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Posts Tagged ‘tale’

A winter’s tale

Sitting here in wintry Britain as the country braces itself for yet another weekend onslaught of heavy snow, it comes as small comfort to know other countries are experiencing similar challenges.

We Brits love a weather story – and equally love to bash our government for its total lack of preparedness/grit/salt/snowploughs – take your pick.

You can’t move at the moment for TV and newspaper stories of people being stranded in their homes as 1cm of snow ‘drifts’ against the kerb, while reporters are dispatched to bravely stand by freezing roads and denounce the government of the day’s woeful lack of planning.

Never mind the fact that normally the UK is a temperate climate more used to grey, damp days than an Arctic blasts, but nonetheless it gives us a good excuse for a weather moan.

But what’s this? Last week saw airports in Germany – of all places – reportedly disrupted due to lack of de-icer, while their French counterparts have more than 500 people on stand-by to deal with exceptional winter weather this weekend.

In the auto world, even Michigan and South Canada – two places where our weather in the UK would probably merit no more than putting on a jumper – have succumbed to scenes normally reminiscent of those closer to here.

Ford and GM reported supply problems as the mercury dived to -13C – or 9F in old money – and Canada’s emergency services were mobilised to rescue stranded drivers.

Just-in-time operations will inevitably come under greater strain when the temperature falls, but it was surprising to see so much disruption in areas that are so used to weather.

Britain is an island in the North Sea, it’s not Florida, so we’ll get weather, albeit usually wet and mild. South Canada, well that’s another story.

 

Oprah Book Club Latest Selections: Charles Dickens “A Tale Of Two Cities” & “Great Expectations”

Hey Bookworks, have you heard? New Kennedy Center honoree Oprah Winfrey has selected Charles Dickens’ great illustrated classics A Tale of Two Cities and Great Expectations as the latest reads for her world-renowned book club. The books, both published in the late 19th century, will be issued in a single 800-page, paperback edition especially for [...]

WikiLeaks tells tale of Qatar and Kosovo

Qatar’s Assistant FM Mohamad Al-Rumaihi told U.S. Ambassador Joseph LeBaron that his country did not recognize Kosovo “out of respect for Russia”.
This is according to one of the U.S. diplomatic dispatches published by the WikiLeaks website.

Tale Of Two Kates: Anne Hathaway Spoofs Katie Holmes & Kate Middleton On “SNL”

If you’re nobody in Hollywood until you’ve been reincarnated as a caricature on Saturday Night Live, Britain’s soon-to-be Princess Kate Middleton is ready for her closeup. Anne Hathaway not only spoofed Middle, but fellow actress Katie Holmes too, during her weekend hosting gig on NBC’s SNL. In a sketch which featured Andy Samberg as Prince [...]

Emma Thompson Writing “Peter Rabbit” 110th Anniversary Tale

Emma Thompson will mark the 110th anniversary of Beatrix Potter’s classic Peter Rabbit tale by writing a new book for the children’s literary series. Earlier this month, Thompson — who plays the title character in the Nanny McPhee films — announced that she is taking a break from professional acting to turn her focus to family. [...]

A Good African tale

An African entrepreneur struggles for recognition in rich-country markets

“IT USED to be a badge of pride that we were the only African coffee brand in British supermarkets. Now I see it as shameful,” says Andrew Rugasira, the founder of Good African. He is bemoaning the fact that other African firms—in coffee and many other lines of business—have struggled to follow the trail blazed by Good African since it was founded in 2003.

