Town Launches Call To Shop Local

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

Businesses are fighting back against the economic crisis with a new campaign to encourage shoppers to support Matlock traders.

After a difficult year for businesses in the town, shopkeepers hope the festive spirit will boost trade and remind residents what is on offer on their doorsteps.

“We can get everything we want in Matlock. I think it is a great place to be and we should all be very positive about what is on offer here.”

A Festive Focus event, which is starting during the Victorian Christmas weekend, will feature a shop window dressing competition.

Mike Blair, owner of Peli Deli, said: “I think it is more important than it has ever been to support local business, especially for Matlock.

“There seems to be a really good key core of high quality products that are stocked by passionate people.”

“Also there is the local, friendly service which very often can be a lot better then you would find in the cities.

“I think what we have got to do, personally, is make our shops look brighter and more inviting to welcome people and give them a great service. Not just that little bit extra at Christmas, but all year round.”

Residents can get involved with the campaign by designing a Shop Local logo.

Entries should be sent before the end of November to Catherine Rawas at the town council in the Imperial Rooms or by emailing CatherineR@matlock.gov.uk. The winning designer will be given a presentation version of the final logo by Matlock mayor Cate Hopkinson.

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Sisters Lets Cut Out All This Chat About Plastic Surgery

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

LAST WEEK, a TV show redefined what we mean by the Glamorous Grandmother. Where once she wore a starchy satin gown, a string of pearls and a bouffant hairdo much like Yootha Joyce’s magnificent coppery fright-wig in George And Mildred in the 1970s, the new generation, shown through Britain’s Youngest Grannies, wore skinny jeans, crop tops and multi-streaked highlights like Everyone Off The Telly because they were approximately 36 years old, the result of two generations of teenage pregnancy.

A speedy one week later and the Glamorous Grandmother is being redefined once again, a grandma who might be the traditional grandma’s age - over 60 - but who is doing everything in her considerable economic power to look like someone’s 36-year-old daughter. Or even 16-year-old granddaughter. We’ve entered, say cosmetic surgery giants Transform, the era of the Botox Granny, where 20% of Botox clients are now over 60, while breast implants for the same age range are up, as it were, by 31%, with full face-lifts also stretching upwards by 35%.

Their inspirational role models, say the clinic, are the ever-twinkling Dame Helen Mirren (63) and the ever-fabulous Joan Collins (75), right, a staggering irony considering both these women are ever-dwindling voices in the anti-surgery fightback. Dame Helen, famously, turned down an offer of free Botox for the 2007 Oscars where she won her gong for The Queen. “I’m very vain,” she twinkled beforehand, “but I’m not fond of all those needles and scalpels. I’ll try to get away with make-up, jewellery and a nice frock.” She was, of course, the globally swooned-over belle of that year’s ball.
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Joan Collins, meanwhile, ascribes her ever-glowing cartoon glamour to “proper food“, “activity” and “a happy gene” (plus world-class wig), as someone who tried Botox in its infancy, 10 years ago, and hated it. “It was unbelievably painful and it didn’t do anything,” she balked in 2006 before lamenting the now everyday Hollywood procedure. “They stick 300 shots of poison into your face,” she scoffed. “It’s hideous and makes you look like a chipmunk. The plastic surgeons want to make you look young but I don’t want to look young, I just want to look good.”

A doctor over in America, meanwhile, has now decided the ageing process is something we can literally halt with no needles and scalpels involved. “I truly believe ageing is a progressive inflammatory disease that occurs at a cellular level,” averred holistic dermatologist Dr Nicholas Perricone this week, skincare evangelist to the likes of Cate Blanchett, Uma Thurman and Julia Roberts. “And as such,” he added, “you can fight it.”

“If you look at Angelina Jolie,” he marvels, “she has these beautiful apples in her cheeks they’re the result of the muscles in the face. Using electro-stimulation I can give anyone this sort of a look.” And that would appear to be that. Follow this advice and 12 weeks later we all wake up and bear an uncanny resemblance to Angelina Jolie.

