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Posts Tagged ‘Paul’

Paul Rieckhoff: GAO: VA Failing to Serve Women Warriors

If you blinked, you could’ve missed it. With the media’s obsession over Michael Jackson’s death and Sotomayor’s confirmation hearings plastered across cable news shows, an…

David Paul: The Greening of Goldman Sachs

The US economic turnaround may not be complete. The AIG turnaround may not be complete. The GM turnaround may not be complete. But Goldman Sachs…

Paul McCartney “Late Show With David Letterman” VIDEO (July 15)

On Wednesday night, music legend Paul McCartney returned to New York’s famous Ed Sullivan Theater 45 years after his first appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show sparked “Beatlemania” in America. During his chat on the Late Show with David Letterman, Paul McCartney opened up about befriending and later drifting apart from the late Michael Jackson. [...]

Paul Abrams: Geithner, Congress, Wake Up!: Before Bonuses, Goldman Should Pay Me Back the $30B Laundered Through AIG

Wall Street mythologists are now spinning the yarn that Goldman Sachs paid back the money it took from taxpayers and thus ought to be free to award enormous bonuses to their senior executives.

All Good Festival | 07.09 – 07.12 | WV

Words by: Andrew Bruss | Images by: Kenny Pusey

All Good Festival :: 07.09.09 – 07.12.09 :: Marvin’s Mountaintop :: Masontown, West Virginia

All Good 2009

While Ben Harper and Relentless7 drove through their headlining slot, Ivan Neville of Dumpstaphunk told JamBase, “All Good Festival is an absolutely wonderful festival. It’s awesome. You’ve got a fuckin’ mountainside and from what I’ve seen – we played All Good three years before – it’s one of the better festivals.” Dumpstaphunk played an appropriately scheduled slot right before Harper took the stage, and Neville couldn’t have been happier with his audience. “It’s a fucking sea of people, man, absolute music lovers and they love different genres of music. [You've got] bluegrass fans, electronica fans. It’s sick that different kinds of shit all goes down.”

Neville pinned the proverbial tail on the donkey when he called All Good one of the best festivals with a collection of devoted music fans from the greater mid-Atlantic and beyond. All Good took place on Marvin’s Mountaintop, a location of panoramic beauty on the outskirts of Masontown, WV. Although greater Masontown seemed to have been carved out of the earth with TNT, the event’s Masontown location provided nothing but ideal geography for a four-day music festival. The rolling hills gave ample room for camping and vending, with wooded areas offering more adventurous campers some extra legroom, but the icing on the cake was the stage-grounds. With no overlapping sets, two stages were set up side by side against a backdrop that Jake Cinninger (Umphrey’s McGee) called “the concert bowl.” From within the air-conditioned confines of their tour bus, he added, “I’m a huge fan of festivals that have some sort of geography. I like this, ‘I can see your house from here,’ mentality. Just sitting here on the bus, we can look 60 miles in one direction and see a bridge, and in the other direction, a city of tents.”

For as much as the grounds proved to be a major player in the weekend’s smooth production, the festival would have been nothing but a major campout without the lineup. Topping the bill, Bob Weir & RatDog shared headlining honors with Harper. Official late night sets were given to jam titan’s moe. and Umphrey’s McGee, with Bassnectar and SOJA playing abbreviated sets on the side stage while things on the main stage transitioned from headliner to late nighter.

Thursday, 07.09

All Good 2009

It seems as though every festival these days is stretching its length with an unofficial kick-off Thursday night, and All Good was no exception. While the main stage was still being erected, a smaller, more intimate performance area was set up deeper into the campgrounds. Keller Williams followed BoomBox, a DJ/guitar duo that raised the flow of blood in everybody’s veins. Without his Keels or WMD’s, Keller was left alone, performing his looped-out, one-man band shtick that won his audience over in the first place. Set highlights like “Freaker By The Speaker,” and Nirvana’s “All Apologies” demonstrated Keller’s technical proficiency, in addition to his natural talent as a performer. Throughout the set, he did some vocal soloing through the buzzing of his lips that sounded like it came from Louis Armstrong’s trumpet, and while playing an air-bass solo, he tossed his imaginary instrument into the air and caught it on the beat.

