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Posts Tagged ‘Plymouth’

Dec. 27, 1831: Beagle Sets Sail With a Very Special Passenger

1831: HMS Beagle, a 10-gun, Cherokee-class brig sloop of the Royal Navy’s survey service, sets sail from Plymouth, England on its second voyage as a survey vessel.
On board, at the invitation of Beagle captain Robert FitzRoy, is a young biologist called Charles Darwin. Darwin’s account of The Voyage of the Beagle, published in 1839, establishes [...]

‘I thought I was dead” says sick Peter Andre

Peter Andre thought he was dying when he was rushed to hospital with stomach pains on Friday, the star revealed to his friends and family. Andre had to undergo emergency surgery in the medical drama, which saw him raced to the Musgrove Park Hospital in Taunton, Somerset, in the early hours of Friday morning. “He [...]

Aretha Franklin Son — Eddie Franklin — Severely Beaten In Detroit

Eddie Franklin, the son of music icon Aretha Franklin, is fighting for his life in Michigan hospital after being severely beaten in a robbery gone wrong at a gas station in Detroit overnight, The Detroit Free Press reports.Eddie, who underwent emergency surgery early Tuesday, was attacked by approximately three people — two men and [...]

Katie Price fans queue for book signing in Plymouth

It looks like Katie Price a.k.a Jordan is still a major celebrity force. Hundreds of fans queued around the block to meet her as she autographed copies of her new book. Huge crowds flocked to Plymouth, Devon, to meet the model, who jetted in to the city”s airport. Cheering fans greeted Jordan, at the branch [...]

Prince William Proposes to Kate Middleton?

Ok guys! This might not be a fresh one but it’s the one roaring all over the place, the news of Prince William,27, Set to Propose to Kate Middleton,28, Is that so?
There have been talks about their engagement this November. Also there has been news from various sources, on Tuesday, that the dates June [...]

Dec. 1, 1942: Mandatory Gas Rationing, Lots of Whining

1942: Nearly a year after the Japanese raid on Pearl Harbor that brought the United States fully into World War II, the Americans get around to imposing nationwide gasoline rationing.
A fuel shortage was not the problem. America had plenty of that. What it lacked was rubber. Both the Army and Navy were in desperate need [...]

Them Crooked Vultures: Stream Entire Debut Album

THEM CROOKED VULTURES FULL ALBUM STREAMING NOW ON YOUTUBE, ALBUM OUT NOVEMBER 17

Them Crooked Vultures

In response to the leak of Them Crooked Vultures‘ self-titled, debut album, the band has made the unprecedented decision to stream the record in its entirety, beginning with first track “No One Loves Me & Neither Do I.”

Them Crooked Vultures is due out November 17 in the United States and Canada on DGC/Interscope Records and can be pre-ordered here. Its release has been preceded by first single “New Fang,” currently streaming on MySpace, and “Mind Eraser, No Chaser,” now available as a free iTunes download.

Them Crooked Vultures recently announced its first ever shows in California and the Pacific Northwest (listed below). The dates expand an itinerary that already includes a December tour of the UK and Europe, and January dates in Australia and New Zealand.

Them Crooked Vultures Tour Dates

11/17/09 Tue The Wiltern Los Angeles, CA

11/19/09 Thu Fox Theater Oakland, CA

11/21/09 Sat Paramount Theatre Seattle, WA

11/22/09 Sun Roseland Theater Portland, OR

12/06/09 Sun Zenith Munich, GER

12/07/09 Mon Columbiahalle Berlin, GER

12/08/09 Tue Palladium Cologne, GER

12/10/09 Thu Plymouth Pavilion Plymouth, GB

12/11/09 Fri Portsmouth Guildhall Portsmouth, GB

12/13/09 Sun Empress Ballroom Blackpool, GB

12/14/09 Mon Birmingham Academy Birmingham, GB

12/15/09 Tue Edinburgh Academy Edinburgh, GB

12/17/09 Thu Hammersmith Apollo London, GB

12/18/09 Fri Hammersmith Apollo London, GB

01/19/10 Tue Challenge Stadium Perth, AU

01/22/10 Fri Festival Hall Melbourne, AU

01/25/10 Mon River Stage Brisbane, AU

01/26/10 Tue Hordern Pavilion Sydney, AU

01/29/10 Fri TSB Arena Wellington, NZ

01/30/10 Sat Vector Arena Auckland, NZ

02/06/10 Sat Austin City Limits TV Show Austin, TX

Stream Them Crooked Vultures here.

