside her home on Monday as fans talked about their love of the singer, and some took photos of themselves in front of her house. Many left flowers and notes. One read: “Too fragile, too beautiful, too big a talent for this world.” Another thanked the star, saying: “Thanks to you I kept struggling in the toughest times.” At St Pancras coroner’s court the assistant deputy coroner, Suzanne Greenaway, said further toxicology tests would be carried out to establish how the singer died. During the brief inquest opening she mentioned only the bare facts of the death. Winehouse released only two albums in her short career. The first, Frank, went relatively unnoticed but the follow-up Back to Black propelled the artist to stratospheric success, winning her five Grammy awards. After the release of the album she was often in the headlines as much for her chaotic personal life as her music, including well-documented drug and alcohol problems and a tempestuous relationship with her former husband Blake Civil-Fielder. Fans have reacted to her death not only by laying flowers and writing tributes, but by buying her albums, with both of her records entering the charts. Her influence on a ream of female stars has been noted, with artists like Lady Gaga saying she “changed pop music forever”. She tweeted: “I remember knowing there was hope, and feeling not alone because of her. She lived jazz, she lived the blues.” Adele, a singer who like Winehouse has achieved huge success with her second album, paid tribute to the singer on her website. “Amy paved the way for artists like me and made people excited about British music again whilst being fearlessly hilarious and blasé,” she wrote. “Although I’m incredibly sad about Amy passing I’m also reminded of how immensely proud of her I am, and grateful to be inspired by her.’ Amy Winehouse Alexandra Topping guardian.co.uk

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IMF’s Christine Lagarde warns Europe and US over debt crises

• New IMF chief speaks out over US debt ceiling • Turbulence could ‘easily resurface’ in eurozone • US should not raise taxes or cut spending too soon The new head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Christine Lagarde , warned policymakers in Europe and America on Tuesday that failure to get to grips with their debt crises would lead to fresh turmoil in the global economy. Speaking in New York, the former French finance minister said that turbulence could “easily resurface” in the eurozone despite the positive response in the financial markets to last week’s bailout package . Lagarde also made it clear to bickering Democrats and Republicans in Washington that there would be knock-on effects for the rest of the global economy if there was no agreement on raising the US debt ceiling . “I’m hopeful that the political courage shown by European leaders will soon be followed by bold fiscal action in the US,” Lagarde said. “On the debt ceiling, the clock is ticking, and clearly the issue needs to be resolved immediately. Indeed, an adverse fiscal shock in the United States could have serious spillovers on the rest of the world. But more fundamentally, a credible fiscal adjustment plan is needed sooner rather than later.” Noting that the financial and economic crisis of 2008-09 had left “deep and long-lasting scars”, the IMF managing director said America should be careful not to raise taxes or cut spending too quickly. “The United States could be facing another jobless recovery. Again, that’s why we’ve advised against fiscal consolidation that is unduly hasty – even as we stress the importance of getting a fiscal consolidation plan agreed soon. We’ve also recommended active labour market policies to stem the rise in structural unemployment, and measures to ease adjustment in the housing market (for example, mortgage relief).” Economists at the Fund have estimated that a 1% cut in the budget deficit lowers growth by half a percentage point over two years. “This is why measures that are legislated now – but only reduce deficits in the future, when the recovery is more robust – would be particularly helpful,” Lagarde said. “But there is good news too: over the longer term, debt reduction can actually raise output by bringing down real interest rates and making room for tax cuts.” She added that the fiscal problems affecting countries on the periphery of the eurozone had “revealed the risks posed by an incomplete economic and monetary union. As a result, the euro area as a whole is experiencing difficulties. Even the tough fiscal and structural measures adopted by the affected countries have not convinced markets that a lasting solution is in place. “The agreement shows that European leaders believe in the eurozone, and will do what it takes to secure its destiny. It has been welcomed by financial markets, as reflected in the stronger euro and lower peripheral bond spreads. But turbulence could easily resurface. For this reason, it is essential that the summit’s commitments should be implemented quickly.” Lagarde also warned of the dangers of social instability, which contributed to the political upheaval in the Middle East and North Africa. “Social problems are of major concern to advanced economies too,” she said. “The young in particular are having a hard time finding work – with potentially lifelong implications in terms of employability and income. At the same time, the older generations are fighting to protect their health and pension benefits. Combine the two, and we may face a ‘clash of generations’, to borrow a term coined by the scholar David Rothkopf . This is why focusing on the right kind of growth is so important.” Global economy IMF Christine Lagarde Financial crisis Global recession European debt crisis US economy Larry Elliott guardian.co.uk