Lotus followed Keller with a set that raged well into the a.m., giving all those early birds something to keep their feet moving to. For as much fun as the glow stick wars may have been, their set left something to be desired. A great deal of All Good attendees seemed to have come from Rothbury (read our review here), where Lotus performed a “secret” late night set, and many-a-head agreed that they were having an off night.

Continue reading for Friday’s coverage of All Good…

Friday, 07.10

Stanton Moore – Galactic :: All Good 2009

Fortunately, Friday showcased a whole array of talent who brought their A-game. Hill Country Revue started the day off on the main stage with overdriven blues that brought several of its member’s fame in the North Mississippi Allstars. Jackie Greene followed with a somewhat generic set that left folks wondering where this kid would be if it weren’t for Phil Lesh’s interest in him.

Mike Silverman, aka That 1 Guy, played for twenty minutes before and after Galactic brought the Cajun funk on the main stage. Silverman may have been the second act of the weekend to work the one-man band angle, but this guy is on a different planet than Keller. He performs on his homemade “Magic Pipe,” a two-stringed bass of sorts that features various effect buttons up and down the instrument’s body, while a second pipe creates tones and various pitches based on the angle at which it’s bent. Most of the folks who were familiar with That 1 Guy beforehand most likely knew him as a regular opener for Buckethead, but after serving as the bread of a crunchy Galactic sandwich odds are many in attendance grew to appreciate him in his own right.

Galactic’s hour long set raged and boogied in all the right ways, getting bodies moving, but not too hard for a midday set under the scorching sun. Following their slot, while Robert Randolph & The Family Band performed “Billy Jean” on the main stage, Galactic’s bassist Robert Mercurio told JamBase, “It’s always tough in the middle of the day to get the same energy as a night concert, but it was great.” As for the event itself, Mercurio said, “I was talking about it with [All Good Promoter] Tim [Walther] and I was saying what I really liked about this festival is you see the lineup and you get to see every band. You have two stages next to each other that don’t overlap. It goes from one [performance] to the next. You don’t have to go anywhere. It’s just continual music. The crowd stays in one spot and instead of having to choose which band to see, they can sit and watch everything, which is unique at a festival.” Ben Ellman, the group’s sax player added, “It’s a beautiful day in a beautiful place. We’re here to have fun, so what more can you ask for?” As for his personal highlight, Ellman said without hesitation, “Getting to use the port-o-let right after they cleaned it. You have to hold it till you see them cleaning.”

Bob Weir – RatDog :: All Good 2009

Although Les Claypool fans didn’t really appreciate it, veteran singer-songwriter Todd Snider performed a brief set of his socially conscious tunes on the side stage before the bass virtuoso got freaky on the main stage. The highlight of Snider’s set was a pseudo-spoken word song about Columbine and violence in America that brought to mind Arlo Guthrie‘s “Alice’s Restaurant” through the almost-goofy, drawn out method of storytelling.

As for Claypool, he fucking nailed it, plain and simple. As he stomped on his monitor to the rhythm, while making goofy faces at his stagehands, Claypool hammered out lick after lick of the funky, mind-altering bass that made this once-metal icon an adopted idol of the jamband community. Much like the attendees, plenty of the acts on the bill have found themselves returning to All Good year after year, effectively building on the communal vibe a festival already delivers. Hence, Claypool roared into his mic, “Here we go again, All Good!” and his packed audience roared right back.

Bob Weir‘s headline slot gave him a solid two hours of time to dish out old Dead tunes, as well as a few of the covers he’s been known to perform over the years. Every armchair Deadhead in the house was able to sing along to “Truckin’,” which made it an ideal set opener. Weir followed with the first half of “Tomorrow Never Knows,” the last track on The Beatles’ Revolver, which he finished up later in the evening. It’s easy to hate on Bob Weir, Phil Lesh or any of the remaining members of the Dead for continuously touring the country behind songs they wrote damn near 40 years ago, but the triple threat closer of “Morning Dew” into “China Cat Sunflower” > “I Know You Rider” puts these arguments to rest. Truth be told, you’re not likely to hear anything written within the past twenty years at a RatDog concert (outside of the originals on their sole studio release, 2000′s Evening Moods), but when the back catalog is full of trans-generational material, judging Weir over the freshness of the songs is irrelevant.