Pre-order the album here.

“Mind Eraser, No Chaser” available on iTunes here.


Them Crooked Vultures Tour
John Paul Jones/Grohl/Homme

Them Crooked Vultures Announce Tour

Them Crooked Vultures have announced a string of tour dates. The supergroup featuring John Paul Jones (Led Zeppelin), Dave Grohl (Foo Fighters, Nirvana) and Josh Homme (Queens of the Stone Age) will begin a full tour on October 1 in Austin, TX before heading to the U.K. in December.

The band also recently posted another song clip to YouTube, check out “Elephants” in the studio:

Them Crooked Vultures Tour Dates

10/01/09 Thu Stubb’s BBQ Austin, TX

10/02/09 Fri Zilker Park Austin, TX (Austin City Limits Festival)

10/05/09 Mon War Memorial Auditorium Nashville, TN

10/06/09 Tue Lifestyle Communities Pavilion Columbus, OH

10/08/09 Thu The Fillmore Detroit (State Theatre) Detroit, MI

10/09/09 Fri The Sound Academy Toronto, ON

10/11/09 Sun House of Blues Boston, MA

10/12/09 Mon Electric Factory Philadelphia, PA

10/14/09 Wed 9:30 Club Washington, DC

12/10/09 Thu Plymouth Pavilion Plymouth, GB

12/11/09 Fri Portsmouth Guildhall Portsmouth, GB

12/13/09 Sun Empress Ballroom Blackpool, GB

12/14/09 Mon Birmingham Academy Birmingham, GB

12/15/09 Tue Edinburgh Academy Edinburgh, GB

12/17/09 Thu Hammersmith Apollo London, GB



Tech Know

By Jason Palmer
Science and technology reporter, BBC News

It might just be the most conceptually complex way of making music that modern man has yet devised.

But that is the challenge of live coding – the process of writing computer code, in real time, to compose and play music or design animations.

"It’s not just a passive process, not just someone creating sounds, which is the problem with electronic music – because people don’t really see what it is that the musicians are doing," said Dave Griffiths.

Dave is a live coder and a performer in a night of live coding held in a south London pub, organised by the collective Toplap.

"Live coding brings the audience closer; they can see that you’re making something in front of them."

The furious coding is also projected on a screen for the audience, making the programming as much – or more – of the performance as the music it codes for.

Bug bare

Live coding eschews the normal route of developing computer code, which starts with writing a program in a "high-level" language – one that looks not too far removed from English.

Then, the programmer compiles it, meaning it is converted by another program into a language not too far removed from the 1s and 0s of computing.

Live coding screenshot

Then they run it. If anything should go wrong – and anyone who has ever done any programming will know how frequent this is – they get nothing out.

A crash. Epic fail.

Because the software that live coders use is designed for a compile-free, real-time use, the performers face that prospect much less.

But it does happen, Dave tells me. "That’s what keeps it exciting," he said.

A crash means a deadly uncomfortable silence in front of an expectant audience, which on the night includes quite a few people who have simply stumbled upstairs into the pub’s function room to see what live coding is.

Jamming frequency

Up first is Chris McCormick, whose performance is a world premiere.

Live coding has its own, custom-made programming languages, some of them which are as simple as a 1970s computer interface, with lines of code entered onto a black screen.

Others might be more visual, with musical directions encoded as shapes that are arranged freehand on a screen.

"It might not be any easier to understand but it’s visually more interesting than just text," Dave said.

Live coding screenshot

"But then there’s also something nice about the purity of just having lines of code."

Chris is a fan of the more visual software, but he follows the live coding purist’s tradition of starting off with a blank screen.

As he adds shapes corresponding to sounds, filling them in with numbers that finely tune their timbre or frequency, his stage fright is not in evidence.

He said that live coding is like building the computer programs that are commonly used to make electronic music; it is "one more level of abstraction" from the music itself.

"Making boring techno music is really easy with modern tools," he said, "but with live coding, boring techno is much harder."

As if to prove the point, the performances after Chris’s held no full-fledged, boring techno.

