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Oct 11 / admin

You’re doing really well you’re doing brilliantly

You’re doing really well, you’re doing brilliantly.TP: Oh no, please darling, wake up …Op: You’re doing really well. What colour is he, what colour is he? What does he look like?TP: He doesn’t look alive, he’s gone pale.(Later)TP: Please breathe, Amar.Op: Is he still very pale?TP: Yes.Op: Right, just keep on going. Is he warm or cold? …TP: His hands are cold.Op: Right.TP: His face is getting colder.Op: OK, what’s his body?TP: His body is warmish.Op: Right, good. Keep going, you’re obviously doing the right thing there …TP: OK.Op: I know, it’s really difficult.TP: (Distressed) Can you warm up, please?Op: You’re doing really well, just keep on going.TP: How long?Op: .. Very almost with you.

It just seems like a lifetime …(Later)TP: Where are they?Op: They’re almost with you – it’s the traffic, it’s horrendous …TP: He’s getting colder.. One of London’s most popular tourist districts has been identified as the area most at risk from violent demonstrations during today’s May Day protests by anarchists. Some businesses have decided to close today and be boarded up while others have drafted in extra security.The police have identified an afternoon rally outside Shell UK offices on The Strand as the most likely source of any trouble severe traffic disruption is expected as well as the cost of millions of pounds in policing and lost business. Officers are concerned that violent protestors may also try and confront the police in the surrounding side streets in the Covent Garden area, or move into the West End.At 4pm, protestors will join forces with a rally of bicycle riders outside Shell UK’s offices on The Strand which house their shipping and trading divisions and a spokewoman for Shell said: “We have reviewed our security measures to ensure that our staff and property is protected.. it will be business as usual. One website reads: “With the war drums beating and the state imposing ever harsher forms of internal control, Mayday 2003 will be our chance to seize the moment and fight back.”Last year the May Day demonstrations were relatively uneventful but the 2001 demonstrations resulted in a major confrontation in which police used the controversial tactic of corralling about 5,000 protestors in Oxford Circus for eight hours. The demonstration led to 96 arrests as well as costing an estimated £20m in lost business, police pay and extra security.. Chris Evans was accused yesterday of lying in court about “crucial” events that led to his sacking by the media company he is suing for £8.6m.

But “neither of these excuses the dishonesty with which he treated this court. Mr Evans was lying in important respects – not about insignificant matters.”Mr Evans said he was ignored when he tried to meet his bosses. But Mr Vos said he tried “to mislead” [the court] into thinking he had waited for three hours at Virgin Radio for the meeting in June 2001 but eventually admitted he was there for 75 minutes, drinking lager. Mr Vos said Mr Evans ran from problems – first by fleeing abroad in May 2001 and then by going on a drinking binge The case continues.. The landlord of a rural inn who staged rock concerts in his beer garden to boost profits claimed yesterday he had been ruined after the singer Van Morrison suddenly pulled out of a commitment. This is really a make-or-break claim.”The court was told the initial claim, to cover the return of an advance payment given to Van Morrison and lost profits from tickets and drinks, had been increased because of the long-term effects on Mr Marlow’s finances.The pub, a 17th-century coaching inn that once housed a courtroom, had started staging pop concerts to try to recover trade lost because of the foot-and-mouth crisis.Previous performers have included Peter Green, the former guitarist with Fleetwood Mac, whose appearance cost Mr Marlow £18,000. He did not make a profit from it.The Van Morrison concert was intended to pull in 1,600 fans.

Mr Marlow said the singer’s list of personal requirements ran to several pages, and that the refusal of Van Morrison to honour his contract had destroyed the reputation of the venue Outside court, Mr Marlow said: “It’s quite simple. We either win with costs or we go bust.”Thomas Croxford, for Van Morrison, said Mr Marlow’s new claim based on damage to his business’s reputation was “inherently improbable”.The hearing continues.. JULY 2002: Ketama, Rif Mountains, northern Morocco “Al Qinnab al Hindi” – Indian hemp – has been grown since time immemorial on the terraces surrounding Mount Tidiguine, near Ketama, in the eastern range of the Rif Mountains. However, European visitors to the area are often surprised at how scrawny the cannabis here looks. The closely grown plants resemble wizened nettles rather than the lush, leafy bush British enthusiasts might grow among the tomatoes at the bottom of their garden, and few are more than three feet tall.
It’s late July.