Although moe.‘s set felt stale and far from trans-generational, the Bassnectar set between Weir and moe. was a weekend highlight. Fans were packed in front of the side stage, cheering for Bassnectar before Weir even finished his set. Every time Bassnectar, born Lorin Ashton, poked his head out from the side of the stage, the crowd went nuts. His set packed the most energy and produced the craziest glow stick wars of the weekend, and when his time was up moe. failed to take the stage, so Bassnectar announced that he was just going to keep playing and until someone told him not to.

Continue reading for Saturday’s coverage of All Good…

Saturday, 07.11

Big Nazo :: All Good 2009

Saturday, early sets by Fear Nuttin Band and Cornmeal were far from packed, and it seemed like lots of folks were counting on seeing The Bridge during their Sunday set rather than Saturday. However, while The Bridge was doing their thing, Big Nazo shocked and awed an audience in all the right ways on the early arrival stage Keller rocked previously in the weekend. To a relatively wholesome crowd with kids on their parent’s shoulders, Big Nazo, hailing from Providence, Rhode Island, came out decked in giant costumes that were just one of the many factors that make their performance so much more than just a concert. Fusing theatrics, sketch comedy and killer tunes, Big Nazo turned a crowd onto a whole type of concert experience they’d never seen before. The folks behind Big Nazo have spent years making costumes for Gwar, but the stuff they make for Gwar is nothing by comparison. The group’s frontman came out as a giant rat-man before stripping down to a mad professor outfit that made it easier for him to cover Gary Wright’s “Dream Weaver.” Later on in their half hour set, we were told that narcs were going to arrest us unless we took an experimental hallucinogen that was already in our system. After being told we’d been dosed, one of the more human looking characters took off his head to reveal an alien face that could have had the most sober of attendees tripping their balls off.

Although it didn’t receive top billing, one highly anticipated set was a half hour performance by Jeff Austin (mandolin, vocals) of Yonder Mountain String Band and Brendan Bayliss (guitar, vocals) of Umphrey’s McGee. The two acts have crossed paths more times than can be counted, and Bayliss even commented that they’ve got an album coming out that’s been nine and a half years in the making. The material leaned towards bluegrass, an obvious comfort zone for Austin, but Bayliss held his own and even fused in some metal riffage in between the Appalachian grooves.

Buckethead :: All Good 2009

After the bromance that was Austin/Bayliss came to a close, All Good was treated to a set by a cult of personality unlike any other on the bill. Buckethead took the stage amidst technical difficulties but after the sound decided to play nice he had the audience wrapped around his finger. As he nunchucked and breakdanced across the stage from behind his mask, the guitarist born Brian Carroll weaved between funk and speed metal in no time at all. With no back-up band, Buckethead opted to perform with a pre-recorded track. Although this makes you wonder how much a Buckethead setlist can truly vary from night to night, it demonstrated a remarkable sense of rhythm and near-perfect memory as he tapped and shredded his audience’s faces off. His white Les Paul has two customized toggle buttons that seemed to have been taken right off an arcade consol, and in his gigantic hands, his guitar looked like a videogame controller to be manipulated for his own enjoyment.

Assembly of Dust and Yonder Mountain both kept things string-heavy before a sunset slot by Sound Tribe Sector 9 took things to another level. They took the stage with the sun at their backs, as the five-strong electronica act started things on a mellow note. As time went on and the sun slowly set, STS9 gradually began adding layers onto their existing jams, heightening the intensity while making the transitions barely noticeable to their audience. Although it seemed like most folks had used up their glow stick supply during the previous night’s Bassnectar set, STS9′s lowdown throwdown was by far one of the highest energy sets of the weekend.

