Sylvester Stallone and his two brothers in boxing will co-produce a stage version of the film 1976. But it is a thinker or a turnip?
Ukrainian boxing brothers teamed up with Sylvester Stallone to organize a musical version of Rocky in Hamburg, Germany.
Stallone said he had long thought that the transfer of the Oscar-winning 1976 musical drama was a good idea, especially if your romantic side was amplified. "By late afternoon, Rocky is a story of love and could never have reached the final bell without Adrian. To see this story come to life in a music scene that makes me proud. And it would Rocky proud."
numbers will move the movie to the stage version includes Eye of the Tiger and Gonna Fly Now, it is unclear whether they will be translated into German, the language of music was written. Gonna Fly Now, the main melody was written by Bill Conti, who wrote most of the soundtrack and made the No on the U.S. Billboard for a week in 1977.
Vitali and Wladimir Klitschko will be co-producing the musical with Stallone and form the main actor, who has not yet been released. Stallone, whose career was launched by Rocky, and has sung in films like Crystal, it is unlikely to be abandoned.
The brothers, whose own history has been dedicated to the film, told how they were fans of the movie as children.
Shaun Parker is happy as Larry to begin to ask Larry how happy he was anyway? Because, although the advertising program and indicates that the play is about happiness, the result is quiet, his emotional temperature ranging from very happy and a little sad.
Indeed, although the stated intention of the Australian choreographer is the use of different personality types to explore what makes us happy, the room itself is more like a riff on children less concerned with the psychology of games, toys and activities. There are two main components of all: a giant rotating pigs edge of the stage, and an arc of bright balloons on it, like a galaxy of colors. The board first row of images of people (who represent the public) and the piece of chalk dancers to develop a record of the action: one stick-like figure, followed by drawings of skates wheels, more people, musical notes graffiti and monitor the actions of the stage, all stained and scamper like dancers on the board.
Set
Boppy sweet sounds and rhythms, the choreography for nine dancers - moving blocks that blend street dance, ballet, contemporary dance and skating - it's very small but larky. The best scenes suggest childlike wonder and simple pleasures: men climb the diving board again and back into space, like children delighted to discover something wonderful and new, a ball that turns becomes a microcosm of all the world of broken slate as a skater zooming round in the opposite direction, like a child eager to race against time. But these moments do not accelerate. The other rivalry games, reflecting, in pursuit and hide choreographic scribbles appear, sometimes funny and sometimes tender, but curiously without consequences - and left me a little sad not to have left a little happier " / aa> Rating: 3 / 5
had $ 1 million in bribes from the construction of two detention centers in exchange for filling with juvenile offenders
A judge of many years of service has been ordered to spend nearly 30 years in prison for his role in a corruption scandal that led to the Supreme Court of the State to overturn the convictions of thousands of children.
former Luzerne County Judge Mark Ciavarella Jr. was sentenced Thursday to 28 years in jail for $ 1 million (£ 617,000) in bribes from the construction of two juvenile detention centers in a case known as "children for money."
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court overturned about 4,000 convictions issued by Ciavarella between 2003 and 2008, claiming it violated the constitutional rights of minors, including the right to counsel and the right to enter intelligently a plea.
Ciavarella, 61, was tried and convicted of racketeering earlier this year. His lawyers had asked for a "reasonable" sentence in court documents, saying, in effect, already been punished enough.
"The media attention this issue has exceeded the coverage given to many and almost all murder capital, despite the protests, which will always be unfairly branded as" kids for cash " judge, "they say.
Federal prosecutors accused Ciavarella
and a second judge, Michael Conahan, to over 2 million in kickbacks from the builder of PA Child Care and Western PA Child Care detention and extortion Hundreds of thousands of dollars in facilities co-owner.
political activities on the island of Utøya with the camp of the Nazi Party condemned as a "new level"
Glenn Beck
chain American Right Tea Party favorite and compared those who were massacred in the Norwegian island of Utøya the youth wing of the Nazi Party.
"There was a shooting in a political field, which sounds a bit like the Hitler Youth, or something else. I mean, which is a children's camp is all about politics. Concern "Beck said in his radio show.
The comments were condemned by Torbjørn Eriksen, former press secretary, Jens Stoltenberg, Prime Minister of Norway.
Eriksen described these comments as a "new low" Beck says the Daily Telegraph: "The young political activists gathered in more than 60 years Utøya to learn and be part of democracy, all Otherwise what the Hitler Youth was ready. Glenn Beck's comments are ignorant, wrong and harmful to the extreme. "
depression scores, a series of disqualifications and an exodus of advertisers to combine earlier this year to end seniority in U. Beck S. Fox News cable.
a campaign to pressure advertisers to boycott the press area of ??experts had been gathering pace, while Beck was involved in the fighting broke out in the conspiracy theories, often involving their air individuals from financier George Soros to Barack Obama.
Soros
The complaint was referred to his childhood in Hungary during the war. In remarks that have been described as "monstrous" by Jewish groups, the announcer said: "There is a Jewish boy to help send the Jews in death camps."
However, his recent comments on the "troubling" nature of the areas of youth policy can be a surprise for fans of Beck Tea Party movement.
questions require responses from large main theater and rape of our planet is covered playwright Mike Bartlett epic and bold production, directed by Rupert Goold on a night that lasts more than three hours and runs from 1968 to 2525. Earthquakes in London has the power and arrogance, but it is incomplete and teeth-grindingly whimsical in his vision of a Messiah to save the planet, cartoons. It feels important, but then leaves you a little hungry.
of the story is the young scientist Robert, at first glance to first date with his future wife in the 60's, swing, which sells its scientific principles to take a job as an apologist for the airline industry as a child, then leaves her three daughters.