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Norway attacks: Anders Behring Breivik appears insane, says his lawyer

Lawyer of man who confessed to Norway killings says client claims he is part of international network and may be insane The lawyer defending Anders Behring Breivik, the suspect behind Norway’s terror attacks, said on Tuesday he had concluded his client was most likely “insane” and he was baffled that he had asked him to represent him. Geir Lippestad, a member of the Labour party whose youth wing (AUF) Breivik targeted, killing more than 60 during a massacre on Utøya island, said he would cease representing him if the suspect refused to agree to psychological tests. Describing Brievik as a “very cold” person, Lippestad added: “This whole case has indicated that he is insane.” He said defending the man who had confessed to carrying out the attacks was a job that had to be done to preserve the integrity of the Norwegian legal system, but did not understand why the killer had chosen him. Speaking to reporters, Lippestad also said Breivik had shared more details on his connections to far-right cells including a number outside the country. The focus continues to intensify on links between UK far-right groups and Brievik with London, the city where the suspect launched his organisation to “save Europe from Muslim takeover”. Lipestad added: “He talks about two cells in Norway, but several cells abroad.” Noregian police sources, however, have cast doubt on such claims. It was also established that Monday’s court appearance was closed to the public and media over police concerns Breivik would attempt to send signals to other cells. Meanwhile, Norway’s justice minister, Knut Storberget, has attempted to quell criticism of the police operation following the attacks, praising their work as “fantastic”. Within hours, Breivik’s lawyer had revealed that the suspect was surprised that he wasn’t stopped earlier during the two attacks. As prosecutors indicated they were exploring the possibility of charging Breivik with crimes against humanity – which carries a sentence of 30 years compared to the current maximum of 21 – the inquest into a series of failings dominated much of the debate in Norway. Among a set of unanswered concerns are why the Norwegian intelligence arm placed Breivik on a watch list after buying fertiliser in Poland that may have been used to build the Oslo bomb but then took no action. Such was the device’s ferocity that Storberget revealed that employees from his department remain missing in the ruins of the capital’s government building. Further north at the scene of Friday’s massacre, police said that 50 officers continue to comb the nearby waters for victims. With the current death toll likely to grow, an official list confirming the majority of identities could be released by police shortly. Police say they have been averaging 20 postmortems a day since the attacks. Brievik’s lawyer said his client was neither aware of the number he had killed or the strength of public revulsion following the atrocities. Lippestad said that the suspect had asked him how many he had killed. The lawyer also added that the 32-year-old hated anyone who did not share extremist views. As Norway waits for confirmation of those who died, attention continues to focus upon how Breivik, despite saying he had been planning the attacks since 2009, managed to evade Norway’s security agencies and carry out the twin attacks. It has emerged that as long ago as 2006 security concerns were raised that the main street running through the centre of Norway’s government district, where the device was detonated, should be closed. The Utøya massacre has also exposed the country’s lack of emergency air response, forcing officers to drive to the island as the killings went on. The one helicopter available to Norwegian special forces was 42 miles away and, according to local reports, could not be flown in time due to Norway’s “holiday season”. The setbacks meant armed teams took more than an hour to reach Utøya island. Norwegian media have also carried claims that ambulances on the way to the island to help the wounded were held up as police attempted to secure the area. Amid a flurry of fresh claims that pointed to links between the suspect and the English Defence League, further details on the pan-European nature of the attacks emerged with reports that Breivik travelled to Karlstad in Sweden, to pick up 150kg of aluminium to apparently give the Oslo device more power. On Tuesday, a Danish businessman revealed that he had discussed methods of creating explosions with Breivik. In an interview with the Danish newspaper Ekstra Bladet, Glenn Jensen said he had met the gunman several times over the past five or six years. Jensen, who ran a construction company and had legitimate knowledge of demolitions, said the conversation did not seem abnormal because “men and boys are interested in gunpowder and bullets and fast cars”. Further details on how Breivik may have funded the attacks have also surfaced. One local claim suggested Breivik was initially intent on raising money on the stock market to establish a European anti-Islam group, before later helping fund the attacks by applying for 25 different credit cards. Breivik has admitted to carrying out last Friday’s attacks but has pleaded not guilty, explaining to Oslo prosecutors that he “is happy” with the death toll. His one regret, it seems, is not being able to kill the former prime minister Gro Harlem Brundtland. The former PM gave a talk to young people gathered on Utøya Island but had left before Breivik arrived on a ferry, dressed as a policeman. Brundtland has dismissed being one of Breivik’s principal targets as unimportant. She said: “The image of this tragedy for me is the wonderful young people I spoke to in the hall [on Utøya].” She said she had met seven young girls, all planning to stand for the first time in elections in autumn. “They asked for advice and I told them to be themselves,” she said. “Now one of those girls has disappeared.” On Monday, Brundtland led thousands on a candleliit vigil through the centre of Oslo as the city expressed a compelling defiance that it would not be cowed by extremism. Urged to carry a rose to express their solidarity, by midnight the city was smothered in piles of the flowers with car windscreens, including police vans, covered in wreaths. Anders Behring Breivik Norway Europe The far right Mark Townsend Helen Pidd guardian.co.uk