Ben Harper and Relentless7 :: All Good 2009

Dumpstaphunk was nice and gritty from the first note, with dueling bassists Nick Daniels and Tony Hall bringing the low end to the forefront and Ivan Neville, a member of the first family of New Orleans funk, leading his band through a set of grooves that were tight musically while informal on stage.

Ben Harper and Relentless7 tore into a powerful set that packed a lot more punch than his work with the Innocent Criminals ever did. In addition to Harper and his slide licks, Relentless7 rolled with a guitarist, bassist and drummer, who all sounded heavily influenced by Led Zeppelin. “Shimmer and Shine,” the first single off the group’s studio debut, featured Bonham-esque drums and bass drops that landed someplace in between John Entwistle and John Paul Jones. And in case the Zeppelin in their sound wasn’t clear enough, they sealed the deal with a cover of “Good Times, Bad Times.”

Umphrey’s McGee was another major festival highlight, and it would be hard to imagine things any other way. These guys know when to noodle, when to shred, and they always rise to the occasion. During a chat on their tour bus, keyboardist Joel Cummins commented, “For us, what’s most important is if we start at one in the morning, we have to do something to keep peoples’ attention after they’ve been on their feet for ten hours.”

Umphrey’s McGee :: All Good 2009 by Bruss

While multitasking between giving JamBase sound bytes and watching the Phillies/Pirates game (as the only vocal Pirates fan of all the Pittsburg attendees), bassist Ryan Stasik said, “This is our fourth time playing All Good, and the places we come to the most often we try not to repeat the same songs when people are likely to have been there. We want people to see us play as many tunes as possible.”

They did, in fact, switch it up, and dished out a killer setlist that would make any Umphreak’s mouth water. The group opened with “40′s Theme,” but it wasn’t until the dueling lead guitar licks of “All In Time” (clocking in near the 25 minute mark) that the group really stretched their legs. On stage, Bayliss comes off as the sexy rock star, while the group’s other technically-gifted guitarist, Jake Cinninger, has a bit of a schoolboy thing going on, backwards baseball cap and all. As tight as Bayliss is on a six-string, Cinninger shone the brightest. During the peak of “All In Time” he ran his fingers up and down the neck of the guitar with his eyes closed, head tilted back, with a look on his face that seemed like he’d just broken out of a deep meditative state. Another major set highlight was a hyper-accurate cover of Pink Floyd’s “Shine On You Crazy Diamond.” They closed out the formal chunk of their set with “Bright Lights,” their humorous ode to rock stardom, which Stasik teased with a closing bass lick from “Thriller.”

Continue reading for Sunday’s coverage of All Good…

Sunday, 07.12

All Good 2009

Sunday’s schedule was by far the mellowest of the weekend, and as disappointing as it looked on paper, the crowd needed it. Donna The Buffalo rang out Johnny Cash’s “Ring Of Fire” on the main stage while many All Good attendees simply packed up and left early. The last two acts on the schedule were BK3, the latest project from Bill Kreutzmann of the Grateful Dead, and the Grateful Dead Tribute act Dark Star Orchestra. Kreutzmann told JamBase before his set that unlike Bobby and Phil, he tries to take a more creative approach to doing Dead tunes, and with Tara Nevins of Donna The Buffalo on vocals, he gave the old tunes a more modern voice.

With all the neo-hippies long gone, the half sized crowd left to witness Dark Star was more Deadhead than Bisco Kid. It was fun getting to hear Dark Star Orchestra play Dead tunes as accurately as they do, and to be honest, Dark Star’s “Bobby” sounded more like Weir on the studio tracks than Weir did himself on Friday night. But there was something off about Dark Star that felt stuck in nostalgia. Even with their own solos, one couldn’t help but feel as though there wasn’t anything remotely spontaneous about the performance, which, as any Deadhead knows, is the at the core of “Dead Music.” That said, if it floats your boat then get after it. While it might not be the most adventurous take on the Grateful Dead, it is certainly a very accurate account, and for anyone who has yet to learn the power of “Dead Music” or just simply wants to relive the glory of days gone by, well, DSO certainly fills that void.