Fast forward 20 years, Robert has become a prophet of climate change that pronounces all convicts. Sarah is the eldest daughter of the Minister of ice to the environment in the government coalition, and is about to make a decision on airport expansion, and the girl Jasmine is a hedonistic abandon. Middle daughter Freya is pregnant, and in a state of acute anxiety to a child in a world that seems to move the ground beneath their feet.
First seen at the Cottesloe in 2010 in a production that puts the audience into the performance space, the work had to be substantially reinvented by the director and designer Caroline Steinbeis Miriam Buether revival of the tour by traditional theaters .
not Robert announced that six billion people on a planet that can support a single dollar, and the next century "that will balance the books", so it's a night you left shaken, if all the waves - although the use of platinum is indeed staggering. Stage director deserves a medal, as the cast of the law, but there is something strange in a game that requires a vision both to preach the need to use less.
Olympic Games in 2012, Andrew Lloyd Webber and other producers should use their entrepreneurial skills to ensure the show goes to
In a business like the theater of the West End, where trust is all the news earlier this month that Andrew Lloyd Webber plans to close some of its West End shows including Phantom of the Opera during the Olympic week to appear as Mary Poppins to announce the death of childhood. Nobody knows exactly the effect the Olympics will be the scene of the West End, but it is unlikely to be as bad as the bombing - the only sustained period of the closure of the West End Theatre in living memory. Lloyd Webber certainly can not think that some people running around a track in East London are a greater threat to the theater, like Hitler, plague, and the Puritans?
There are reasons to nervousness of the contractor. In 2010, the European Tour Operators Association published research suggesting that previous Olympic Games had a "toxic" effect on the number of foreign visitors. Sydney, Athens and Beijing all wildly exaggerated numbers of visitors to their games, in part because regular visitors or potential visitors who have no interest in sport tend to stay away from Olympic years.
are regular visitors to the West End theater kept afloat during the summer months. A West End show is the key to the route of many people in London, but many tourists will simply not be in London next summer. Ticket Agencies are preparing for a bad deal. But perhaps they should seek to turn a crisis into an opportunity. Attend a performance is an important part of the experience of London (in a way that was not in Sydney, Athens and Beijing) and Olympic visitors to be attracted by access to theaters and marketing easy initiatives ticket will be strongly encouraged by the Society of London Theatre, which is an active approach. After all, there are only a few hours so you can see the pole vault and synchronized swimming.
If the Olympics have a depressing effect on the number of visitors and the assistance of the West End this year that the London Games will present on television screens in the world could produce a long-term benefit for tourism and theater in the years to come. Hope that Danny Boyle did not take any advice for the opening ceremony of the award ceremony in Beijing, where British culture was represented by Leona Lewis trills off a bus.
We ask teachers and parents explain how teachers' strike this week for students
Paul Luxmoore, Director of the School Dane Court Grammar in Margate, Kent
Our students have not experienced a general strike in his life, so I do not think many of them can see beyond having an unexpected out of school. Of course, if it were to continue for an extended period, as it did in the 1980s, they could start to feel very uncomfortable. I expect teachers to use common sense when answering questions from students on strikes. And I hope that some see an opportunity to discuss major political issues: the recession, debt and the collective economy, for example
Colin Goffin, deputy director and professor of media at Benjamin Britten High School Lowestoft
Our students are mostly enthusiastic about the idea of ??an extra day off, but we had some discussions on strikes. In media studies, we investigated how the decision to strike of teachers was covered in various newspapers. I also used as an opportunity to talk to older students on work contracts, asking "What if you have a job and your employer has amended his contract so he had to work long hours different or get money paid less? "
Catherine Bourne, an English teacher
not going to be amazing. I understand why the others are, but in the current economic climate, there are many people in other professions who have a difficult time for him not to withdraw their work. This is exactly what I say to students. I was not teaching for the money - that went into it because I wanted to make a difference in the lives of children. For me personally, there are many more important issues to get excited, like the introduction of the new Ebacc grade and how the government of professional qualifications such as BTEC almost worthless.
Jackie Schneider, a music teacher in primary school at Alamo Elementary School and Santa Teresa in the London Borough of Merton
As in all aspects of education, my principle is to always tell the truth, so accessible. So if the kids ask me what is the strike, I would say that this is a last resort, that teachers are leaving the workforce because they have a disagreement with the government, and after all other means of negotiations have failed, it is their democratic right to strike.
. The Guardian says the investigative reporter of the news media of the world listened to phone messages Milly Dower
. Describe the private detective Glenn Mulcair as "a brilliant Blagg" but he says he has acted as "facilitator"
. States that no longer supports self-regulation of the press
former star apologizes Journal Reporter with the family of Matt Lucas, a former partner and other stories that make up . Finds that the tabloid journalists were "cannon fodder" for the owners and he was threatened after he started talking
14:17:
Davies explains that if you go on the theme of the story and that person has a public relations consultant, if maneuver margin, will the story with his personal touch and you pull.
Alastair Campbell was "brilliant" in this area, says Davies.
often go to the other side if he is a murderer and is in defense of Reynolds, but he made history by history.
14:17: Davies is currently discussing the news of the decision not to alert the world of Max Mosley, the history of 'sexual activity prior to publication. Last week, Mosley said he knew nothing until 10 am the day of its publication.
Davies said that if he went to Mosley, "they will get a warrant for reasons of confidentiality."
I disagree
history, but I understand why not go near him.
14:15:
Davies says the Sunday Mirror has bought a kiss-and-tell the story. By alerting the other side involved in the story, the person was able to ban the paper.