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Chris Matthews Slams Sen. Mike Lee for Demanding Constitution be Rewritten to Pass Debt Limit

Click here to view this media Chris Matthews did a good job of making Utah Sen. Mike Lee look like the obstructionist he is on Hardball tonight. Here’s more from Think Progress — Mike Lee: I Want America’s ‘House To Come Down’ Unless Congress Votes To Rewrite Constitution : In an interview on MSNBC’s Hardball this evening, tenther Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) admitted that he is using the threat of a catastrophic default to extort the nation into rewriting the Constitution to force a permanent era of conservative governance : CHRIS MATTHEWS: How many days do you think we have, on the outside, to get this debt ceiling through before we have a problem? How many days? LEE: I don’t know, maybe ten days. MATTHEWS: Okay, in ten days you want to change the United States Constitution by two-thirds vote in both houses? That’s what you’re demanding. LEE: Yes. If possible we can’t change the Constitution just in Congress but we can submit it to the states. Let the states fight it out. MATTHEWS: And you think you’re being reasonable by saying you want a two-thirds vote in the House, which is Republican, and in the Senate which is Democrat. You want the Democratic Senate, by a two-thirds vote, to pass a constitutional amendment or you want the house to come down? LEE: Yes. That’s exactly what I’m saying and I’ve been saying this for six months. Go read the rest for more details on Lee’s hostage taking. Someone wake me up when this debt ceiling kabuki is over. I can barely stand watching any of it any more.

