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...long enough for public opinion to curdle on any politician, but Tony Blair's fall from grace has been particularly poignant. Last week, as he stonewalled reporters about exactly when he would depart 10 Downing Street and fielded clunky ripostes to the zingers of the new Conservative leader, David Cameron, he seemed a different man from the vigorous, fresh-faced powerhouse who rode a landslide to office in 1997. Only a year after winning Labour's first consecutive third term in office, he is being drenched in a storm of public disdain. "Blair should go and give a different leader...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Going Ungently | 5/14/2006 | See Source »

...Calderwood Courtyard in the Fogg Art Museum.One of the largest groups in the Performance Fair is the Mozart Society Orchestra (MSO), which is playing Mendelssohn’s “Violin Concerto in E minor.” MSO—which will feature soloist Sandy M. Cameron ’09, the winner of the organization’s Freshman Concerto Competition—will take the stage in Sanders Theatre at 1 p.m. At the same time, Yoko S. Wakabayashi ’07 will perform Chopin’s “Ballade...

Author: By J. samuel Abbott, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Classical Concerts Consume Campus | 5/3/2006 | See Source »

...only to the debt-ridden National Health Service as a cause of voter concern, Labour is ill-placed to take advantage of the issue. The Conservatives, having focused on immigration last year in their unsuccessful attempt to unseat Blair, are wary of repeating the strategy under new leader David Cameron, who wants to reposition his party as more inclusive and faces an important first test in local elections this week. Only the BNP is making a big push based on immigration concerns: according to one recent poll, 59% of Britons support the BNP position that all further immigration should...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Love It or Leave It: Xenophobia Goes Mainstream | 5/1/2006 | See Source »

...only to the debt-ridden National Health Service as a cause of voter concern, Labour is ill-placed to take advantage of the issue. The Conservatives, having focused on immigration last year in their unsuccessful attempt to unseat Blair, are wary of repeating the strategy under new leader David Cameron, who wants to reposition his party as more inclusive and faces an important first test in local elections this week. Only the bnp is making a big push based on immigration concerns: according to one recent poll, 59% of Britons support the bnp position that all further immigration should...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Exit Strategies | 4/30/2006 | See Source »

...protected from sex crimes by (white) men - at least not in the way that white women were historically "protected" from black men. That notion of protecting the white female chastity was the impetus behind anti-miscegenation laws, and countless lynchings - including those of Emmitt Till, and, less famously, James Cameron, a black man who was accused of murder and rape in Marion, Ind., in 1930 and survived his attempted lynching, though his two co-defendants did not. Anticipating his imminent death at the hands of the angry mob, Cameron (who was later exonerated from both crimes) recalled, "The realization dawned...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Southern Discomfort | 4/25/2006 | See Source »

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