Those of us with a bloke lying next to us, meanwhile, will find chances are he still bears no resemblance whatsoever to Brad Pitt, as nowhere in any of this week’s anti-ageing pronouncements did anything apply to that curiously unconcerned section of the ageing population known as men.

“Women over 50 already form one of the largest groups in the population structure of the Western world,” Germaine Greer reminded us the other year. “As long as they like themselves, they will not be an oppressed minority. A grown woman should not have to masquerade as a girl in order to remain in the land of the living.”

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Anger At Henson’s School Patrols

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

Four months after NSW police seized Henson’s work from a Sydney gallery, the photographer has sparked renewed debate after making his first public defence of his work.

In a book by journalist David Marr, Henson says he finds models in several different ways. Most often, he is introduced to them by a friend or relative, but sometimes he sees a child in public and gives a business card to their parents.

He said he was once invited to a Melbourne primary school by a principal and “had a look around at lunchtime” before the principal offered to contact the parents of two children he had seen. It was not the first time he had been invited into schools to search for models, the book says.

Leonie Trimper, president of the Australian Primary Principals Association, said parents should have been told in advance about Henson’s visit. “Primary schools are not showcases for the public to come in and choose students for their own personal projects.”

Gail McHardy, the executive officer of Parents Victoria, said anyone wanting to enter schools for “external purposes” had to seek appropriate permission in advance, not after the event.

Ms McHardy asked whether Henson had been accompanied by staff on the visits and whether he had approached the children.

She said model agencies and other agencies had to follow protocols when approaching children in schools.

But Oscar-winning actor Geoffrey Rush came to Henson’s defence yesterday amid the latest controversy over the photographer’s work, saying public discussion of the furore had been “shrill”. “We’re not a very arts-attuned society,” Rush told The Weekend Australian. “So people start to see only the sexual politics of it.”

At the time of the raid on the Sydney gallery, police threatened to charge both Henson and the gallery, but the NSW Director of Public Prosecutions later found there was insufficient evidence to proceed. In Marr’s book, Henson concedes some of his models may have looked back with regret about working with him but says there has never been any negative reactions at the end of a session.

Liberal senator Bill Heffernan yesterday said it was an unforgivable betrayal of the trust placed by the parents in the schools that had allowed a photographer to commercialise children in the playground. “It’s absolutely outrageous someone ought to be sacked,” he said.

“The thing that shocked me most of all about the debate was the perception that artists were above the law or were asking for special exemptions, but that was never the case,” she said. “There is a responsibility in the artistic community to address that.”

In the book, Henson says he takes photographs only with the “willing participation and full control” of the family.

The child then makes the final decision. He also points out that children have an ability to detect unsavoury people. “Kids can smell a rat, you know, and we just don’t give them credit for it.

“If there is a dodgy teacher in the school, kids will know about it … It’s all part of the way in which they are naturally equipped to be resilient. Babies are tough.”

While Henson has been well-known to art collectors and gallerists for more than 20 years, most Australians hadn’t heard of him or seen his photographs until May, when police raided the Sydney gallery following a complaint from child protection advocate Hetty Johnston.

“He has a tendency to depict children naked and that is porn,” Ms Johnston said at the time.

The raid triggered furious debate, with everyone from Cate Blanchett to Kevin Rudd offering an opinion on what they saw as the differences between art and pornography.

The Prime Minister said he found the photographs “absolutely revolting” a sentiment echoed by then Opposition leader Brendan Nelson and former NSW premier Morris Iemma.

“Kids deserve to have the innocence of their childhood protected,” Mr Rudd said at the time. “Whatever the artistic view of the merits of that sort of stuff frankly I don’t think there are any just allow kids to be kids.”