All Good 2009

Dark Star provided a mellow end to a sunny weekend that was expected to yield thunderstorms galore. Good weather, great production, and heaps of talented artists made All Good another big success. Unfortunately, certain ghosts of the event’s past continued to haunt in 2009. Drug arrests and overdoses have led to a more active role of drug enforcement agents on site, and while varying accounts may differ, it seemed as though 2009 was a cleaner, more peaceful event with less of the dirty-nasty, but it was not void of this element.

Regardless of the activity on Shakedown, the amount of unsupervised children wandering the lot (including a prepubescent doing nitrous and one “mother” leading her son around on a leash made of caution tape) was negligent at best and criminal at worst. Plenty of parents opted for the family camping and had their kids in the tent by sundown and there were clearly plenty of families that had a wonderful weekend, but not everyone was so responsible. Too many children under the age of ten were left entirely unattended in an environment riddled with very adult activities, and in a crowd of over 15,000 you’re more than likely to have at least one unsavory individual looking to cause harm. This type of commentary is rare in the recap of a musical event – especially one that was overwhelming positive like All Good – but some things need to be noted. A Jersey based bouncer named Cornelius “Corney” Ealman said that he wasn’t opposed to festival drug use as long as you weren’t “pushing kilos,” but when asked what he would want people to know about the event, he said plain and simple, “Don’t bring your little kids. It’s just not a good environment for little kids to be in.”

Although the weekend did have its shadier moments, they were easy to avoid and anyone looking to take care of themselves and have a good time likely did just that and then some. Whenever you get a big crowd of party people together there will always be a few bad apples, but at the 2009 event, from logistics to weather to crowd to a familiar-yet-eclectic lineup, All Good once again does the name justice.

Continue reading for more pics of All Good 2009…

Images by: Kenny Pusey

Brendan Bayliss & Jeff Austin

Brendan Bayliss

Jeff Austin

Assembly Of Dust

Buckethead

Buckethead

Buckethead fans

Buckethead fans

That 1 Guy

Jackie Greene

Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk

Tony Hall – Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk

Nick Daniels & Ian Neville – Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk

Allie Kral – Cornmeal

Fear Nuttin Band

Ben Ellman & Corey Henry

Ben Ellman – Galactic

Steve Kimock

Lake Trout

Les Claypool

Les Claypool

Sam Bass – Les Claypool

Mike Dillon – Les Claypool

Mike Dillon

Ben Harper

Big Nazo

Big Nazo

Big Nazo

Yonder Mountain String Band

Robert Randolph

Bob Weir

Dave Murphy – STS9

Hunter Brown & Jeffree Lerner – STS9

STS9

STS9 fans

JamBase | Mountaintop
Go See Live Music!


Michael Conniff: Con Games: End of Story In Vegas

Vegas, man-made and juiced-up, is where our story as a country has come to an end.

Russell Brand to play the Easter Bunny

Actor will provide the voice of the mythical character, for family-friendly film I Hop

With his bright eyes, excitable demeanour and enormous appetite for sexual conquests, it looks like the perfect role: Russell Brand, court jester of British comedy and Hollywood ingenue, has been cast as the Easter Bunny.

Brand will provide the voice of the chocolate egg-bearing rabbit in a new family comedy based on a mix of live-action and CGI, titled I Hop. The story centres on a jobless slacker who runs over the Easter Bunny while driving home late, Variety reports. With the creature unable to fulfil his usual duties due to a broken leg, the man is forced into action to help save Easter. As they get to know each other while going about their work, it turns out the new comrades are both running from adulthood.

Tim Hill, who shot similar fare with last year’s hugely successful Alvin and the Chipmunks, will direct for Universal and Illumination Entertainment.

Producer Chris Meledandri said: “Russell showed me that he’s got a wonderful ability not only to be funny in his own body, but he can create humour vocally, which is the distinction we need for these movies,” Meledandri said. “This gives us an opportunity to re-mythologise the holiday around an Easter Bunny character that is as dynamic and irreverent as Russell is.”

The script is by Cinco Paul and Ken Daurio, who worked on another Illumination project, Despicable Me, which is in cinemas on 9 July in the US. Brand is part of a voice cast which includes Steve Carell, Jason Segel, Kristen Wiig and Julie Andrews.