Davies says he has his own problems with such stories, but he says he tries to illustrate the research is the "danger" involved in moving the other side.
2:12 p.m. However, there are cases where a journalist is not going the other hand, if we may endanger self-or are not ethical reasons for not seeking comment.
Davies argues that the classic case of a pedophile could be charged with murder and kidnapping, and if a journalist is preparing a background story is wrong and ask for the kidnapping and murder
There is an ethical problem here. Do you ask for the concentration camps of Hitler?
confidentiality and privacy can also be problematic.
14:08:
Davies asked if he agreed he did not put one of his criticism of the person concerned or the relevant documents before his book Flat Earth News was published.
He replied "absolutely not".
said he is currently teaching young reporters and said he wondered if that helps you go elsewhere or not, and says that "most cases" it is.
2:05 p.m.:.
resumed his research Leveson
Davies is now talking about "binology" - a reference to a practice used by a man who sold the Fleet Street stories based on documents found in the deposits from the public
He gives an example of Jonathan Aitken and the information obtained, apparently by Benjamin Pell.
Davies refers to a book written by Mark Watts on Pell, a man known in the trade press as "Benji the Binman."
2:01 p.m.
Labour MP Chris Bryant Twitter is just the BSkyB annual general meeting:
JM tom_watson whether BSkyB if ever paid for private investigators. They study
1:51 p.m. Alan Rusbridger, editor of the Guardian, Twitter has been through the testimony of Nick Davies.
You can follow him here @ arusbridger
Davies: Mulcair "ease" of piracy. His understanding is that journalists NotW deleted messages Milly Leveson #
1:28 p.m.:. now have a complete history of James Murdoch for re-election as president at the annual general meeting of BSkyB
13:24:
Here is a summary
Lunch:
. The Guardian journalist Nick Davies said research that journalists of the New World intercepted telephone messages on the dowry of Milly.
. Describes the private detective Glenn Mulcair as "Blagg brilliant", but said he has acted as "facilitator".
. It no longer supports self -regulation of the press. . Former Daily Star reporter Richard Peppiatt apologized to the family of Matt Lucas, former partners and others for the stories he wrote.
. He told reporters in the tabloids were "cannon fodder" for the owners and he was threatened after he started talking.
13:05:
Search breaks for lunch and Davies will be in the chair after eating. His testimony is expected to continue until 2:45 p.m., when the new features of the publisher of the ancient world, Paul McMullan, appears.
1:01 p.m.
Robert Jay Davies QC said he also refers to a Sunday Times journalist, David Connett, who took the role of a "tribunal. / Aa>
also refers to someone in the Sunday Telegraph in collaboration with Dr. David Kelly, who committed suicide after being discovered as a source for Andrew Gilligan "sexed" Iraq dossier.
Davies said Lord Ashcroft and Lord Levy both had their tax records Blagg by someone who seemed to work for the Sunday Times.
1:01 p.m. Blagg
One expert said he was working for the Sunday Times, but that was the end of 1980, says Davies .
It is one of the above, if you want, you do not like the way everything went.
24:57: Davies said he was "absolutely clear", known in the money that was going on, there was no clear indication of who was "Z" for the money spent.
He says it's fair to say that the Daily Mail (including former journalists have already been mentioned in connection with "Z") was not the only one to pay for stories. mail is not alone in their relationship with "Z", as I said, I think it was casual and widespread.
24:55:.
Davies talks about the persecution of "Z" and said that Fleet Street can be held when he was acquitted
When Scotland Yard tried to stop a further rise ... the trial was acquitted ... There was media coverage of crime has been celebrated by Fleet Street. It is fair to say that he was involved in a number of years in business casual, take cash from newspapers to the police.
24:53:.
Davies The new material pointing forward with his story
Davies said he took "note blagging, interceptions advice from voice mail, notes, e-mail interceptions, notes of phone hacking, theft, tracks, and hints of corruption police "
also knew that journalists carry cash for stories and that the police were frustrated because of the active investigation of the crimes were prevented from selling the information.
24:52: Davies asked about paragraph 271 of his testimony in which he states that in the middle of Fleet Street 1990 was the hiring of dozens of individuals and organizations, including an individual in Ruislip for ex-directory numbers, phone bills and other materials from confidential databases.
Davies said that the individual was brought to trial and Ruislip public information about the case, with the first Motorman investigation, was another source of information.
24:50: Davies is now talking about an individual "Z", the activities of Scotland Yard tried to stop. He then briefed the court.
Davies says that "Z" has worked on behalf of Fleet Street in the early 1980s until very recently, was still active when the Earth was flat writing news
court says the report, as well as public domain material and human resources were the basis for his stories on hacking the phone.
24:47:.
Breaking News BSkyB annual general meeting
Mark Sweney
see our media business, just Twitter the following:
81.24% in favor of the reelection of Murdoch. Murmurs in the room
and this:
James Murdoch re-election resolution. 18.76% vs
24:45:.
Davies asked if Leveson has access to the raw material of the Information Commissioner had over Whittamore
"I'm not used to answer questions," jokes Robert Jay QC. "Usually, the opposite," said Leveson.
Davies said he only asked because he has access and is surprised that there was no process.
Jay research now confirms that he has seen documents relating to Whittamore.
24:40: ". The dark arts"
Davies speaks on the chapter of his book Flat Earth News called Davies said he uses two reports on the operation Motorman, freedom of information and direct contact with the "two members of the [private investigator Steve] Whittamore network."
said "embarrassed" the Information Commissioner for times more information.
24:39:
Davies
written statement expands the reasons why he felt it would be a violation of privacy to publish a story a former Minister of phone is hacked.