In contrast to Mr Rudd’s comments, current Opposition Leader Malcolm Turnbull publicly denounced the raids, claiming artists should be allowed to express themselves within the bounds of the law.

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Cowboys Cougars Game Figures To Be Fun

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

Oklahoma State doesn’t know much about Washington State, which is OK because Washington State doesn’t know much about itself.

Saturday’s game won’t exactly be sandlot ball, but there could be variances thereof.

“On our offense, that’s what we do,” Gundy said, “and we’ve got some guys who are pretty good at it.”

Starting quarterback Zac Robinson smiled at the mysterious trip to the Great Northwest, claiming he gets a kick out of the possibilities.

“Oh, absolutely. I think that’s a lot of fun,” Robinson said. “They’ve got tape on us, but we’ve got virtually nothing on them. They could come out and show a completely different look than what we’ve been practicing. That makes it kind of fun.”

In August, teams are far more concerned about executing their own stuff than what the other team might try to do.

Openers are closer to raw football than any game on the schedule. Just line up, snap the ball and let’s see who’s better.

“When it comes down to it, it’s about tackling, flying around and having fun while you’re out there,” Cowboys junior linebacker Andre Sexton said. “If you can go out there and tackle, it doesn’t really matter what plays they run. We have to go out there and find a way to stop them.”

The threat of the unknown exists every week to a certain degree, but OSU vs. WSU is beyond the norm.

The Cougars have a new head coach in Paul Wulff, a WSU graduate who spent the previous 15 seasons at Eastern Washington, the last eight as head coach.

The Cougars have a new co-defensive coordinators in Chris Ball, previously the secondary coach at Pittsburgh, and Jody Sears, who was Wulff’s defensive coordinator at Eastern Washington.

This meant the Cowboys studied the defensive schemes of three programs WSU, Pitt and Eastern Washington to prep for Saturday.

“Between the three of them, we’ve practiced quite a bit of stuff the last two months,” OSU co-offensive coordinator Gunter Brewer said. “Good thing we opened up with them because if we played them in the second game, we wouldn’t have had as much time to prepare for them.”

There also are unknowns with the Cowboys.

How good their defense will be has pretty much been an unknown this entire millennium.

Who will be calling OSU’s offensive plays wasn’t known until Monday’s media luncheon, when Gundy revealed he would be calling the shots, not Brewer or co-coordinator Trooper Taylor.

“It’s fun for me,” Gundy said. “The reason I’m involved more is because it’s what I like to do.”

Gundy has yet to choose between Alex Cate and Brandon Weeden for the backup quarterback and won’t do so until Saturday, if necessary.

Asked if he was playing mind games in not revealing who would call plays and the back-up quarterback, Gundy shrugged and said, “There’s nothing to hide, plus he (Wulff) doesn’t care who our backup quarterback is.”

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Swimmers’ fears as Matlock pool closure is extended

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

News that a Dales swimming pool will be closed for repairs until at least October has sparked anger from users.

Derbyshire Dales District Council has said residents will be without the facility while extensive work on the main pool takes place.

Steve Sankey, chairman of Matlock and District Swimming Club, said he feared the Lido would suffer the same fate as Sherwood Hall leisure centre.

Mr Sankey said the club also risked losing swimmers to other clubs and falling competition results.

Matlock Mayor Cate Hopkinson said she also had concerns about the Lido after Sherwood Hall closed.

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Family meetings a surprising success

Monday, August 18th, 2008

About three years ago, I took a parenting class that came highly recommended by several friends. It was free to the public, informative, and quite a lot of fun.

I worked hard to put into practice much of what I learned there. One suggestion made by the teacher - the implementation of a weekly family meeting - sat on the shelf in my brain until earlier this year. I don’t really know why I waited so long.

Those of you clearing your throats as if to say, “Ahem … it’s because you were a control freak who didn’t want to switch to a democratic parenting style” can just be quiet right now.