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Chris Matthews Slams Sen. Mike Lee for Demanding Constitution be Rewritten to Pass Debt Limit

Click here to view this media Chris Matthews did a good job of making Utah Sen. Mike Lee look like the obstructionist he is on Hardball tonight. Here’s more from Think Progress — Mike Lee: I Want America’s ‘House To Come Down’ Unless Congress Votes To Rewrite Constitution : In an interview on MSNBC’s Hardball this evening, tenther Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) admitted that he is using the threat of a catastrophic default to extort the nation into rewriting the Constitution to force a permanent era of conservative governance : CHRIS MATTHEWS: How many days do you think we have, on the outside, to get this debt ceiling through before we have a problem? How many days? LEE: I don’t know, maybe ten days. MATTHEWS: Okay, in ten days you want to change the United States Constitution by two-thirds vote in both houses? That’s what you’re demanding. LEE: Yes. If possible we can’t change the Constitution just in Congress but we can submit it to the states. Let the states fight it out. MATTHEWS: And you think you’re being reasonable by saying you want a two-thirds vote in the House, which is Republican, and in the Senate which is Democrat. You want the Democratic Senate, by a two-thirds vote, to pass a constitutional amendment or you want the house to come down? LEE: Yes. That’s exactly what I’m saying and I’ve been saying this for six months. Go read the rest for more details on Lee’s hostage taking. Someone wake me up when this debt ceiling kabuki is over. I can barely stand watching any of it any more.

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US cyber security chief quits after hacker attacks

Randy Vickers’s resignation follows string of online assaults on Senate, CIA, FBI and other government agencies The head of the US body responsible for combating cyber-attacks has resigned unexpectedly following a string of online assaults on the CIA and other government agencies. Randy Vickers, the director of the US computer emergency readiness team (CERT), stepped down on Friday, according to a Department of Homeland Security email obtained by the Reuters news agency . According to Reuters, the email did not disclose any reason for Vickers’s resignation. The Department of Homeland Security declined to comment. Vickers, director of CERT since 2009, will be temporarily replaced by deputy director Lee Rock. Vickers’s resignation follows a number of online attacks on government websites including the Senate, the CIA and the FBI. William Lynn, the US deputy defence secretary, revealed earlier this month that a foreign intelligence service had stolen up to 24,000 computer files from a Pentagon supplier in March – one of the largest successful cyber-attacks on a US government agency. The hacker collectives Anonymous and LulzSec targeted state websites after US intelligence agencies vowed to clamp down on the groups, resulting in a string of arrests worldwide. Sixteen alleged members of the Anonymous collective were arrested last week, as part of the investigation. Two British teenagers, 19-year-old Ryan Cleary and an unnamed 16-year-old, have been arrested in the past month accused of involvement in the attacks. The unnamed south London teenager – thought to go by the online alias “Tflow” – was released on bail on Friday following his arrest on Tuesday. Washington-based CERT is responsible for the protection of US government computer networks, including those of the Pentagon and Senate. Hacking Data and computer security Computing US national security United States Josh Halliday guardian.co.uk

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London 2012: a virtual tour of the Olympic Park

From the showpiece of the Olympic stadium to the cutting-edge sustainable design of the Velodrome, our 3D map of the Olympic Park takes you on a tour of the architectural stars of London 2012 Paul Scruton Martin Shuttleworth Paddy Allen Mark McCormick

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GDP figures mean Britain will miss its economic growth targets