The raw material for the history includes details of the messages were exchanged between him and a friend. I argued that we should not publish the messages - the intrusive, and it was perfectly possible to explain the important point that the Minister was a victim, without violating their privacy
The same type of balance was raised by the history of hacking voice mail Milly Dowler, who took me in July 2011. I was sure it was a matter of public interest which must be revealed, but there was some concern that the publication would violate family privacy Dowler is exposure to advertising more.
24:36:. Davies explains how to use the Freedom of Information Act on three occasions to extract information on research
24:34:.
Davies now asked about the police investigation into the phone hacking in 2006
He said that the Office initiated the investigation in January 2006 through analysis of phone records of the company. This has produced a wealth of information, but the prosecutor and the police decided not to proceed.
Davies asked how he knows, he answers that "good human source showed me the paper"
24:32:.
Davies said he heard a report from the CPC in November 2009 exempting newspapers phone hacking
The report was terrible, just a huge piece of work. My editor gave the committee of the CPC code editors through it, he went on radio and said, "This is worse than useless"
I do not trust the industry to regulate itself. I report, I want to be free. We deceive ourselves if we think it would work because it will not.
24:31:
Davies said he no longer supports the concept of self-regulation of the newspaper industry. He says the press is not able to keep its own house in order.
The history of the CCP's performance undermines the concept of self-regulation and re-reading of this test, I realized it was sticking up for self-regulation, but I no longer exist.
do not think it's an industry that is interested or capable of self-regulation.
24:28:.
Davies asked if he knew who took the phone Milly Dowler is
He said that the "facilitator" was the private detective Glenn Mulcair. Mulcair was "a brilliant Blagg" and could get the information from the telephone company. Mulcair said not really hear the same messages - more than has been done by the journalists themselves
If you ask who entered the voice mail of Milly, the answer is that this is one of several journalists and news from around the world that then deleted voice messages.
The moderator was Glenn Mulcair. There is a misconception, I think, how it works.
Not really, in general, do the same thing to listen to the message. Most of what is being done by journalists themselves.
Mulcair worked so they can do when there is a problem because it is a brilliant Blagg, to gather information, data from the mobile phone company.
time to time, I think, special projects only -. I think the royal family would be an example
Davies now speak of the revelations in The Guardian in July 2011 that the phone had been hacked Milly Dowler.
hestitate said about history, particularly the impact it would have Dowler family. However, sending a warning by police in Surrey to the family.
What was so important that we report that we had to find a way to enter the public domain. On the other hand, the family was in hell. We sent a detailed report by Surrey Police to say what is reported. We did what we could to soften the blow by sending details of warning.
24:23: Davies said the tutor was offered the story of a former cabinet minister, whose voice was hacked. He felt he went too far in terms of violation of privacy. Davies The reporter asked what he thought and he said he felt that the paper should not rebreach privacy has been violated in the first place.
24:22: ". Take out the checkbook"
Davies says he has already competed in the tabloids and he said that getting the first two pages of history, but it gets the chapter.
24:21:.
Davies says he has never paid a source of information and has never been the guardian to pay a police officer for a story
I think it's a practical question. The key you have to do is encourage people to talk to us. The way to do it successfully to build relationships and motivate ... is the most exciting thing of the information.
24:19:
Davies continues:
What I am arguing for journalism did not begin with the facts, there is a trial before selective. What we cover story ... this is very subjective
Davies says, "does not absolve the guardian" problems Peppiatt spoke in terms of single thought about the veracity of a story.
Davies refers to an article in the Guardian ran in 2008 that claimed the charred remains of at least five children were discovered in the basement of the house of a former Jersey children.
Davies, said the visit confirmed that the story does not stand up to examination.
These are problems that arise in all the newspapers - is a story too good to be demolished. The journalist who rang and said, "That's bullshit, there is no evidence at all," will not thank you.
24:12: Davies explained that the ownership structure of The Guardian, which is a trust, unlike the Daily Star and the type culture created by a single owner, as previously described by Richard Peppiatt.
He adds:
The broadsheets are based much more on advertising for revenue. This is where the roles popular that competitiveness through the ranks ...
broadsheets have less business imperative, which still sell copies, but not as many copies
24:09:. Davies now to another example, three years ago when there was a media blackout on Prince Harry's visit to Aghanistan
Before going to the army, called the Palace of the newspaper and asked for a media blackout.
Press
agreed not to publish, on the basis that if we did, to call down fire on him more and his team and did not want to be responsible. other hand meant that you took part in a history of public relations: "Harry and the" dogs 24:06: research lawyer, Robert Jay QC, Davies calls for a concrete example of the difficulties of the public interest. Davies told The Guardian "was a big problem with the hardware of Wikileaks."
Julian Davies persuaded Assange to work with The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel leaks, but "it soon became clear that it contained information that could make people on the ground in Afghanistan, seriously injured. "
is absolutely clear that he could not publish this information, but it happened.
24:03:
In connection with the public interest, Davies said:
I strongly disagree with the New World was a public interest in publishing the story about Max Mosley's sex life.
24:03:.
Davies
written statement of research has been published
24:01:.
Davies stated in paragraph six of his statement that the notion of public interest can be very "slippery"
in this expansion, said in operational terms is difficult because it is difficult to tell where the lines are supposed to be found.
The answer is that it would be nice if, in the public interest, but are blocked ... someone often difficult and personally I would like to say a public interest organization for advice or a member of the public may participate and may get advice from high quality.
With the advent of a conflict that would be able to provide advice and say "that's what I said." I wish I had something that was important in the case of a dispute .
11:59:.
