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kokb We need honesty on the pitfalls of freedom of movement

Fqmf A failure of society : Britain s slum housing crisis 鈥?in pictures
The crowd carries you along in a marathon, says Katie Arnstein towards the end of this winning show about family and friendship. Its the cumulative effect of all those tiny connections with others 鈥?like a performer and her audience or a hospital waiting room full of strangers.Which is where much of the story unfolds as Arnstein takes us through her mums treatment for bowel cancer. Yes, its one of those comedy shows, Arnstein acknowledges, keenly aware that she is entering a familiar subgenre. But this tribute to her mother is delicate in its emotional detail, often underscored by absurd humour drawn from quotidian scenarios such as the inherent hazards of bowel cancer coffee mornings.Jane Arnstein is evoked so n [url=https://www.stanley-cups.fr]stanley thermos[/url] imbly by her daughter that you almost feel they are sharing the stage when, in a touching role reversal, Katie drops her off at the hospital as if its her first day at school and, anoth [url=https://www.cup-stanley.es]stanley cup[/url] er day, picks her up weary after radiotherapy and fondly calls her a sleepy bear. We experience their fear, resolve and anger in the face of illness, the daughters outlo [url=https://www.cups-stanley.ca]stanley cup[/url] ok affected by a chance encounter in the waiting room with a spry gent in Skechers, training for a marathon.View image in fullscreenCaptivating 鈥?The Long Run, directed by Bec Martin. Photograph: Tristram Kenton/The GuardianTo say much more would spoil the evening. Bec Martins captivating production makes powerful use of a traverse stage 鈥?we naturally flinch and avoid eye contact when hearing this subject matter but the Uojd London houseboat residents fear rise in mooring fees will price them out
A five-person panel of legal experts and journalists has been appointed by the Scottish government to consider how to implement the Leveson report.They are to spend three months considering how statutory underpinning of a new independent system of self-regulation of the press should operate in Scotland.Chaired by Lord McCluskey, the former solicitor general for Scotland and a supreme courts judge, the other four panel members are:*David Sinclair, director of communications for Victim Support Scotland and a former president of the National Union of Journalists, was once assistant editor of The Herald.*Neil Walker, professor of public law at Edinburgh university and considered to be an expert on constitutional and legal matters.*Peter Watson, a lawyer with the Glasgow-based firm Levy McRae and a visiting professor at Strathclyde university. He [url=https://www.stanleycups.cz]stanley termoska[/url] is a former president of the Society of Media Lawyers.*Ruth Wishart, a freelance journalist and broadcaster, a former Daily Record columnist, assistant editor of the Sunday Mail, The Scotsman and Sunday Standard. She recently interviewed journalists including me to create the transcripts used for the theatrical drama, Enquirer, itself seen as a response to the Leve [url=https://www.stanleymugs.ca]stanley cup[/url] son inquiry.At present, the Press Complaints Commission deals with complaints made across the UK. But a statutory element to pres [url=https://www.cup-stanley.pl]stanley polska[/url] s regulation in Scotland would require the setting up of a separate body to comply with Scottish law.The first minister, Alex Salmond, spoke o