Dave and his collaborator Alex McLean perform a live-coding duet, each of them running independent programs. They listen to each other’s output and work separately but together in a way that is conceptually not so different from two saxophonists "trading fours".

Engaging

Matthew Yee-King and his partner Nick Collins have opted to stray from standard live coding this evening, instead performing their "algorhythmic choreography".

Instead of code entered on the screen resulting in sound, it results in Nick performing dance moves. It’s less high-tech and more conceptual performance art.

But they share the others’ passion about what it is that live coding taps into.

Live coding pub scene

"I’ve done all sorts of things with a computer and a stage, but [live coding] feels like it’s really native to computing," said Matthew.

"It’s like a virtuosic exploration of the guts of the machine, in the same way that a piano virtuoso engages with the machine they’re using.

"You’re deeply engaging with the machine in a way that you don’t if you’re using someone’s ready-made software."

And this seems to be the point; no one has come expecting to make or to hear heroically composed, massively melodic and moving music.

It’s more an exposition of what can be done starting from absolutely nothing with a novel, stripped-down set of sonic tools.

Dave sums it up: "It’s such a new thing, and we don’t know if we’re any good at it – it may well be that a new generation comes along and just blows us away".

The group is looking into doing a tour of sorts by playing in planetariums across the country, with the first in September at Plymouth Planetarium.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

The Low Anthem Tour Dates

LOW ANTHEM CONTINUE WORLD TOUR WITH WEST COAST DEBUT, DATES WITH BLIND PILOT


The Low Anthem

It’s been a banner year for The Low Anthem. In addition to being JamBase’s New Favorite Artist this month, the Rhode Island trio spent the greater part of the year touring with acts such as Elvis Perkins In Dearland, Joe Pug, Ray LaMontagne, Josh Ritter, and Langhorne Slim in support of their highly praised Nonesuch debut, Oh My God, Charlie Darwin, the band is gearing up for yet another stretch on the road, this time with the Portland group Blind Pilot. This run of 21 club and theater dates begins October 15 and continues through November 12 and includes the band’s West coast debut. Additionally, The Low Anthem will return to NYC for a performance at the Bell House at the end of August and travel to Europe for a month-long tour in September, where they’ve already played to much enthusiasm at Glastonbury, sold out a show at Union Chapel in London, and received stellar reviews in Uncut, Q, Mojo, NME, The Guardian, and The Independent.

The very special Avon Cinema in Providence, RI is hosting the first October U.S. tour date. The Cinema is a beautiful old movie theatre, the perfect setting for the band’s anticipated homecoming show and largest performance in Providence to date. The band will also be playing a free show on Block Island, where they recorded Charlie Darwin.

The Low Anthem’s most recent tour has taken them through a number of prestigious festivals, including Bonnaroo, Glastonbury, Lollapalooza, and the recent 50th Anniversary of the Newport Folk Festival, where they had humble beginnings working as recycling crew. This time around they got to share the stage with some of their heroes, including Pete Seeger, Arlo Guthrie, and Gilian Welch during a group sing-along.

THE LOW ANTHEM PRESS:

“Only a band since 2006, the depth of songwriting and ability to cross the dusty Americana landscape from such burdened acoustic folk songs like “To Ohio” to country barnburners, delicate three-part harmonies dripping with reverb, a Tom Waits cover, and soul-saving gospel without loosing continuity makes The Low Anthem worthy of all the hype they are sure to receive…” – JamBase

“Stately… Lyrics contemplating faith, loss, destruction and self-destruction.” – New York Times


“One of the breakthrough albums of 2009… A highly eventful journey into American songcraft, variously echoing Dylan, Springsteen, The Band, and Tom Waits.” – MOJO


“Really beautiful… The great music, it’s not what you play; it’s what you don’t play.” – Billy Bragg (PROJO)

THE LOW ANTHEM ON TOUR:

08.13 Chapel Hill, NC Local 506

08.14 Richmond, VA The Canal Club – Downstairs Lounge

08.15 Baltimore, MD Ottobar w/Langhorne Slim

08.16 Philadelphia, PA Philly Folk Festival

08.17 Pittsfield, MA Stage 2 – Word X Word Festival

08.18 Block Island, RI Captain Nick’s

08.27 Fall River, MA Narrows Center For the Arts

08.29 Plymouth, MA Plymouth Waterfront Festival

09.03 Dublin, IRELAND Gaiety Theatre w/Ray LaMontagne

09.04 Dublin, IRELAND Gaiety Theatre w/Ray LaMontagne

09.05 Stradbelly, IRELAND Electric Picnic Festival

09.06 Manchester, UK Deaf Institute

09.08 Newcastle, UK Cluny

09.09 Birmingham, UK Glee Club

09.10 Oxford, UK Bullingdon Arms

09.11 Larmer Tree Gardens, UK End of the Road Festival

09.12 Larmer Tree Gardens, UK End of the Road Festival

09.13 Isle of Wight Bestival

09.15 Munich, GERMANY Atomic Cafe

09.16 Milan, ITALY La Salumeria Della Musica

09.17 Zurich, SWITZERLAND El Lokal

09.18 Frankfurt, GERMANY Broftabrik

09.19 Koln, GERMANY Gebaude 9

09.20 Berlin, GERMANY Lido

09.21 Hamburg, GERMANY Knust

09.23 Amsterdam, NETHERLANDS De Duif

09.24 Brussels, BELGIUM Ancienne Belgique

09.25 Nijmegen, NETHERLANDS Doornroosje

09.26 Paris, FRANCE La Maroquinerie

10.02 Austin, TX Austin City Limits

10.15 Providence, RI Avon Cinema

10.17 Seattle, WA Chop Suey

10.18 Portland, OR Lola’s Room at the Crystal Ballroom

10.19 Eugene, OR WOW Hall*

10.21 San Francisco, CA Great American Music Hall*

10.23 Los Angeles, CA Troubadour*

10.24 San Diego, CA Casbah*

10.25 Tucson, AZ Plush*

10.27 Austin, TX The Parish*

10.28 Dallas, TX Granada Theater*

10.29 Houston, TX Bronze Peacock at HOB*

10.30 Baton Rouge, LA Spanish Moon*

11.02 Tallahassee, FL Club Downunder*

11.03 Orlando, FL The Social*

11.04 Atlanta, GA The Earl*

11.05 Nashville, TN Mercy Lounge*

11.06 Asheville, NC University of North Carolina*

11.07 Norfolk, VA Attucks Theater*

11.09 Carrboro, NC Cats Cradle*

11.11 Washington, D.C. The Black Cat*

11.12 Boston, MA Paradise*

*with Blind Pilot



U.S.: Baby cut from mom found alive

A baby cut from the womb of a slain Massachusetts woman was found alive in New Hampshire Wednesday night, police said. Julie A. Corey, the suspect in the killing of the pregnant woman, was taken into custody in Plymouth, N.H., where she was found with the baby and a male companion, The Boston Globe reported.

Wealthy elderly turn backs on seaside havens

Newly retired move to cultural cities or the shires

God’s waiting rooms are undergoing a transformation. For decades, many of Britain’s coastal towns have been synonymous with blue rinses, bingo and tea dances. Places such as Bournemouth, Eastbourne and Worthing have been seen as retirement havens for generations of pensioners, keen to take the sea air just as their Victorian predecessors used to.

But according to an analysis of demographic data, many of today’s wealthier pensioners are turning their backs on traditional retirement destinations with a “grey influx” into upmarket towns and cities in some of the UK’s most sought-after inland locations – such as in the Cotswolds, and parts of Hampshire and Kent.

The shift is driven by an increase in the number of people reaching retirement age, coupled with rising levels of wealth. In 1945, life expectancy at birth for men and women was 63 and 68 respectively. In 2009 it is 78 and 82.

The dramatic increase in the number of over-65s means that by 2019 there will be 2.4 million more than today. But the traditional coastal retirement resorts, which grew to meet burgeoning demand from the postwar middle classes, have not been able to accommodate the demographic shift.

Research from Experian, the consumer research and credit rating agency, charts the trend. Changes to its giant Mosaic database – which divides the UK population into socioeconomic and lifestyle groups – show a much larger proportion of older people moving to the most desirable parts of the country, often funding this by selling their mortgage-free homes. And where coastal destinations were once the vogue, many are now looking to inland market towns, historic cities and major cultural destinations.

“People want to spend more of their retirement in the country, in areas of attractive scenery,” said Richard Webber, visiting professor of geography at University College London, who helped develop Mosaic. “And they are choosing to live a long way from London and other major population centres.”