In paragraph five of the statement of a witness Davies, says The Guardian has a clear code of practice on ethics
The Guardian has its own code and code of the CPC is a party, as an appendix. The NUJ code is less often mentioned, but what is more or less the same.
11:58 pm:
Davies said he accepted that it is frustrating for research that can not talk about their sources of In more detail, which means that will be a gap between what we know and what can be discussed openly.
11:55 pm: Robert Jay, counsel for the inquiry, however small this line - Davies How many people speak before the validation of claims in his book.
said a dozen for each journal title. "This does not mean that in relation to each count of 12 to 15 sources, but they have more than one."
11:54: Davies Leveson question "How many people are needed to validate the findings, as opposed to someone who comes and says 'X' and someone says "no, this is not true
Davies said:
I would say that a flexible set of 15 to 20 new journalists around the world who spoke on condition of anonymity for me or for a researcher. They have been an important engine driving the story forward tremenduously.
also says there are half a dozen others in the industry were very important.
There is a third pool of sources - for the victims. There are also private investigators and people "close to the police."
11:50: He said that one of the first things we look for sources is completely anonymous. They may fear they will lose their jobs, or being beaten. There is a culture of bullying in some newspapers of Fleet Street - is real.
11:48:.
Davies says that two of the main roads to find a story in the public domain and talking to people
high old newspaper says Leveson is "News is what someone somewhere does not want you to know."
Davies added: "The interesting thing is the continuation of human resources and persuade them to help you."
He says the former editor of the Sunday Times Harry Evans has his journalists to convince people to continue. If there is ongoing legal action, the judge may order the disclosure that the journalist could help uncover the truth.
The pressure of the families of missing activists have led to prison sentences for the killers of former President Colina Group
Jorge Noriega, 83, has red eyes and sensitive. These days were difficult. After searching constantly for 19 years, has finally recovered the remains of his son, Jesus, one of nine peasants of Santa, a rural town in northern Peru, who disappeared in 1992. "For years we looked for tracks and walked over the hills ... and now, just 20 minutes from our homes, our children have returned, "said Noriega.
In early August, the police discovered a skull, bones and pieces of clothing near the Panamerican Highway. He quickly made the connection with the Santa farmers who were captured in the 1990s by members of the Grupo Colina death squad. It was created in secret during the presidency of Alberto Fujimori (1990-2000) to eliminate, by extrajudicial, leftist guerrillas belonging to the Shining Path and Tupac Amaru organizations.
Hill Group also aimed at trade unionists and political activists who oppose the government or obtained as the leaders, as was the case in Santa where a businessman was in open conflict with farmers. "My son was the leader of the landless [landless] of the Organization, which is the only crime he committed," said Noriega.
Jesus Noriega, 39, had four children. Four masked men abducted him at home one evening in May 1992 with eight local residents. His father tried to make known his disappearance, but police did little to help. The families of the nine missing men, but continued to demand justice.
Thank
complained that they and other victims filed, members of the Colina Group were found in 2010 and sentenced to 15 to 25 years in prison. One of the defendants admitted that the peasants had been killed the day they were removed and buried near Santa. But the information was not sufficient to find the rest.
report that 80 people were taken from the freight train can not be confirmed, official says
The Mexican government has found no evidence to confirm the report of a priest at least 80 Central American migrants were kidnapped in a freight train last week, said an official.
Interior Department assistant secretary, René Zenteno, two witnesses said that Honduras and Guatemala, told federal investigators who saw armed men off the train and take two women, two men and a boy with them.
No evidence or testimony of a larger collection was found, Zenteno said.
Rev. Alejandro Solalinde, who runs a shelter for migrants in Oaxaca, reported that witnesses said more than 80 migrants were kidnapped in the neighboring state of Veracruz by armed men who hijacked freight train on their way last Friday.
Solalinde told Radio Formula witnesses told him the armed men forced migrants to climb from the top of some cars and packages at least three trucks out.
"What [the witnesses interviewed by the authorities] were the first to enter five cars, but not alone ... do you think should be three vans for five people? "Solalinde said.
Zenteno said that if the priest had more tests should be given to the authorities.
"It is the assumption that they were removed as they boarded the train," said Centeno.
American poet whose bittersweet lines brought him success in his late 80
Ruth Stone, the distinguished American poet whose voice was memorable for its bittersweet humor and pathos, has died at the age of 96. She wrote in relative obscurity for most of his career, but a major recognition came as late Stone 80. When he received the National Book Award in 2002 for collection in the Galaxy, which summarizes his career: "I was writing poems or any other since I was five or six years, and I could not stop I could never stop No. I know why ... it was like a stream next to me, you know, my life has gone through here, and I got married and had three children and all the things that have to do, and throughout the present time, it was time . And I really did not know what he said. I have spoken and he has written. So many things can not even take credit for that. "
Peter claimed his poems came to him on the other side of the universe. Recalling his experience of writing things that I tell myself when to suspend the machine, said in an interview in 2010 in the American Poetry: "I was in the laundry hanging garden, and suddenly I said: 'Oh, better me than that. "So I started writing as fast as I could. I could not get the last line for years."
wrote several of his poems at his home in rural Goshen, Vermont, Pierre transcribed the news that the universe and the daily drama of life as an itinerant poet, widow and mother of three daughters . He wrote with a passion to guess their own voice and language, the exercise of their freedom "yip" in its "schizophrenic night." The "barking" contained a tragic / comic store certain other American poets have been beaten, often double-edged sword recalls the verse of Emily Dickinson, only in a more conversational style, as in these verses Curtain (1987):
Hey, last night
"in the rush to cry with the owner, M. Tempesta. I slipped in two cats. He yells: "No pets! Pets not allowed!"
me back to my aunt Virginia
proud, but weak in the head.
remember Anna Magnani.
threw a couple of books. I cry. Cleans opens his eyes and hands. OK OK keep animals dirty
without nails in the walls.
cried together.