Mr Rugasira created the firm with the goal of creating a distinctly African coffee brand, by carrying out some of the value-added parts of the supply chain, such as roasting and packaging, in Africa, instead of just shipping raw coffee berries abroad to be processed—rather like Jamaica has done with its Blue Mountain coffee. Since persuading Waitrose, an upmarket British supermarket chain, to stock his coffee in 2005, Mr Rugasira has won round its rivals. Last month Sainsbury’s became the latest to place an order. Good African coffee will soon be available in America, too, though initially only online, not in shops. The firm also has ambitious plans to start marketing Good African tea and Good African chocolate. …

Aparna Sen’s ‘Japanese Wife’ a contrived tale, disappoints

Film: “The Japanese Wife”; Starring: Rahul Bose, Raima Sen, Chigusa Takaku, Moushumi Chatterjee; Written & Directed by Aparna Sen; Rating: **
The final lap in this lyrical but contrived tale of unfufilled love shows two women coming together after the tragic death of the man they both loved. One, the Japanese wife of the title, the [...]

Schumpeter: The tale of Mr Jackson

The public sector has had its fill of management consultants

MARGARET THATCHER regarded Beatrix Potter’s “Ginger and Pickles” as the only business book worth reading. The BBC recently elaborated on this insight in a series on “The Beatrix Potter Guide to Business”. “Jemima Puddleduck” is a treatise on enterprise. “Samuel Whiskers” is a parable about the importance of rolling audits. And “Mrs Tittlemouse”? It is a warning about the dangers of employing management consultants.

Mrs Tittlemouse is “a most terribly tidy particular little mouse”, forever cleaning her house and shooing away intruders. But one day Mr Jackson, a “fat-voiced” toad, arrives and makes himself at home, lounging in the rocking chair and putting his feet on the fender. He not only refuses to leave, he scours the house for tasty morsels, spreading chaos as he goes. It takes Mrs Tittlemouse a day to clear up after him when he finally leaves. …

Tuna and pollock: A tale of two fisheries

How to pillage the oceans deliberately, and by accident

THERE are two ways to overfish the sea. One is to ignore scientific advice and plunder on regardless. The other is to accept the advice, and then discover it isn’t good enough.

For decades the Atlantic bluefin-tuna fishery has fallen into the former camp. The International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT), the group charged with managing this fishery, has been a disgrace. Every year, its member states have handed themselves quotas far in excess of those prescribed by the organisation’s scientific advice. Last year things were so bad that ICCAT’s chairman warned members that if they did not do better their power to manage the bluefin would end up being taken away from them. But they failed to restrain themselves, and the backlash has begun. Earlier this year Monaco proposed that the bluefin be listed in Appendix I of CITES (the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora). Such a listing would ban all international trade while the stock recovered. …

Chris Weigant: Friday Talking Points [87] — A Tale Of Two Houses

Before I begin with the serious stuff, I’d like to indulge in a little gratuitous media-bashing first. If that sort of thing isn’t your cup…

Reese Schonfeld: The Undoing of Gen. T. Michael Moseley: A Cautionary Tale About the Military/Industrial Complex

This tale recounts the interwoven fate of an Air Force Chief of Staff, potentially disastrous handling of nuclear weapons, and a financial advising company with more than 300,000 military personnel as investors.

Fern Siegel: Stage Door: Thérèse Raquin

Thanks to Jim Petosa’s sharp direction, this thoughtful production successfully captures the hallucinatory world of guilt.

Miley Cyrus to star in fairy tale

‘Hanna Montana’ star Miley Cyrus is set to turn into a fairy in the big screen adaptation of young adult novel “Wings”.
The story of the film revolves around Laurel, a 15-year-old who grows up sheltered and home-schooled in a small town.
Adjusting to a big high school is difficult, and her suspicion that she’’s not [...]

Miley Cyrus to star in fairy tale

‘Hanna Montana’ star Miley Cyrus is set to turn into a fairy in the big screen adaptation of young adult novel “Wings”.
The story of the film revolves around Laurel, a 15-year-old who grows up sheltered and home-schooled in a small town.
Adjusting to a big high school is difficult, and her suspicion that she’’s not [...]

Laurence Leamer: A Tale of Two Houses: Congress Debates the Peace Corps

Often debates in the House of Representatives are little more than ideological diatribes before a largely empty assembly. Thursday, the House was galvanized by a…