Webber said around half of those reaching retirement age choose to carry on living in their own home, or at least in the same area. But of those with above-average wealth, around 60 per cent choose to live somewhere else. Half of these now select less traditional retirement destinations.

“A lot more older people want to retire to places of historic importance, places that have orchestras and festivals,” said Webber. “They’re looking at historic market towns and cities, places like Bath and Cheltenham, cathedral cities and university towns where there are beautiful buildings.”

The new pensioners

As a result of its extensive social mapping of the UK, Experian has identified five new types of retiree.

Beachcombers

This group reflects the growing trend for the middle-class retired to select smaller communities, many on the coast or a river, rather than larger resorts. Popular destinations: Barnstaple, Newport (Isle of Wight), Carmarthen, Inverness, Kendal, Newton Abbot.

Balcony downsizers

Higher-status retired people in their 70s and 80s, who live in privately owned or leasehold apartments in purpose-built blocks of flats suitable for those too fragile to cope with the upkeep of houses and gardens. Popular destinations: Worthing, Boscombe, Edinburgh, Southend-on-Sea, Barnet, Kingston upon Thames.

Golden retirement

People with accumulated assets, who pick prestigious retirement communities. They lead busy social lives, drive and garden. Popular destinations: Exeter, Southampton, Poole, Chichester, Norwich, Canterbury and Ipswich.

Bungalow quietude

Retirees with modest pensions, living in older-style bungalows, often in less well-off areas unattractive to younger families. Popular destinations: Blackpool, Rhyl, Scarborough, Plymouth, Nottingham, Peterborough, Newcastle upon Tyne, Lincoln, Leicester.

Country-loving elders

People on comfortable incomes living in former farms or older-style properties in quiet villages and market towns. Popular destinations: Truro, King’s Lynn, Hereford, Carlisle, Shrewsbury.

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


Europe’s Mars rover slips to 2018

By Jonathan Amos and Paul Rincon
Science reporters, BBC News

NEW EXOMARS MISSION CONCEPT

  • Now likely to leave Earth in 2018; primary aim is to search for life
  • Current proposal is to use a US Atlas rocket to launch ExoMars
  • US also to look after the rover’s entry, descent and landing
  • Hardware likely to be the same as for US 2013 rover, Curiosity
  • ExoMars would be targeted at key methane hotspots on the planet
  • It will have the capacity to drill 2m into the Martian ground
  • Esa states still have to sign off the plan and a budget

ExoMars concept (Esa)

Europe’s flagship robotic rover mission to Mars now looks certain to leave Earth in 2018, two years later than recently proposed, the BBC understands.

The ExoMars vehicle is intended to search the Red Planet for signs of past or present life.

The delay is the third for the mission originally planned to launch in 2011.

While the switch will disappoint many people, officials say the change will open up a greatly expanded programme of exploration at the Red Planet.

The European Space Agency (Esa) will now join forces at Mars with the US space agency (Nasa). The two organisations believe they can achieve far more by combing their expertise and budgets.

The basis for this approach was agreed at bilateral discussions in Plymouth, UK, last month.

Since then, scientists and engineers on both sides of the Atlantic have been working up the basic architecture for a series of missions in 2016, 2018 and 2020 (launch opportunities to Mars come up roughly every two years).

Mass issues

The plan, or baseline, for this programme is now starting to emerge.

It would see the agencies launch a European orbiter to the Red Planet in 2016. Its main aim would be to track down the sources of methane recently detected at Mars. The presence of methane is intriguing because its likely origin is either present-day life or geological activity.

Confirmation of either would be a major discovery.

Mars Express (Esa)

The American Atlas rocket used for this mission would also have capacity to carry sufficient mass to put some sort of static lander on the surface. The European orbiter would act as its data relay to Earth.

The 2018 launch opportunity would be taken by ExoMars, again launching on a US Atlas rocket. This mission window is actually one of the most favourable in terms of planetary alignment for many years, and that makes it possible to send a very heavy surface mission.

The proposal on the table currently is that ExoMars should be joined by a slightly smaller rover in the class of the US Spirit and Opportunity vehicles that are on the surface today.

ExoMars and its smaller cousin could be targeted at the Methane sources identified by the 2016 orbiter.

The 2020 launch opportunity would probably then be taken by a network of instrumented static landers.

Technological goals

Both Esa and Nasa will have tight finances going forward and will have to constrain their ambitions accordingly.

