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My friend James Morrow, who has died aged 74 from lung cancer, was an assistant editor at the Guardian in the 1980s, a psychotherapist and a motorcycle adventurer.Born in Oxford, James was the son of Ian Morrow, a management consultant knighted for his work with Rolls-Royce, and his wife, Elizabeth nee Thackray . [url=https://www.stanleycups.ro]stanley cup[/url] He attended Rugby school in Warwickshire and, after studies at a technical college in Cambridge, dabbled in accountancy and advertising before landing a position with the Kilburn Times.Progressing quickly, James joined the Guardian in 1979 as a subeditor, helping oversee the newspapers transition to computerised publication. He rose to be assistant editor of the Jobs Money section during the huge economic changes of the Thatcher years. By this time he had become a high-functioni [url=https://www.stanley-cups.es]stanley cup[/url] ng alcoholic 鈥?successfully concealing the extent of his problem from family and friends.After getting sober with the support of Alcoholics Anonymous, James left journalism in 2004 to retrain as a psychotherapist, working in rehabilitation centres across London. For him this was a way to give back, and his proudest achievement was working tirelessly with colleagues at St Lukes in Kenni [url=https://www.cup-stanley.ca]stanley mugs[/url] ngton, helping patients turn their lives around until its closure in 2012.In the same year, James married Patricia Webb, a photographer, his third wife. As ardent motorcyclists, they rode thousands of miles across Europe, North Africa, India and south-east Asia 鈥?living for a time in Thailand and visiting Bjpm Plymouth kinship carer wins legal bid over slashed payments
The Liberal Democrat compromise on control orders is significant of itself people are still to be curfewed and tagged without charge but also important for what it indicates about the political future of the coalition.The bonhomie of last May s Conservative-Lib Dem negotiations was principally a function of the Lib Dems volte-face over the speed of deficit reduction. But it was matched by agreement on a whole raft of civil liberties issues. The Conservative and [url=https://www.cup-stanley.fr]stanley mugs[/url] Lib Dem manifestos were already in accord on scrapping ID cards, the national identity register and the nationwide ContactPoint children s database, as well as on restraining powers of entry and ending the misuse of anti-terror laws.The coalition agreement also incorporated Lib Dem proposals to outlaw the fingerprinting of children without parental consent, the storage of internet and email records, and the restoration of聽protest rights, as well as firming up Conservative proposals to stop the holding of innocent people s DNA and to limit CCTV.Thereby, for Lib Dem negotiator David Laws, the economic l [url=https://www.cup-stanley-cup.ca]stanley canada[/url] iberalism of the Conservative [url=https://www.cups-stanley-cups.ca]stanley tumblers[/url] Party had been convincingly combined with the social liberalism of the Liberal Democrats . The fate of the civil liberties agenda is聽thus a vital matter for all parties. Max聽Rowlands of the research group Statewatch has produced an audit, and he finds a long list of kept promises 鈥?on ID cards, ContactPoint, stop-and-search powers, libel law reform and the misuse of a