The former TV presenter is currently lining up a number of Hollywood projects, including Judd Apatow’s Get Him to the Greek, in which he reprises his role as British rocker Aldous Snow from last year’s Forgetting Sarah Marshall, and remakes of Drop Dead Fred, and Oscar-winning comedy Arthur.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Paul LeGendre: The Ilan Halimi Murder Trial: Moving Beyond Hatred?

On Friday, July 10, the leader of a Paris gang was sentenced to life in prison for torturing and murdering a young Jewish man, Ilan…

Ronnie Wood painted as vampire by dumped wife’’s fuming brother

A portrait of Rolling Stones member Ronnie Wood painted by his estranged wife’s brother shows him as a vampire.
Wood cheated on his wife Jo with Russian beauty Ekaterina Ivanova.
And now Jo’s sibling Paul Karslake has expressed his anger by showing him sucking blood of a blonde in his oil painting.
“I don”t hate the bloke, [...]

The girl who borrowed a heart

• Ten years with two hearts, then her own recovers
• 16-year-old leads full life after cancer and transplant

Her life used to consist of endless rounds of medicines, long stays in hospital and uncertainty about how much longer she would live for. Now 16-year-old Hannah Clark – the first person in Britain to receive someone else’s heart but later have it removed, only for her own to unexpectedly recover – relishes typical teenage pursuits such as running, shopping and walking her dog.

Born with a rare heart condition that could easily have killed her, Hannah, from Mountain Ash near Cardiff, was two when she joined an exclusive club by having a five-month-old girl’s heart grafted on to her own.

For 10 and a half years she had two hearts – “piggybacking”, doctors call it – although it was the donated heart that kept Hannah alive while her original organ took a long rest.

Complications meant the second heart had to be taken out when she was 12, and doctors were unsure what would happen. No one had survived such a procedure.

Now, three and a half years later, one of the most dramatic success stories in recent medical history has just done her GCSEs, started her first part-time job at a kennels and is preparing for a family holiday by the seaside – all powered by a heart which, for her first 12 years, doctors thought could not keep her alive.

Confirmation of Hannah’s highly unusual success in recovering from cardiomyopathy, which affects the heart’s muscle, comes today in the form of a long article in the Lancet medical journal.

In complicated medicalese, it tells an amazing story of survival. The authors, who include renowned heart surgeon Sir Magdi Yacoub, testify to the teenager’s feat.

Yesterday the girl who used to have two hearts negotiated another obstacle: a press conference to tell her story.

At times the constant whirring of cameras, barrage of questions and sheer number of people left her lost for words, or in tears.

How specially does she treasure life now, someone asked? “I can’t say,” replied Hannah. It took her mother, Liz, to answer: “She just loves life. She doesn’t think about tomorrow; she thinks about today, and lives life to the full. She gets up every morning smiling, and it’s very, very rare to see Hannah upset.

“She doesn’t go to bed until three o’clock in the morning sometimes … that’s how much energy she’s got. She couldn’t have done that before.”

Yacoub, of the Harefield hospital in west London, said her recovery had given the many doctors involved in her care insights into many things, such as transplant surgery and the use of immunosuppressant drugs, which must be taken to minimise the chances of a patient’s body rejecting a new organ.

Before Hannah, no one’s own heart had ever recovered enough to keep them alive, although doctors did think it was a theoretical possibility that a weak heart could somehow become strong.

Among the lessons learned from Hannah, Yacoub said, was that “the possibility of recovery of the heart is just like magic. A heart that was not contracting at all, after a time we put the new heart to pump next to it, and do its work. Now it is functioning normally. That is going to be very fundamental in helping people in the future.”

Born in 1993, Hannah underwent what surgeons call heterotopic cardiac transplantation, or “piggybacking”, two years later. However, the immunosuppressant drugs led to her developing an incurable, rare cancer that kept returning despite repeated bouts of chemotherapy.

