Category: Culture

  • Dogfight at Stobart Crew as former boss sacked from board

    Southend airport

    Stobart Staff has sacked former boss Andrew Tinkler from the board within the contemporary twist in a bitter power combat on the proprietor of Southend and Carlislie airports.

    The company is suing Mr Tinkler to courtroom for “breach of settlement and breach of fiduciary accountability”, it stated.

    Mr Tinkler claimed the board had defamed him as a part of a prison dispute with Stobart Group.

    He is looking for to take away chairman Iain Ferguson in a vote on the company’s AGM.

    Mr Tinkler was once leader govt of Stobart Crew for a decade till he stepped aside ultimate year to deal with a company known as Stobart Capital, however remained on the Stobart board.

    The dispute between Mr Tinkler and Mr Ferguson erupted after Mr Tinkler came up with a suggestion late last yr to buy the airline Flybe.

    Relations deteriorated among Mr Tinkler and the firm last month while he informed the board he planned to oppose the re-election of Mr Ferguson as chairman at Stobart Group’s annual meeting on 28 June.

    Mr Tinkler, former director Allan Jenkinson, and Neil Woodfood of Woodford Investment Management have banded in combination to take a look at to oust Mr Ferguson as chairman. Together, they keep watch over about a third of the stocks within the corporate.

    they’re seeking to change Mr Ferguson with Philip Day, leader executive of Edinburgh Woollen Mill Team.

    However, Invesco, which has a few 24% protecting, has declined to fortify the move.

    The firm spoke back on 29 May by means of advising buyers to re-decide on Mr Ferguson. Mr Tinkler has alleged this letter used to be defamatory and is suing 5 directors for defamation.

    Tax charge

    In up to date weeks Stobart Crew has started pursuing Mr Tinkler in the courts for a tax legal responsibility it says is value £3.8m plus interest.

    This week the regulation firm Rosenblatt sent Mr Tinkler’s lawyers a letter that has been observed by way of the BBC. The letter alleges that he attempted to benefit from the proposed Flybe deal in some way that might have been damaging to Stobart Crew.

    The letter also alleges that Mr Tinkler has taken “a large number of and really extensive” bills out of the corporate.

    Mr Tinkler mentioned the allegations within the Rosenblatt letter contained “malicious falsehoods” and that he will “rigorously protect himself towards the chairman and leader government’s makes an attempt to defame him”.

    Stobart Workforce, that is worth greater than £800m, is become independent from the street shipping company Eddie Stobart Logistics. That firm may be indexed at the London marketplace and is value simply over £500m.

  • Rolls-Royce aircraft engine repair will take ‘some years’

    Rolls-Royce engine Symbol copyright Rolls-Royce

    An engine fault that grounded planes at British Airlines and other airliners will take “some years” to fix, Rolls-Royce has mentioned.

    The aerospace large stated parts in its Trent A THOUSAND engines had been wearing out sooner than expected but that it “had an answer” to the problem.

    It came as Rolls-Royce said higher-than-anticipated results for 2017, following a document loss in 2016.

    However, it signalled job losses ahead because the firm keeps to cut costs.

    In December, Air New Zealand changed into the newest airliner to floor a few of its flights on account of problems with its Rolls-Royce engines.

    Image copyright Getty Images Symbol caption In December, Air New Zealand become the newest airliner to flooring a few of its flights as a result of issues of its Rolls-Royce engines.

    Japan’s ANA and Virgin Atlantic have additionally had issues.

    Rolls-Royce said as much as 500 Trent 1000 engines – used on Boeing 787 planes – and some Trent 900 engines had technical problems.

    Boss Warren East advised BBC Radio 4’s These Days programme: “First you have got to grasp that each one mechanical issues put on out through the years, and a few of the parts in our Trent engines are dressed in out faster than we at first forecast.

    ‘we’ve got a plan’

    “We’re having to regulate the operational impacts as a result of it’s rather disruptive for our consumers.”

    He delivered: “we’ve got a solution, now we have a plan, it will take a few years to totally put into effect the adjustments in the entire engines which can be in carrier.”

    The company mentioned higher than anticipated profits for 2017, with earnings prior to tax of £4.9bn.

    It follows a £4.6bn loss in 2016 – the largest in Rolls-Royce’s historical past – because of settling corruption circumstances and foreign money hedges going fallacious, among other factors.

    the scoop driven shares within the corporate up by greater than 14%.