Whatever the reason for the delay, I got over it. In March of this year, the kids and I had our first formal meeting and haven’t missed a week since. Now, I find I’ve become one of those overzealous crazy people on a quest, and that quest is to get the word out on how cool family meetings are.

Once they start having family meetings of their own, I won’t seem nearly as annoying, because they’ll be out annoying all of their friends too. An outline of a typical family meeting follows:

Spotlights: This is the feel good portion of the meeting. Everyone gets a chance to spotlight someone else for doing something right. At our first ever family meeting last spring, Miriam spotlighted Ray for helping her get things down from high shelves. Three year old Michael often spotlights the first person he looks at for “being nice.” At a family meeting in the weeks following our wedding, my husband spotlighted himself for “being so lucky.” (Yes, I know that was a completely gratuitous bit of cuteness. At this week’s meeting, I’ll be spotlighting myself for using the word gratuitous.)

Calendar: This section of the meeting is pretty self explanatory. We pull the calendar off the fridge and fill in appointments, activities, and other events we need to remember. I want the world to know I was fastidious about adding Underwear Day during our family meeting two weeks ago. We observed it with a *cough* brief moment of silence. No, I will not apologize for the corniness of that pun.

Planning: We’re currently working on our plan to make a family flag. The first planning session brought with it the task of choosing our family colors. If you’re ever planning on making a family flag, I suggest you come to the meeting with three or four colors, and let them choose two. I made the mistake of asking everyone to submit a color for vote. Our flag will now be red, gold, green, blue, yellow, clear and hot red. I don’t know what hot red is, but Michael is passionate about it.

Issues: The issues portion of family meeting is a chance to work out the nuts and bolts of family life. We make rules, decide on consequences and settle arguments. Everyone has the right to raise an issue, whether it’s Ray’s recent motion that we make Sunday nights “Taco Night” - it was unanimously approved - or Miriam’s passionate plea to reinstate family prayer time. The thing I’ve learned about issues time is that I’d better be ready for complete honesty from my kids. How well I remember the meeting in which Cate pronounced, “Mommy, you yell too much.” Fortunately for me, I was rewarded two weeks later with her spotlight of, “Mommy, thanks for not yelling so much anymore.”

This week, I’ll be unveiling the new “Extra Chores for Cash” incentive system, and I’m pretty sure one of the kids wants us to vote on a fair Playstation 2 schedule. We’ll be looking over the sample family crests I printed from the internet, and we may start breaking down the costs of going to Disneyland next summer. All in all, I think it will be a fun and productive meeting. I’m especially excited for spotlight time.

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Man hit by car following attack

Saturday, August 16th, 2008

A 20-year-old man was dragged almost 400 feet by a car Thursday that struck him in a hit-and-run near Brunswick High School during a chase his brother said began when they were attacked at a discount store.

Josh Carlisle of Brunswick was listed in stable condition at Southeast Georgia Health System’s Brunswick hospital, a spokeswoman said.

He was run over about 4 p.m. on Habersham Street and dragged beneath a blue Nissan Altima to Cate Street, said his brother, Daniel Carlisle, who cradled his brother in his arms until police and emergency personnel arrived.

“He was conscious but crying and yelling in pain,” said Daniel Carlisle, whose clothes were stained with his brother’s blood.

Josh Carlisle has head and chest injuries and one of his legs was broken, his brother said.

He apparently became trapped behind one of the tires as the vehicle rolled over him, police said.

Police were searching for the Altima, which had its windshield broken by Daniel Carlisle, who said he threw a piece of metal at the car to try to distract its driver from his brother.

No arrests had been reported in the case Thursday night.

Danielle Carlberg, 24, and Daniel Carlisle, 23, gave this account of the chase and hit-and-run to the Times-Union:

Carlberg and the brothers were at the Dollar General Store, 4999 Altama Ave., when a woman, accompanied by two young children and a man, accosted Josh Carlisle. The woman began punching him in the face while her male companion accused him of burglarizing her home.