But the doctors’ strategy, to reduce the doses of immunosuppressants, led to Hannah’s second heart failing. In February 2006, they decided they had no choice but to take it out, or risk Hannah’s death. Three and a half years of constant improvement, and Hannah’s gloriously normal life, have proved enough for them to pronounce the reversal of her transplant an unqualified, if unexpected, success.

Her father, Paul, recalled how when she was being treated at London’s Great Ormond Street hospital the family was told that Hannah was about to die.

“They called us in and said that a tumour had affected her spinal cord and was putting pressure on her brain, and was going to kill her. A nurse told us that she only had 12 hours to live. I said, ‘Well, you believe what you believe and I’ll believe what I believe’. For some reason, the next day she was OK.”

Their experience has made the Clark family advocates of presumed consent, a policy – supported by Gordon Brown and chief medical officer Sir Liam Donaldson – that would see everyone in the UK presumed to be in favour of donating their organs after death. Supporters believe that, with 1,000 people dying every year due to shortages, the move would greatly increase the supply of organs. Yacoub said that, having previously been opposed to presumed consent, he now backed it.

Survival story

1 May 1993 Hannah Clark born in Wales.

July 1995 Aged two, Hannah undergoes “piggybacking”, in which a donor heart is joined with her own. She improves for four and a half years.

August 2001 Hannah is found to have a rare form of cancer caused by immunosuppressant drugs that stop her body rejecting the new organ.

2001-2006 Her cancer keeps recurring. Doctors deem it incurable.

February 2006 Doctors decide to remove the donor heart.

14 July 2009 Hannah’s story reported in the Lancet.

  
  
  

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Paul Hogarth: California Tenants Have No Friends in Governor’s Race

Last Friday at 5:00 p.m. (which he’s apt to do when releasing bad news), San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom vetoed three pro-tenant ordinances designed to…

July 13, 1937: Gibson Plugs In the Electric Guitar

1937: Guy Hart, general manager of the Gibson guitar company, is awarded the first patent for an electric guitar pickup. The instrument that defines popular music in the second half of the 20th century is born.
Gibson’s electric guitar wasn’t the first to market, but its pickup design was superior to competing models — especially after [...]

Paul Abrams: Over the Heads of Congress: For Obama to Get Healthcare/Energy, Push Must Now Come to Shove

Although the so-called debates over healthcare reform and energy have been less than enlightening, the actual work of Congress marking up bills and launching trial…

David Paul: Who Will Win the Next Phase in Iran, Ahmadinejad or Iraq’s Ayatollah Ali Sistani?

We have yet to see what the Iranian regime will be prepared to do in the face of real opposition. After all, the leaders of…

Ashes live – England v Australia

First Ashes Test, Cardiff, day four:
England v Australia

LIVE TEXT COMMENTARY (all times BST)

By Ben Dirs

606: DEBATE
Your thoughts on the action

e-mail tms@bbc.co.uk (with ‘For Ben Dirs’ in the subject), text 81111 (with "CRICKET" as the first word) or use 606. (Not all contributions can be used)

AUSTRALIA FIRST INNINGS

"Poor Michael! If he sends his bank details and $500.00 administration and bank fees then we will gladly help. Paul in Lancs, good to see you are about, Sarahs, where are you"
Miss Ruby, Perth, in the TMS inbox1119 – 498-5 Broad is called for a wide… tennis ball bounce, the ball looped about two feet above Haddin’s lid. Over-pitched from Broad and Haddin laces him through the covers for four. Haddin picks up a single with a carve to point, before Broad goes round the wicket to North. North clips to mid-wicket for one, Australia disappearing serenely into the distance like a ruddy great ocean liner… "Sorry to disappoint you folks, but Freddie isn’t fit to polish Beefy’s boots. Lord Botham could sink 20 pints, steer a pedalo through Sydney Harbour in peak hour and still rip into any of our finest 11 with results. That’s why we respect Beefy, he’s a proper cricketer, a sneering laughable rogue, worthy of an Aussie passport."
Johnny Rocket in the TMS inboxBBC Sport’s Tom Fordyce on Twitter:"Is that Richie Benaud in the Cardiff press box There’s no mistaking that tanned visage – all hail the greatest commentator of all time."1115 – 490-5 Short from Anderson and North rocks backs and tugs him away for a single, before Haddin drops into the off-side for one.