UK economic growth forecasts of 1.7% now look unrealistic, economists warn A slowdown in Britain’s growth in the second quarter means that the economy is weaker than thought and has no chance of meeting its official growth target this year. The eagerly awaited preliminary GDP estimate for April to June showed the economy growing by 0.2%, rather than contracting. Although this was better than some of the gloomier forecasts, it is still slower than the 0.5% growth seen in the first quarter, which came after a 0.5% decline in the fourth quarter of last year. City economists and thinktanks warned that the Office for Budget Responsibility would have to revise down its 1.7% growth forecast for this year. Will Straw, associate director of Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR), estimates the UK will grow by just 1.2% this year. The weak growth is fuelling fears that Britain could lose its AAA credit rating unless the economy picks up sharply in the third quarter. The Office for National Statistics attributed some of the weakening in growth to a range of one-off events: the royal wedding, the additional bank holiday, the unusually warm April and also the impact of the Japanese tsunami on global supply chains. ONS chief statistician Joe Grice said taken together, these factors knocked 0.5% off GDP growth in the second quarter. He added that the economy’s underlying growth rate was higher than 0.2%. The service industries, which account for three-quarters of the economy, grew by 0.5%, as did the construction sector. But the production industries shrank by 1.4%. Most of that was down to a 3.2% fall in electricity and gas output due to warm weather in April while manufacturing, which was hit by the knock-on effects of the Japanese tsunami, dropped by 0.3%. Hotels and restaurants benefited from the April heatwave and the royal wedding however, growing by 2.2%. George Osborne welcomed the figures . “The positive news is that the British economy is continuing to grow and is creating jobs,” the chancellor said. “And it is positive news too that at a time of real international instability we are a safe haven in the storm. Our economy is stable at this time because this government has taken the difficult decisions to get to grips with Britain’s debts. Abandoning that now, as some argue we should, would only risk British jobs and growth.” However, Ed Balls, the shadow chancellor, said the figures were “deeply worrying” and a sign that the economy is flatlining in the face of a global hurricane. “When there is a hurricane you do not rip the foundations out of your own house. That is exactly what George Osborne has done,” Balls told the BBC. In his official response, he accused the chancellor of being “in total denial”. “Families, pensioners and businesses can feel that tax rises and spending cuts which go too far and too fast are hurting, but it’s increasingly clear that they aren’t working,” Balls said. “It’s now almost certain that George Osborne’s growth forecasts will be revised down for a fourth time, which will mean government borrowing is revised up once again.” The “meagre and pathetic” growth figure also sparked fresh calls for an economic Plan B from Unite, Britain’s largest union. Unite general secretary Len McCluskey said: “With every passing month, it is becoming clearer and clearer that the government’s monetarist and fiscal policies are not delivering the level of growth necessary for the British economy to recover. It is complacent of ministers to blame global economic problems for the bad figures. What we need to remember is that Britain stayed out the eurozone to give it more freedom of economic action – many of the problems we face are home-grown and can be laid directly at the door of George Osborne. “It is interesting to note the reports that there is rising tension between David Cameron and George Osborne about growth strategy – it is dawning on the Prime Minister that his friend is no economic genius.” Economic growth (GDP) Economics Economic policy Office for Budget Responsibility George Osborne Liberal-Conservative coalition Julia Kollewe guardian.co.uk

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Ettinger’s body is frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at the institute he founded, along with those of his mother and wives Robert Ettinger, a pioneer of the cryonics movement, has died and had his body stored at the facility he founded in the hope that medical technology will enable him to live again one day. Ettinger died at home on Saturday, aged 92, in a suburb of Detroit after weeks of declining health. His body became the 106th to be frozen and stored at the Cryonics Institute, which he founded in 1976. “My father devoted himself to doing what he could to enable his family, his friends and others to come back and live again,” said his son David. “Whether he will achieve that nobody knows at this point, but we think he has a good shot.” Ettinger, a university physics teacher, was seriously wounded during the second world war at the Battle of the Bulge and spent years in hospitals. The bone graft surgery that saved his legs inspired his optimism about the prospects of preserving life through technology, a statement from the institute said. . His son said Ettinger was also inspired by science fiction writings about deepfreezing the dead, and expected researchers to make serious progress toward developing the idea. But when nothing seemed to be happening, he wrote a 1964 book, The Prospect of Immortality, introducing the concept of cryonics. “If civilization endures, medical science should eventually be able to repair almost any damage to the human body, including freezing damage and senile debility or other cause of death,” he wrote. “No matter what kills us, whether old age or disease, and even if freezing techniques are still crude when we die, sooner or later our friends of the future should be equal to the task of reviving and curing us.” Ettinger promoted his theory in other writings and appearances on television. There are now similar facilities for preserving bodies in Arizona, California and in Russia. Ettinger also established the Immortalist Society, a research and education group devoted to cryonics and extending the human life span. The Cryonics Institute charges $28,000 (£17,000) to prepare a body and store it in a tank of liquid nitrogen. The first person frozen there was Ettinger’s mother, Rhea, who died in 1977. His two wives, Elaine and Mae, also are stored at the institute. Ettinger was never bothered by ridicule and was a “reluctant prophet”, his son said. “He did what he thought was necessary and appropriate and didn’t worry much about what people thought,” he said. “The people who are scoffers are like the people who said heavier-than-air flight won’t work.” Cryonics Medical research United States guardian.co.uk