    The company attributed its performance to more potent gross sales of aero and diesel engines, to boot as a £2.6bn accounting spice up from the hot strengthening of the pound.

    Job losses?

    However, it stated its 2018 figures might be impacted by the cost of finishing up the Trent engine maintenance, and also that it will push in advance with a plan to “simplify its personnel construction” to cut prices.

    this would see it scale back its selection of industry divisions from 5 to three.

    Mr East prompt company roles could be affected however stressed out the revamp was now not set to electrify engineers or technologists.

    It comes after round 600 managers have left the group on account that 2015 under a prior overhaul.

    “it is too early to touch upon explicit numbers of activity losses, however what i’ve been talking about for a while is we want to simplify our operation,” Mr East said.

  • Roger Bannister dies at 88; was first to run mile in under 4 minutes

    Roger Bannister, the first runner to break the 4-minute barrier in the mile, has died. He was 88.

    LONDON — Roger Bannister, the first runner to break the 4-minute barrier in the mile, has died. He was 88.

    Bannister’s family said in a statement that he died peacefully on Saturday in Oxford, the English city where the runner cracked the feat many had thought humanly impossible on a windy afternoon in 1954.

    Bannister, who went on to pursue a long and distinguished medical career, had been slowed by Parkinson’s disease in recent years.

    He was “surrounded by his family who were as loved by him, as he was loved by them,” the family said in a statement announcing his death on Sunday. “He banked his treasure in the hearts of his friends.”

    British Prime Minister Theresa May remembered Bannister as a “British sporting icon whose achievements were an inspiration to us all. He will be greatly missed.”

    Helped by two pacemakers, Bannister clocked 3 minutes, 59.4 seconds over four laps at Oxford’s Iffley Road track on May 6, 1954, to break the 4-minute mile – a test of speed and endurance that stands as one of the defining sporting achievements of the 20th century.

    “It’s amazing that more people have climbed Mount Everest than have broken the 4-minute mile,” Bannister said in an interview with The Associated Press in 2012.

    The enduring image of the lanky Oxford medical student – head tilted back, eyes closed and mouth agape as he strained across the finishing tape – captured the public’s imagination, made him a global celebrity and lifted the spirits of Britons still suffering through postwar austerity.

    “It became a symbol of attempting a challenge in the physical world of something hitherto thought impossible,” Bannister said as he approached the 50th anniversary of the feat. “I’d like to see it as a metaphor not only for sport, but for life and seeking challenges.”

    He might not have set the milestone but for the disappointment of finishing without a medal in the 1,500 meters, known as the metric mile, in the 1952 Olympics in Helsinki. Instead of retiring from the sport, he decided to chase the 4-minute mark.

    Swedish runner Gundar Haegg’s mile time of 4:01.4 had stood for nine years, but in 1954 Bannister, Australian rival John Landy and others were threatening to break it.

    “As it became clear that somebody was going to do it, I felt that I would prefer it to be me,” Bannister told the AP.

    He also wanted to deliver something special for his country.

    “I thought it would be right for Britain to try to get this,” Bannister said. “There was a feeling of patriotism. Our new queen had been crowned the year before, Everest had been climbed in 1953. Although I tried in 1953, I broke the British record, but not the 4-minute mile, and so everything was ready in 1954.”

    His chance finally came on a wet, cool, blustery May afternoon during a meet between Oxford and the Amateur Athletic Association.

    When Bannister looked up at the English flag whipping in the wind atop a nearby church, he feared he would have to call off the record attempt. But, shortly before 6 p.m., the wind died down. The race was on.

    With Chris Brasher setting the pace on the cinder track, they ran a first lap in 57.5 seconds, then 60.7 – 1:58.2 for the half mile. Chris Chataway, a distance specialist, paced a third lap of 62.3 – 3:00.4. Bannister would need to run the final lap in 59 seconds.

    With 250 yards to go, Bannister surged past Chataway, his long arms and legs pumping and his lungs gasping for oxygen.

    “The world seemed to stand still, or did not exist,” he wrote in his book, “The First Four Minutes.”

    “The only reality was the next 200 yards of track under my feet. The tape meant finality – extinction perhaps. I felt at that moment that it was my chance to do one thing supremely well. I drove on, impelled by a combination of fear and pride.”

    After Bannister crossed the finish line, the announcer read out the time: “3…” The rest was drowned out by the roar of the crowd.