Curiosity and skycrane (Nasa)

European ministers pledged sufficient monies at their major triennial gathering last year to take the budget for ExoMars to 850m euros. Esa officials believe the proposals they are formulating with Nasa can broadly match the cost requirements and the technological goals of both parties.

For Europe, the primary goals are to land, to rove and to drill on Mars. However, under the plan outlined above, these objectives could not all be achieved during the ExoMars opportunity.

In 2018, it is likely the entry, descent and landing (EDL) of Europe’s rover would be handled by the Americans, using the "skycrane" system they have designed for their big 2013 rover known as Curiosity.

If Europe really does want to do EDL, the option is open for it to take responsibility for the 2016 surface package of instruments.

Esa’s director-general, Jean-Jacques Dordain, has promised to report to his member states in the autumn with firm proposals for a re-scoped Mars exploration programme.

Industrial jigsaw

Two months of intensive discussions will now take place in those member states, and in European industry which will be responsible for building the spacecraft systems.

If financial contributions to the mission from Esa member states were to change substantially, the space agency might have to re-visit the balance of industrial work allocated to different countries through the process of "juste retour".

Prototype ExoMars rover

Esa’s rules of juste retour ensure the work which returns to a member state reflects the financial contribution it makes to a programme.

One senior European space executive called at the recent Paris air show for the whole ExoMars industrial programme to be re-opened to competition.

The ExoMars rover was originally conceived as a small technology demonstration mission.

It was approved in 2008 and should have been launched in 2011. Then, as ambitions grew and the design was beefed up, the launch was put back.

At first, it was shifted to 2013. Last year, a decision was taken to move it even further back, to 2016, because of budget concerns.

Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk

Paul.Rincon-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Steve Parker: Tell Bob Lutz what GM must do now

With the Core Four divisions of Cadillac, Chevrolet, Buick and GMC, and with Bob Lutz back on-board, General Motors is now very much on its…

The Lib Dem power failure

The party controls swaths of urban Britain but lacks the leadership and vision our great cities require

With growing confidence, Nick Clegg is making his mark at Westminster. On Trident, on Afghanistan and, at yesterday’s prime minister’s questions, in condemning parliament’s inability to reform itself, the Liberal Democrat leader is asking the tough questions and hinting at a more radical and progressive political future.

But in power it’s a rather different story. For after last month’s victories in the local elections, Clegg’s party is now a major player in public life. In control of Bristol, Liverpool, Hull and Sheffield; part of a Tory coalition governing Birmingham and Leeds; and in charge of numerous London boroughs. The Lib Dems are dictating the shape of great swaths of urban Britain. And just then the confidence and bravery on show in SW1 appears to dissipate. All too often an insurgency party, built on grassroots campaigns about town hall excess and mending fences, lacks the political vision to govern our greatest cities.

All politics is local – an aphorism the Lib Dems have burned into their retina. When it comes to speed-bumps, cycle-paths, planning applications and all the miserable frustrations of suburban life, the party is there, making a difference. Organised, motivated, and effective, they pick up council seat after council seat where there is any whiff of one -party hubris.

But such a parochial focus inevitably causes political contradictions. As the London Green party leader Jenny Jones has deftly chronicled, Clegg’s troops are against roadbuilding – apart from the Newbury, Batheaston, and Lancaster bypasses. They are opposed to the expansion of Heathrow in south-west London, but in favour of the growth of Birmingham, Manchester and Liverpool airports. And they are against incinerators – apart from when they are for them, in Exeter, Plymouth and Barnstaple.

One could see this as an admirable display of localism, with each regional party defining its policy agenda. Yet it might also hint at the woeful lack of a governing ideology, allowing the party to position itself as a perennial protest vote. Perhaps the Lib Dems are the party of liberty – but how does one explain their passion for CCTV cameras? Maybe it is the party of social justice, but not if it means free school meals in Hull or Islington.

In fact, amid all the campaigns and promises of action, the Lib Dem offer at local government usually boils down to the chance to throw the buggers out, maintain an inflation-linked council tax, and have the refuse collected regularly. Not one of those is an ignoble ambition for millions of residents. But when it comes to leading our cities, a grander civic sense is surely called for.