BBC Sport

BBC Sport’s Tom Fordyce in Cardiff: "The best-selling item outside the ground this morning Ponchos – plastic ones, not the Peruvian alpaca sort. It might not be raining now, but the locals know a downpour when it’s brewing."

Get involved on 606

"With the money involved in sport nowadays, I wonder if it would be feasible to use ‘rain-prevention technology’, as in, firing those rockets up to disperse the rainclouds. Even if it’s only for big matches such as these."
Sir_Blitzo on 606
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1110 – 488-5 Broad to bowl from the Cathedral Road End… come on Broady, got to be better than yesterday… leg-side delivery flicked away for four by Haddin… bouncer top-edged for four by Haddin… Broad’s frustration gets the better of him, as he shies for the stumps with Haddin rooted in his crease. Haddin snaps his gum and narrows his eyes… "little boys," you can almost hear him thinking, "little boys…"1104 – 480-5 England skipper Strauss has a big grin on his face as he bounds down the pavilion steps, and it’s Jimmy Anderson to bowl first. Too straight, and Haddin flicks his first ball away for a single. North may be a new name to many, but he’s been around for some time now – 130 first-class matches, 9,247 runs, averages 44.67. Tidy opening over, North playing it cool.1057: Broad could do with a couple more wickets today, he really hasn’t dazzled so far. A yard or two short, he’s been well and truly sorted out by the Aussie batsmen, and we could well see Harmison and Onions coming in at Lord’s. It’s Haddin and North at the crease this morning, and here they come, as Blowers struggles to make himself heard over an ear-quivering Jerusalem.TMS’s Alison Mitchell on Twitter:"Aaaah, watching a touching embrace between TMS’s Jason Gillespie and Brett Lee on the outfield (well, a manly sort of hug)"1048: The early Pub Pontification chat in my office centres on whether Andrew Flintoff is overrated or not. The man next to me thinks he’s a marvellous cricketer, but that the hubbub surrounding him whenever he’s thrown the ball or he comes out to bat seems a bit out of proportion. The man opposite reckons he’s not fit to light Botham’s panatella. Obviously, I have no opinion on the matter.

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"If and when England learn to pitch the ball up and only use the short one as a surprise they might get somewhere. It isn’t rocket science – look what happened to Katich and Hussey when Anderson pitched it up."
rhiannan05 on 606
Join the debate on 6061037: Michael… have you been fibbing If you email in and can prove to me what these "other valuable things" were, then I’ll wire you the money. As for the cricket, it’s pretty difficult to know what to talk about to be honest – if we were going to get a full day’s play in, then we’d surely be chatting about how long the Aussies should bat for, but the weather forecast is so dirty, I’m not sure how relevant that chat’s going to be. "Interestingly, Michael, who needs a loan, was at a seminar here in Holland yesterday, according to an email I received. Poor lad lost his wallet two days on the trot"

Alex, hoping the rain stays away from his home ground in Leiden, the Netherlands, in the TMS inbox1031: The video scorecard has just been inserted at the top of the page, but you’ll have to manually refresh the page to see it…1028:The weather forecast from Cardiff couldn’t really be much worse:the BBC reckon it’s going to be an out and out wash-out, although they’ve already got it wrong to be fair – they were predicting drizzle from 1000 BST, and we haven’t seen any yet. Anyone got $2,500 they can lend Michael I’ve got his email address in case you’re worried about him not paying it back. "Hello. How are you doing I am sorry that i didn’t inform you about my traveling to England for a Seminar. I need a favor from you as soon as you recieve this e-mail because i misplaced my wallet on my way to the hotel where my money,and other valuable things were kept, i will like you to assist me with a loan urgently. I will be needing the sum of $2,500 to sort-out my hotel bills and get myself back home. Your reply will be greatly appreciated."
Michael in the TMS inbox1014: Hello. It looks as if we’ll be starting on time, which might be a surprise to many of you. However, after lunch Fish and his mob reckon it’s going to rain and rain and rain..


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