Carlisle denied the accusations then got into Carlberg’s car with his brother, and the three of them drove away from the store. The woman, children and the man got into the Altima and gave chase.

Carlberg drove through several residential neighborhoods in an attempt to elude them and to find a police officer for help. When they got to the school, Josh Carlisle jumped from the car and started running toward the building to get one of the school’s resource officers.

The man in the Altima jumped out of the car and chased him on foot. Carlisle slipped and fell down on the pavement at a driveway leading to the rear of the high school. The woman then stopped and picked up the man.

“As soon as Josh fell and her boyfriend got in, she floored it and ran over Josh,” said Carlberg, who described the woman as laughing.

Police found brass knuckles at the scene.

Two students told the Times-Union they saw the car hit him, and their accounts of the incident were consistent with what Carlberg and Daniel Carlisle said.

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So much for the safe choice

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

Let’s pause for a minute amidst the scatty cacophony to John Edwards’ affair with his flighty “videographer,” who no reasonable person would pay to film paint dry.

No, it’s the fact that the down-home son of a millworker with his lazy Carolinian drawl (and lily-white skin) was supposed to be the safe bet for the Democrats. Jaded liberals squawked that America would never go for the ballsy chick or the black dude, so you’ll vote for Edwards and you’ll like it.

That’s the best we can hope for. America’s just not ready and all that.

Of course, folks in Iowa didn’t listen to the conventional wisdom and the rest is history. But even after Barack Obama secured the nomination, a pundit here or there would sourly mumble that he was floundering because of that black thing, needling that John Edwards would be blowing John McCain out of the water.

Which amounts to a nice theory for political science students to contemplate in between Jager bombs at the bar. Those of us in the real world rejected the Plastic One because we didn’t know who he was (even after being a few thousand votes in Ohio away from the vice presidency in ‘04) and didn’t trust him.

After observing and interviewing Edwards at political events since 2003, I can say that he was heavy on sheen and light on substance. He said all the right things, repeating Democratic talking points in his artful, aw-shucks way. The father of three was great at kissing babies.

But there was no way His Contrivance seemed ready to take that 3 a.m. phone call. (Although I would vote for him to play the president on tee-vee. His coif is killer).

So maybe that’s why few of us were shocked at his revelations that yes, he actually did dally with Rielle Hunter, who still sports ’80s Madonna hair as a nod to her days as a coked-out New York clubhopper.

To think that Elizabeth Edwards (who Rielle sniffed “didn’t give off good energy”) will have to spend her last years shuddering from this humiliation is just vile. Monsieur Edwards claims he told his family, which presumably includes his eldest daughter, Cate, a Harvard law student. Maybe his other two kids, 8 and 10, can find out as a Christmas present later after Mommy’s passed away.

Edwards, who nailed himself in an ABC interview as a narcissist, has cringingly insisted there’s nothing more for anyone to say as “I’ve stripped myself bare.” Well, there are questions of the paternity of Hunter’s daughter and if this was the first time the senator strayed.

But that’s just a measure on the hypocrisy scale. It’s the political implications that I’m interested in.

Just think for a moment if he were the nominee. This would be game-over for the Dems. You can argue that McCain dumping his disfigured wife for an Anheuser heiress 18 years his junior would become an issue. Perhaps. But that was almost 30 years ago and all we see now is silver-maned Cindy, doting mother of seven.

We can have a robust debate whether extramarital affairs should have any place in political discourse. I vote no, but I’m a journalistic curmudgeon, in spite of my Gen X birthday and the fact that I’m paid to blog. But Edwards’ tryst is out there (and how). Given the appalling scenario with his wife’s metastatic cancer, I don’t really feel like doing him any favors by ignoring the political fallout.

The reality is that this kind of salacious scandal is ruinous for politicians, especially when it reinforces the very doubts people had about the candidate in the first place. Edwards knows this, having watched Bill Clinton implode (and castigating him for it).