And here the Liberals have a proud history. It was Joseph Chamberlain‘s municipal socialism that transformed Birmingham in the 1870s, slicing Victoria Square and Corporation Street and Council House Square (later Victoria Square) through the fetid, medieval core of the city,by clearing 40 acres of slums and taking control of gas and water in the process. “Ward meetings assumed a new character,” recalled a contemporary. “They spoke of sweeping away streets in which it was not possible to live a healthy and decent life; of making the town cleaner, sweeter and brighter; of providing gardens and parks and music; of erecting baths and free libraries, an art gallery and a museum.” Chamberlain delivered these changes with the backing of a Liberal party unafraid to think big. Overriding local ward objections, Chamberlain “parked, paved, assized, marketed, Gas-and-Watered and improved Birmingham” – all within three years.

In the past decade, Britain’s cities have undergone similar urban renewal – in the sage words of Michael Heseltine, “the biggest investment and regeneration since the Victorian age”. Post-industrial conurbations have revitalised their city centres, begun to conserve their civic fabric, and attracted new residents and businesses (if not yet tackled the problems of schooling), all of which have necessitated taking risks with big capital projects such as trams and business parks, thinking strategically about the international brand of a city, and confronting vested interests.

Precisely such a policy has transformed Manchester under Sir Richard Leese’s leadership. Glasgow is heading in the same direction under Steven Purcell. Even Wandsworth council under Tory leader Edward Lister – philistine and reactionary as it is – has a sense of civic purpose. Yet you will look in vain for a similar spirit of urban ambition from many Lib Dem leaders, too often focused on the cracks in the pavement rather than the true measure of a metropolis. In Hull and Bristol it is too early to tell, but in Sheffield they are already undermining a global reputation for sporting excellence and, in Leeds, the council is putting that city’s creative regeneration at risk with cuts to the arts and voluntary sector.

Of course, there are many progressive Lib Dem councils: Richmond has pioneered a range of quality-of-life policies, while Liverpool has invested in a cultural strategy embracing the entire city. And, of course, the party plays an essential part in the ecology of democratic pluralism. But I know what a Tory council stands for, and I know what a Labour council does, but I have no idea what a Liberal town looks like – apart from boasting some well managed controlled parking zones.

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


UK facing largest Post Office strike in years

• More than 12,000 postal workers to walk out on Friday
• Strikers protesting against cuts at Royal Mail

Thousands of postal workers across the UK will go on strike on Friday in protest against cuts at Royal Mail, threatening the worst disruption to deliveries in years.

The action will be the latest stage in a series of strikes over jobs, pay and services, which have hit parts of the country in recent weeks and are now set to escalate into a national dispute.

The Communication Workers Union said more than 12,000 of its members in cities ranging from London and Edinburgh to Bristol and Plymouth would walk out for 24 hours.

The union has accused Royal Mail of cutting the pay and jobs of postal workers without agreement, while also reducing services.

On Friday afternoon, a letter and postcard will be delivered to Royal Mail’s chief executive, Adam Crozier, and business secretary Lord Mandelson. This will be followed by a national balloon release, with thousands of balloons rising above Royal Mail workplaces across the UK.

Dave Ward, the CWU deputy general secretary, said: “There are serious and growing problems in the postal sector which urgently need resolving. We have renewed our offer of a three-month no-strike deal to Royal Mail in return for meaningful talks over modernisation. The current cuts, bullying managers and ever increasing workloads on a shrinking workforce cannot continue. Pressure and stress is at breaking point for postal workers so we urgently need a fresh start for a modern Royal Mail.

“The national day of action on Friday is in response to an ever growing number of requests for industrial action from postal workers across the country who feel let down by Royal Mail management. We have almost 400 ballot requests at the moment with more coming daily. Without progress, this could effectively turn into a national strike.”

Last week, Mandelson accused the union of boycotting talks on Royal Mail modernisation. He insisted that it was “inconceivable” that the public would support a bailout of the Royal Mail’s £10bn pension fund deficit without the organisation agreeing to overhaul the way it works.

The CWU was fiercely opposed to the plans for partial privatisation of the Royal Mail that have now been abandoned, and Mandelson has accused it of adopting a “head in the sand” approach to modernisation.

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


Steve Parker: What!?! Bob Lutz back at GM!

General Motors has come out of bankruptcy after a somewhat-biblical 40 days and nights of massive reorganization, as a new, smaller company more than 60%…