    The record lasted just 46 days, as Landy ran 3:57.9 in Turku, Finland, on June 21, 1954. That set the stage for the showdown between Bannister and Landy at the Empire Games, now called the Commonwealth Games, in Vancouver, British Columbia on Aug. 9, 1954.

    Landy set a fast pace, leading by as much as 15 yards before Bannister caught up as the bell rang for the final lap.

    “Around the last bend, I think the crowd was making so much noise he couldn’t hear whether I was behind, or whether he’d dropped me, and he looked over his left shoulder, and I passed him on his right shoulder,” Bannister said.

    Bannister won the race in 3:58.8, with Landy second in 3:59. It was the first time two men had run under 4 minutes in the same race.

    Bannister considered that victory even more satisfying than the first 4-minute mile because it came in a competitive race against his greatest rival.

    Bannister capped his brilliant summer of 1954 by winning the 1,500 meters at the European Championships in Bern, Switzerland, in a games record of 3:43.8.

    Bannister, who was chosen as Sports Illustrated’s first Sportsman of the Year in 1954, retired from competition and pursued a full-time career in neurology. As chairman of the Sports Council between 1971 and 1974, he developed the first test for anabolic steroids.

    “None of my athletics was the greatest achievement,” he said. “My medical work has been my achievement and my family with 14 grandchildren. Those are real achievements.”

    IAAF President Sebastian Coe said Bannister’s death represented a “day of intense sadness both for our nation and for all of us in athletics.”

    Coe ran a mile in a world record 3 minutes, 47.33 seconds in 1981 between winning gold medals in the 1,500 meters at the 1980 and 1984 Olympics.

    “There is not a single athlete of my generation who was not inspired by Roger and his achievements both on and off the track,” Coe tweeted.

    Bannister also served as master of Oxford’s Pembroke College from 1985-93.

    Bannister married Moyra Jacobsson, an artist, in 1955. They had two sons and two daughters and lived in a modest home only minutes away from the track where he made history.

    Bannister outlived his 4-minute mile pacemakers: Brasher, who founded the London Marathon, died in 2003 at the age of 74. Chataway died in 2014 at 82.

    ___

    Former Associated Press European Sports Editor Stephen Wilson contributed to this report.

     

  • Man convicted of killing woman who rejected $8 offer for sex

    A jury has convicted a man of killing a woman who rejected his $8 offer for sex.

    ATLANTA (AP) — A jury has convicted a man of killing a woman who rejected his $8 offer for sex.

    The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports that jurors on Friday convicted Felix Shirley of murder in the January 2017 killing of Misha Moore.

    Citing the Fulton County District Attorney’s Office, the newspaper says Shirley was sentenced to life in prison, plus five years.

    The newspaper says Shirley had just ended his shift at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium when Moore approached him. As the two began walking together, Shirley handed Moore $8 for sex. When she told him it wasn’t enough, authorities say Shirley threw her against a wall, kicked and beat her, then shot her with a .22-caliber revolver.

    The slaying was captured on surveillance video. Moore’s body was found at the bottom of a stairwell.

  • Marion Barry, D.C. ‘Mayor for Life,’ memorialized with statue

    A bronze, larger-than-life statue of late D.C. politician Marion Barry was unveiled Saturday on Pennsylvania Avenue, memorializing the controversial so-called “Mayor for Life” mere blocks from the Whi

    A bronze, larger-than-life statue of late D.C. politician Marion Barry was unveiled Saturday on Pennsylvania Avenue, memorializing the controversial so-called “Mayor for Life” mere blocks from the White House outside the city building where he worked during his decades in public office.

    Erected outside the John A. Wilson Building, the seat of D.C. local government, the eight-foot-tall statue portraying a smiling, waving Barry constitutes “a fitting tribute in this city that he so loved,” D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser said at Saturday afternoon’s unveiling.

    Born and raised in Mississippi, Barry moved to D.C. in the 1960s while working for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, or SNCC, one of the era’s most prominent civil rights groups. He ran for city school board the following decade, and in 1974 he was won a seat on the District’s first elected city council.

    Barry, a Democrat, ultimately served four terms as mayor and spent 16 years on the city council prior to passing away in 2014 at the age of 78.

    “Sometime after Martin Luther King had a dream, and before President Barack Obama gave us hope, it was Marion Barry that brought opportunity to Washington, D.C.,” said Ms. Bowser, a fellow Democrat elected mayor in 2014.