I am very nervous, he said.
Ruth Swan Perkins was born in Roanoke, Virginia, and raised in Indianapolis, where his father worked as a typesetter for the Indianapolis Star, who was also a gambler. His mother reads to her and encouraged Tennyson to write. As a young adult, stone particularly enjoyed reading Russian novels. Based on his career in what she calls the "great library confusion, the female spirit," intends to maintain its matrilineal inheritance. "No amount of knowledge can shake my grandmother out of me," he wrote in his poem Pokeberries "or Aunt Maud. O my mother, not just bite into an apple / with large white teeth, it was divided in two. "
After the failure of his first marriage, married Walter Stone in 1945. In addition to her busy family life to raise her three daughters, Walter and responsibilities as a professor of English at Vassar College, the couple wrote poetry and fiction, criticizing each other's work and achieve the first success with the publication in The New Yorker and Kenyon Review.
Pierre published his first poetry book, in iridescent time in 1958, shortly after the purchase of his home in Goshen life with the money he received for Bess Hokin Award for poetry . The young couple seemed to point to a meteoric career in the literary world in the early 60's, when the sabbatical in London, Walter hung on the hanger on the door of his cabinet, leaving no note. For the rest of his life, Peter wrote so vividly bright and deep pathos of loss, describing his death in his poem March 15, 1998:
"You have a righteous anger. And then you obviously are people who jump on that anger. "The game alive and Gillian Slovo returns were causing unrest between anger and jumping, as described by a youth worker based in Tottenham. It puts the words persons adversely affected by the riots, and the testimony of police officers, doctors, looters and curious. Modified from interviews conducted in September and October
riots
stems from an idea and a challenge tricycle outgoing artistic director Nicolas Kent: since the government had refused a public inquiry into the causes of the riots, the theater takes its own time.
After an explosion of video - the flames and the roar of sound in the streets of London - Speakers presented on a stage that is empty except for bricks and bottles of water accumulated in the front. At one point, flames rising on both sides so that the action seems to unfold in a blaze, but most of the movement is in the speech. This is delivered by actors who barely moving, sometimes sitting, and they are mostly calm. All forces - contradictory, passionate and sad - is in the words he chooses and uses . Family Mark Duggan shot by police, said they had been involved in an exchange of fire: there was no one. They said the body in the police station was not hers, that was. Mohamed Hammoud ran to his son to throw your shoes to see a wall of smoke in the hallway, and then looked at his burning house with people about it, "like a trophy." A shepherd saw a mother to ensure that the shoes were equipped plundered the feet of his son, and I saw the children go to McDonald's to make your own food. A police officer told a doctor in A & E: "We lost Clapham." A young man explained: "I wanted a new iPod a" shit "I have a innit."
wife of Michael Gove believes that the disturbances are like a Rorschach blot: each sees in them what they want. State Secretary of Education views are right. He thinks that there is no evidence that spending more money on local projects that help young, and wonders why more young people join the Scouts.
You would not expect to go to the tricycle and go with the liberal idea that all those who took to the streets to be mounted on horseback. However, there is nothing intimidating about the spread generously on the evidence presented here. In the best tradition of the courts has been a pioneer in the theater, Nicolas Kent stages of speech of a patient with confidence and transparency unmatched performance. Stress is greater. The result is vital.
A walk by the Party: The Fall of New Labour
- Michael Chaplin, adaptation of the diary of Chris Mullin - is something most of the work of Kent to put the documentary scene. However, it has its individual vitality, thanks to Max Roberts, the director who brought us
Pitman Painters
like a devil out of a bottle of ink, John Hodgkinson is Mullin, loud hair and surprised. It seems, however, he admitted that the shadows and ambition, in the spring, a more innocent time: wastewater treatment and leylandii Thanet, moved to tears by asylum seekers. "It had to look elsewhere," drawls a conservative who has found a hood Mullin.
When Gillian Lynne was 13, her mother died in a car accident. Surprisingly, it has become a terrible loss in the catalyst for a successful career in theater, film and television, and was inspired by her mother all
Child
Gillian Lynne
ended when he was 13, in what should have been a carefree summer day. He played with four friends in a garden in Kent, the children because their parents were together, a group of four couples had been together for the weekend, and the grandparents of two children were looking five years. "We went to a tree, have a wonderful time," says Gillian, "when we saw the grandparents of our friends walk across the lawn towards us. This seems strange, because they can not go in the garden like that. And then I realized How strange it seemed, and then asked everyone to enter, and it was very rare
"We could see the grandparents were in a state of affairs, and a veil seemed to descend on the house something terrible had happened -. We could feel it."
Gillian and her friends were right. Something had happened, something more terrible than they could imagine. That same day, elsewhere in the country where they spent the weekend, his 36 year old mother of Barbara and three friends had gone shopping in the back of his car skidded into the path of a tanker. The four men were killed.
was very late that night when the father of Gillian, Leslie and other parents, returned to Kent with the news of the death of their mother to child. "Never forget how Dad seemed - that seemed to have shrunk, with clothes hanging, and he trembled," he recalls. "Then I said the mummy was dead, I put my arm around him and said:" I take care of you "- and at the same time, I knew that my childhood was over."
History
Gillian is remarkable for several reasons. The first is that even though she says it like it was yesterday - no detail is forgotten, did not spare the nuances - the tragedy took place over 70 years in 1939. Also remarkable is the power of a story - something about a group of children are orphaned at the same time is very impressive. The most remarkable of all is that this tragedy, far from diminishing, and even destroy Gillian, became the building block in the foundation of the end of his long life (now 85).