Which is another crisis likely averted by not picking Hillary as the nominee, besides the fact that she could unite the right in a way McCain never will. Who knows when Bill’s next bimbo eruption would strike, not to mention his less sexy, but far more troubling dealings in Dubai. That’s the real reason Clinton’s not on Obama’s veep short list, not bad blood after a bruising primary.

When it comes to arrogant politicians’ penchant for extracurricular activities, the more things change, the more they stay the same.

And so a skinny black guy with big ears, a funny name (and the magazine-cover perfect family) is not only the voters’ choice, but has turned out to be the Dems’ safest bet for presidency.

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Cate Campbell

Saturday, August 9th, 2008

Three days before her 16th birthday, Cate Campbell was giving an interview at Santa Clara, outside San Francisco, where she had just downed American pool-sprint queen Natalie Coughlin. Former Olympic 200m butterfly champ Mel Stewart, working for a swimming news website, was asking Campbell how she stayed grounded given the rocket-ride she had taken to the top of her sport in less than a year.

In Australian sporting terms, Campbell could be the best thing to come out of Africa since George Gregan. Born in Malawi, the eldest of five children, Campbell spent her first nine years in Blantyre, a former colonial city named for the Scottish birthplace of explorer Dr David Livingstone. Siblings Bronte (now 14), Jessicah (12), Hamish (10) and Abigail (seven) followed.

Even if the Campbells didn’t have a -backyard swimming pool, water was destined to figure largely in their early lives land-locked Malawi is more than 20 per cent water thanks to the -enormous Lake Malawi. Father Eric is a keen sailor and mother Jenny, “who chucked us into the water as soon as possible”, is a -former national-level synchronised swimmer.

Campbell spent weekends at Lake Malawi where the children swam and sailed and kept an eye out for angry hippos. “There used to be a rogue hippo that would hang around and attack people and eat the villagers’ crops, until they shot it,” she recalls.

It was an outdoorsy life of bushwalks and bonfires, but eventually the family decided Australia offered a better future and emigrated when Cate was nine. They moved to Brisbane and rented a house in Indooroopilly, walking distance from the local swimming club.

Campbell says she was “very lazy” at the start of her swimming career and it was -initially her sister who inspired her to commit to the sport. “Bronte is very driven and she would pull me out of bed to go training,” she says. “I’d slack off and skip laps. Then she reaped the rewards of doing the work and that made me put my head down and work hard.Campbell finished second to Trickett in both sprint events (50m and 100m) at the Olympic trials in March and will combine with her to lead the women’s 4×100m freestyle relay that is defending the gold medal.

Cusack is also intent on ensuring she grows up with wings at her heels, but no stars in her eyes. He is protective of her in the public eye, but in private he delivers reality checks. “Cate hasn’t been treated any differently as she’s become more successful, outside the pool or in,” he says. “The biggest mistake is to turn them into princesses, where they think they should be treated differently.”

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Property Cleanup Taxes Springdale Resources

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

Yards and lots throughout Springdale are looking more like hayfields than lawns, but mowing the yards could take more effort than baling hay.

A change in state law added days, weeks and sometimes months to the time needed for the city to legally mow property the owner let return to a natural state. The state legislature, according to Ernest Cate, assistant city attorney, changed the notification requirements in 2007 for cities that want to clean up private property deemed unsafe or unsanitary.

Before doing any work, the law states, the city must notify any lienholder, such as a mortgage bank, before starting work.

“Before the law changed, code enforcement would post a notice on the property,” Cate said. “After seven business days, you could start mowing. The attorney’s office wasn’t involved.”

“People are frustrated,” said Sgt. Billy Turnbough, who heads the police department’s Springdale Nuisance Abatement Partnership. “I’m frustrated. This is hurting people’s quality of life and their property values.”

The problems range from affordable housing to much more expensive neighborhoods.

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