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http://oxfordstudent.com/2014/06/12/oulc-electoral-college-to-be-split-by-gender/

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/sam-kelly-dead-allo-allo-3694388

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Contenders: The Labour Party leadeship race is between (top) Alex White and Joan Burton, while the deputy leadership race will be contested by (below from left), Michael McCarthy, Alan Kelly, Seán Sherlock and Ciara Conway.

The nomination process for those seeking to become Labour Party leader closed at noon today, with Minister for Social Protection Joan Burton and Minister of State for Primary Care Alex White the only candidates to succeed Eamon Gilmore. The four contenders for the deputy leadership are also now known – with Ministers of State Sean Sherlock and Alan Kelly, joined in the race by TDs Ciara Conway , as of yesterday, and Michael McCarthy. The entire paid-up membership of the party will vote to elect the new leader and deputy leader. Each candidate will get a list of the 5,000 or so party members and their contact details, and the campaign will begin. It is expected that four hustings will be arranged at which the candidates can address party members seeking their support Galway Dublin, Cork, Galway and Portlaoise, where the Tom Johnson Summer School is being held, are the provisional locations for the husting. Members who are not more than two years in arrears will be entitled to vote if they pay up their €15 a year membership fee before June 13th. An appeals panel will be established to consider the claims of members who feel they have been unfairly treated. The closing date for the return of ballot papers will be noon on July 4th. The counting of votes will begin immediately. Labour Party Leadership race Joan Burton: The Dublin West TD is the favourite, and was quick out of the traps, canvassing backbenchers for support almost immediately after Eamon Gilmore announced his resignation. Ms Burton has worked the grassroots assiduously in the past three years. She is also the most popular Minister among members of the public. Her main strength is among the rank-and-file members. Her support in the parliamentary party would not have been huge to begin with, but appears to be growing. Ms Burton has consistently said Labour should be the party of work, rather than a party of welfare. She will also emphasise the need for Labour to refocus on its strengths in the public sector and with the working class. Her supporters will also point to her appeal to the average voter. TDs could be persuaded she will be the most acceptable face to have on posters come the election. Alex White: The 55-year-old barrister and former producer of The Gay Byrne Show has impressed a cohort of colleagues, who would like to see a media-savvy performer as party leader. The Dublin South deputy is undoubtedly persuasive and highly intelligent, but doubts remain as to whether he could encourage enough ordinary members of the party to back him in a contest with longer-serving competitors. Perceived as a liberal-leaning lawyer, some colleagues outside the capital suggest he might struggle to extend his appeal beyond a Dublin-centric, middle class niche. His expertise as a legislator came to the fore during the fraught abortion debate. A first-time TD who had served a term as a senator, Mr White’s accomplishments were recognised when he was promoted to Minister of State for Primary Care in 2012 following Róisín Shortall’s departure. Labour Party Deputy Leadership race Alan Kelly: The Minister of State at the Department of Transport has focused on securing the position of deputy leader and the expected full Cabinet post that would probably come with it. If Joan Burton were to become leader, Alan Kelly could position himself as a male, young and rural counterbalance to her. He could gather support from a combination of those arguing for a generational change and those pushing for a rural presence at the top of the party. Kelly is based in Nenagh, Co Tipperary, but would not command wide backing in the parliamentary party. Expect Mr Kelly to emphasise his youth to play on those who want to see the rainbow coalition generation pass the baton, as well as a desire for renewal and regeneration of Labour. His backers hope he would get support in the rural strongholds of Willie Penrose, Jack Wall and Emmet Stagg, but he won’t be alone in hoping for support from those quarters. Ciara Conway: The 33-year-old Waterford TD is aspiring to become deputy to Alex White. Elected to the Dáil at her first attempt in 2011, Ms Conway previously worked for the children’s charity Barnardos. She became interested in politics as a student at NUI Galway where she was elected to the Students’ Union and joined Labour. She was involved in Labour Youth as its international officer. She has a masters in social work from UCC. Ms Conway was elected to Dungarvan Town Council in 2009. She was vocal on behalf of the party during the formulation of abortion legislation, and has pro-choice views. Seán Sherlock: The Minister of State for Research and Innovation is 41. Representing Cork East since 2007, Mr Sherlock is a son of the well-known former TD Joe Sherlock. Educated at the College of Commerce, Cork and NUI Galway, he was co-opted to Cork County Council and Mallow Town Council in 2003 and was elected to both the following year. He is a former mayor of Mallow. Mr Sherlock was an assistant to former MEP and ex-Labour Party president Proinsias de Rossa. He was Labour’s spokesman on agriculture in the last Dáil . Michael McCarthy:Another Corkman, 37-year-old Mr McCarthy represents Cork South-West. From Bantry, Mr McCarthy was formerly a pharmaceutical company employee. A first-time TD, he was elected to the Seanad in 2002 and re-elected in 2007 after contesting General Elections unsuccessfully in both years. He was elected to Cork County Council for Skibbereen electoral area in 1999.

The Tron Theatre In Glasgow are looking for short 15 minute plays in response to The Commonwealth Games.

 

These plays will be performed as readings during Glasgow 2014 as part of The Tron’s Home Nations Programme. The scripts should be a response to the athletes, events, sports, political issues or scandals of The Commonwealth Games since 1930. The plays should take us on an interesting, alternative journey of the Games.

Scripts should be no more than 15 pages and have no more than five characters.

Please email submissions to lisa.nicoll@tron.co.uk with the heading ‘Commonwealth Plays’ by Monday 9th of June 2014.

Find out more about the Tron Theatre

Posted: May 25, 2014 in Uncategorized

Check out @MITOCW’s Tweet: https://twitter.com/MITOCW/status/469952183774236673

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In the LAPD’s Open-Unsolved Unit, not many murder victims die almost a decade after the crime. So when a man succumbs to complications from being shot by a stray bullet nine years earlier, Harry Bosch catches a case in which the body is fresh but any other evidence is virtually nonexistent.

Now Bosch and his new partner, rookie Detective Lucia Soto, are tasked with solving what turns out to be a highly charged, politically sensitive case. Starting with the bullet that’s been lodged for years in the victim’s spine, they must pull new leads from years-old information, which soon reveals that this shooting may have been anything but random.

Coming out in hardcover, eBook, and audio formats on November 3 in the USA and Canada, and on November 6 in the UK, Ireland, Australia and New Zealand.

An extract was released  yesterday,Friday< following huge  build up all week and is here 

( Michael Connelly

Michael Connelly is the author of twenty-six previous novels, including the #1 New York Times bestsellers The Gods of Guilt and The Black Box. His books, which include the bestselling Harry Bosch series and Lincoln Lawyer series, have sold more than fifty-eight million copies worldwide. Connelly is a former newspaper reporter who has won numerous awards for his journalism and his novels and is the executive producer of the forthcoming series Bosch, starring Titus Welliver. He spends his time in California and Florida.

The Black Echo introduced Connelly as the heir apparent to Raymond Chandler and also helped usher in a new approach to the police procedural. Now, twenty years later, Connelly is still writing about Harry Bosch, continuing to discover new layers to this now iconic character with increasingly complex and believable plots….Connelly makes him a fresh and original character each outing.” (Oline H. Cogdill, Miami Herald).