And what turned out to be brilliant life, for in spite of Gillian Lynne's not a household name, is a legend in theater, well known by anyone in the entertainment world. She was a ballet dancer, actor, director, a television director and choreographer - and excels in all. His greatest success was with cats and The Phantom of the Opera, which choreography. "I was very lucky," he said. "Most people in my company does not have a great success, and I had two."
But I do not think Gillian has been a matter of luck: she knows that her success is due to labor discipline and dedication - and also, she says, her mother was helped to beyond the grave. "Many times in my life when things went well, I thought," This is Mom - still with me aa .'"
You do not believe in the afterlife to see the strength of the influence of his mother, Barbara Pyrker (Gillian changed its name to the scene), because it is clear is that his mother packed in 13 years sufficient guidance, support and love for his son that last a lifetime. "She was my best friend, my protector. We had fun as a whole, "she said." She taught me a lot, too: it taught me discipline, real discipline has always been hard work, discipline, because I expect so .. "
Barbara also encouraged her daughter in the ballet, which, after his family was to matter more than anything in his life. (One of the other children of the first class I took was Beryl Gillian boyfriend, who became Beryl Grey -. Give and Gillian are great friends to this day)
Barbara has always believed in the talent of his daughter - at the time of his death, Gillian won a scholarship to study at the Royal Academy of Dance. "So what saved me, after the mummy was dead, was in a ballet company and be able to dance as she wished. She had high hopes for me." kept alive the love to live the dream they had dreamed all of his mother, one of the most poignant moments in his recently published autobiography is the description of the days in February 1946, when she danced her first solo at Covent Garden, Sleeping with Margot Fonteyn, before an audience which included the royal family. As he ran on stage and started dancing, Gillian wrote, all in the theater is gone. "It was my mother around and around me, ready to dance with all my heart ... we were alone, to enter the world he had always wanted for me, and I offered my dance with her. "
throughout his long career, he says, went to talk with his mother and his work to devote to it. "Someone told me the other day, I could have been Trevor Nunn -. 'His mother would have felt very proud, "I hope he would. "
But there is another element, too, for the purpose of the death of his mother. "The pallor of my experiences gave me another dimension that has been of great help in my work when I'm directing people - especially Phantom -. Something that you can take advantage is not on the page There is something in the air, something you must feel to understand, and I can do because of what happened to people I'm working mother often say that I said has opened some of them -. and everything happened because of this terrible time. "
The strike could reach 57 000 NHS patients, about almost 90% of schools and disrupt the passport control and immigration
strikes the public next week, the sector could reach 57 000 patients in the NHS, about almost 90% of schools and universities in England and Wales, and tens of thousands of passengers companies air force to rethink their travel plans. In a warning that the action could affect the most likely areas of daily life, including the British Museum warned that the articles could be roped in tourists because of staff shortages. According to the TUC, the union orchestrated the attacks, 2.6 million voted for the strike in four sectors - government health, education, public administration and local - with about 750,000 voting yes
Health
more than 57,000 patients may be affected due to the cancellation of operations, outpatient visits and diagnostic tests Wednesday. According to the Ministry of Health estimates that about 20% of the NHS - or 260,000 workers - are on strike, causing a corresponding reduction in output. As a result, there could be at least 40 000 5500 outpatient operations less 12 000 diagnostic tests. Patient transport will also be affected, with 7500 fewer trips, despite all calls to 999 will be served.
Among the benefits, the results of blood tests will delay the transfer of patients to other hospitals will be delayed and some patients have to stay in hospital longer than expected because of the transportation services of the NHS is offered only a limited number of services. Hospitals have started writing to warn patients that people with non-emergency surgery scheduled for next Wednesday will come at a later date.
mothers and children are likely to be affected by health visitors and district nurses are concentrated in only urgent cases, such as families where someone is very sick or if there issues of child protection. Union leaders have agreed with NHS managers who care for patients in emergency care and emergency services, including care and maternity and E will not be affected and that patient safety will be protected. Services for cancer patients and those undergoing kidney dialysis should also be performed normally in the plans set up by the employers' organization of the NHS, local leaders of the NHS and union representatives.
Dean Royles, Director of NHS Employers, said the recent outbreak of flu and winter pressures meant regular health services has been well used to dealing with fewer people than usual. "The unions have said they will try to make this difficult and ensure that emergency relief is not disturbed. They do not seek to ensure maximum disruption, "he said.
protected
services include A & E, emergency surgery, intensive treatment services for cancer and renal dialysis, Royles said. However, many patients are affected. "There will be delays and discomfort for patients who need treatment. Suppose you have taken time off for surgery scheduled for next Wednesday, and one of his family made plans to take care of you and now you realize that surgery is off, it's disturbing, right?.
"There will be interruption of elective surgery, outpatient, reviews, and the health visitor and district nurse services," he said. Although the figures are impossible to predict, a significant number would not be practical, he said.
however, expressed widespread concern that no work could lead to shortages of key staff could affect the care of critically ill patients, despite the provisions in place to ensure these areas are covered including through the transfer of staff to other tasks. "The NHS will need to ensure you have sufficient expertise in each area. But we have enough people from that can make or medical gases to sterilize surgical instruments ?".
While contingency planning should mean things smoothly, there is no guarantee that problems arise, Royles said. "Schools will be closed so that staff were waiting to find really work, and if a patient can be waiting for kidney dialysis, but the ambulance get to you?" Christina Mcan, head of health at union Unite, which represents 450,000 NHS employees, said: "There will be inevitable disruption it is assumed that the majority of outpatient services will be affected on that day ..." In addition, almost all transport services for patients - they have the patients to other hospitals or at home to download - go out. This could lead to delayed discharges or "bed-blocking", next week. Some hospital patients who are medically fit to leave may be sent home to facilitate the work of hospitals, as some are at Christmas, McAn said.