    “He embodied the spirit of Washington,” Ms. Bowser said. “Where you can fall down and get back up…Where you fight hard and speak up,” she added.

    Indeed, Barry’s arguably best known outside the Beltway not for his accomplishments during his decades in office, but rather over his 1990 arrest for crack cocaine possession that resulted in six months behind bars. The incident anything but derailed his political career, however, and Barry was re-elected mayor hardly two years after completing his prison sentence.

    “Mr. Barry taught us do not ever give up hope, because as long as you’re waking up on this earth, there can be a comeback,” said Ms. Bowser.

    Chairman Phil Mendelson said the statue of Barry is the first to honor an African-American on Pennsylvania Avenue, a historic roadway that also hosts the White House as well as every presidential inaugural parade.

    “It’s exciting because we are placing a statue to a District of Columbia hero on Pennsylvania Avenue, the nation’s avenue, and in so doing we are reminding everybody that this is not a federal city but a local city with real people and real issues,” he said during there unveiling. “This is an exciting day because we are erecting a statue to an African American hero in the nation’s capital on the nation’s avenue. There are few statues commemorating African Americans in our city, and none on Pennsylvania Avenue.”

    “Some may ask, how could somebody with controversy get elected and re-elected and then get memorialized with a statue?” asked Mr. Mendelson “Well, an essential part of good governance is human relations. Marion Barry connected with people. Marion Barry helped people through thick and thin,” he said.

    The Barry statue was designed by artist Stephen Weitzman and selected by the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities from a pool of 13 submissions.

    Built in the early 1900s, the Wilson building has housed several city offices since after the Home Rule Act established the D.C. government in 1973. Then a council member, Barry was shot in the chest while in the Wilson building in 1977 during a two-day standoff perpetrated by a radical Muslim group.

  • West Virginia college creates competitive bagpipe band

    Recruiting efforts are currently underway to form the West Virginia Highlanders of Davis & Elkins College Grade V. Students versed in playing the bagpipes can earn up to a $5,000 scholarship per year

    ELKINS, W.Va. (AP) — Recruiting efforts are currently underway to form the West Virginia Highlanders of Davis & Elkins College Grade V. Students versed in playing the bagpipes can earn up to a $5,000 scholarship per year based on audition performance.

    Members of Grade V will share the same MacLeod of Lewis Scottish plaid and perform in parades and other special events along with the West Virginia Highlanders of Davis & Elkins College. In addition, they will compete at regional Highland festivals and games, and learn more about piping and Scottish traditions.

    The current 20-member Highlanders pipe and drum band has a long history with Davis & Elkins College and the Randolph County community.

    Formed in October 1947 as the official band of the H.W. Daniels Post 29 American Legion, the Highlanders group has continued many of its long-held traditions of music and dress with roots in Scottish heritage.

    In 1990, the Highlanders began carrying a banner with their new affiliation and name – the West Virginia Highlanders of Davis & Elkins College. The band now represents the community and the college at various public events, and performs at multiple college functions, including commencement, Founders’ Day and other special events.

    The band has performed in all 50 states and marched in the National Independence Day Parade on historic Constitution Avenue in Washington, D.C.

    Patrick McKay, an admission counselor at D&E and drummer in the Highlanders since 1997, came up with the idea for forming a competition band after competing himself throughout the years.

    “I’ve noticed the competitors are getting younger,” McKay said. “Every time I would see these young people out there pursuing their passion I would always think D&E would be the perfect environment for them to learn and practice and go on to compete.”

    The younger set of pipers and the more seasoned members of the Highlanders will complement one another by sharing techniques and experiences. The comradery and years of combined experience of the group were part of what attracted Bryan LaFollette to attend Davis & Elkins College. A bagpipe student since the age of 10 and now a college junior, LaFollette was recently named the Highlanders’ pipe master.

    “It’s good to pursue your love for piping because it can take you a long way in life,” LaFollette said. “At the core of everything, though, is your education, and D&E really stands out. We have great resources with professors who truly care and The Naylor Learning Center to keep you on track while you pursue your passion.”

    LaFollette and McKay agree that the new group of pipers will help the tradition of the West Virginia Highlanders of Davis & Elkins College live on in the community and throughout the nation.

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    Information from: The Inter-Mountain, http://www.theintermountain.com