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Climate activist Tim DeChristopher due for sentencing

‘Bidder No 70′, who won bogus bids for $1.8m of drilling rights, could face up to 10 years in prison An activist who disrupted a Bush administration auction for the oil and gas industry – bidding $1.8m (£1.1m) he did not have for the right to drill on remote areas of Utah – is due to be sentenced on Tuesday. As Bidder No 70, Tim DeChristopher put in bogus bids and won drilling rights to 14 parcels of land at the auction, seen at the time as a last scramble by the Bush administration to open up wilderness lands to oil and gas extraction. The action made DeChristopher a hero to some environmentalists, but he could face up to 10 years in prison and a $750,000 fine following his conviction last March of defrauding the government. “It is all up the judge. He can pretty much do what he wants,” DeChristopher, an economics student, said in a telephone interview. But he added: “I do think I will serve some time in prison. That is what I think will be the next chapter in my life.” Sentencing was scheduled for 3pm Utah time, or 10pm UK time on Tuesday. The severity of the sentence, in all likelihood, will be determined by negotiations between DeChristopher’s legal team and the prosecution on the extent of financial damage caused by his bogus bidding. The prosecution is pushing for four-and-a-half-year term, arguing that an example needs to be made of DeChristopher as a deterrent to other activists. DeChristopher’s legal team is urging a suspended sentence or probation. DeChristopher said he did not have a clear plan when he turned up at the Bush administration’s oil and gas leasing auction in Salt Lake City in December 2008. “At the time I went in with a very direct action kind of mindset thinking that if I can cause enough delay, stop this action and keep oil in the ground, then that would be worth it,” he said. He had come straight from writing one of his finals, unshaven and in an old down jacket. “I certainly didn’t look like anyone who was there,” he said. “I didn’t pretent to be an oil executive or anything.” Officials from the federal Bureau of Land Management asked if he wanted to bid. DeChristopher said yes, still thinking at that point that he just wanted to shout something or cause a disruption. But by the time the auction was over, DeChristopher had driven up prices on some parcels and made winning bids on 14 pieces of land – some of it near national parks. He knew he had no money to pay for it. The Obama administration later cancelled most of the sales, because of doubts about Bush’s leasing plan. However, the judge, Dee Benson, refused to allow DeChristopher’s lawyers to argue that the auction had been cancelled. DeChristopher, meanwhile, began acquiring a following on campuses and among an older generation of activists. He also founded a civil disobedience group, Peaceful Uprising . “Tim is a hero to me,” Peter Yarrow, the folk singer, and member of Peter, Paul and Mary, wrote in an article in the Los Angeles Times on Tuesday that likened DeChristopher to the leaders of the civil rights movement. “Throughout American history, acts of civil disobedience have led to change. Think about the Underground Railroad that helped escaped slaves to freedom, or about the courageous actions of people like Rosa Parks, who refused to stay in the back of the bus simply because of their skin color. Without this kind of defiance of unjust laws, our country would likely still be denying people of colour basic freedoms.” Activism Protest Oil Energy Fossil fuels Oil Commodities Oil and gas companies Energy industry Gas Gas Suzanne Goldenberg guardian.co.uk

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