Some medical practices where family physicians are members of the Union of Doctors, a division of Unite, that do not go on Wednesday, while others will be closed for short periods of events to commemorate the action of the MPU, the president said Dr. Ron Singer.Dr Boomla Kambiz, a GP in Tower Hamlets, east London, said the surgery offered only a doctor on the cover of calls, and other practices in the vicinity would also take some measures. Although neither the Royal College of Nursing Royal College of Midwives and a vote of its members, members of both professions that belong in unison went on strike, putting more pressure on hospital resources.
Most of the Chartered Society of Physiotherapists (CSP) 27 000 members who provide physical therapy for patients in the NHS on strike, except for a few who are treating patients such as high priority the intensive care unit. "Of course, there will be problems with people. Routine treatment, but important, that people often have, such as outpatient, including women's health, will not be provided to date. However, they provide the next day, "said Phil Gray, managing director of the PUC.
Gray could not say how many physiotherapy clinics would be canceled, but said 2236 different items in the NHS would be affected by the action of its members, such as hospitals, clinics and home health services treatment. Similarly, patients with foot problems are clinical suspended following the action of the Society of Chiropodists and Podiatrists (SCP).
education
Almost 90% of schools and universities in England and Wales is expected to close next Wednesday, when hundreds of thousands of teachers stage a mass walk-on reforms retreats. The Association of Teachers and Lecturers (ATL) found that 86.8% of schools - public and private - and the schools were closed, while 11.5% will be partially closed. The union expects 99% of schools in Scotland will be closed.
The Irish National Teachers Organisation, told the Guardian that nearly 100% of all schools in Northern Ireland would be closed. Government and other unions have refused so far, which is drawn in the number of institutions that can close.
However, both the National Union of Teachers and the Ministry of Education (DfE) said they expect the "vast majority" of schools in England and Wales for close. A spokesman said DfE impact of attacks can be considered as "very serious".
unions representing school custodians, teaching assistants and secretaries - Unison, Unite and GMB - are also on strike. At least two universities - Strathclyde Sunderland - all classes are canceled on Wednesday, a move that will affect thousands of students. The University and College Union (UCU) said it would be "serious disturbance" for classes at the university. Many of its members are in the Teachers' Pension Plan - the same model as the teachers of primary and secondary schools. Others are in the pension system and universities will also join the escape.
, David Cameron, suggested that parents take their children to work, but parents' groups have called this unrealistic.
The decision to close a school down the principal or, in the case of schools of the academy, the academy trust. Cabezas and hopes to consult with parents and governors of the school in advance. Schools are allowed to use volunteers who regularly come to school to help in case of strikes, but can not elaborate on the procurement staff.
A spokesman for the National Association of Head Teachers (NAHT) said the union's phones were "ringing" a question asking the best managers to cover for themselves and their colleagues strike. "Unfortunately, while we advise to be as cooperative as possible with its board of governors and local authorities, ultimately it is for others to consider contingency plans right now," he said.
"One of the points of the strike that caused the interruption. If the services offered by our members are of vital importance for its removal causes mass chaos, perhaps the government should ask why this is not reflected in their willingness to negotiate an agreement? " For two teachers' unions, the strike Wednesday for the first time that members have voted to go to a national strike. The NAHT has never gone on strike before in its 114 year history, while this is the first national strike in 127 years of history of ATL. Another teachers' union, the NASUWT, did not take industrial action for over 13 years. Local authorities and the DEA will prepare a list of closures in the coming days, but are likely to have a good estimate until the eve of the strike. more schools and colleges are expected to close Wednesday, June 30, when a similar attack took place on public sector pensions. This time, several unions are involved. Then, 27% of local authorities closed schools, 28% were opened and 24% were partially closed. Data were available for the remaining 21%.
civil service
Government plans for an emergency strike are being finalized Wednesday in much of the public administration. Plans to keep the borders of Great Britain was a dark omen of assurance that the UK Border Agency is rushing to find staff to replace the passport and immigration controls. immigration officials at Heathrow and other airports in the UK are due to join the action next week against the pension reform. Border Services Agency, as revealed in The Guardian, offers £ 450 for a single tour the former official, tried to lure workers from India, Russia and South Africa with the promise of flights Free and want to train other members of the public for a day of work -. but can not complete the required number of officers to check passports
Yes, Fonz 'Fonzarelli Arthur, the man who literally jumped the shark is in the news. A kind of
Age : 65
Appearance:. Naughty But Nice
Aaaaaay I beg your pardon?
is its slogan, is ignorant. It is Arthur "Fonzie" Fonzarelli, the guy drives greasy hair of the pioneers of fly on the wall documentary Happy Days. was not a .-
completed. He rode a motorcycle, he worked as a mechanic and has rented a room in the middle class Cunningham. The inside of his leather jacket beat a heart of gold, and he was like a god to his son Richie square. Bu.
no woman could resist him, could defeat a tyrant. His only weakness was that he could not refuse a challenge. Therefore, this time in 1977, when
put some water skis and literally jumped the shark
. This is where the term comes from, actually. Now you can make a contribution just pathetic. happy days was not a documentary.
Are you sure about that?
positive.
Oh, my dear. Then it's back to routine. Who is blah, and why is the thingumy
The Fonz is the fictional character once played by American actor Henry Winkler, and is in the news because Winkler visit 11 Downing Street tomorrow.