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FILE - This is a Wednesday, Nov. 7, 2007 file photo of a Spitting Image puppet of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher now Baroness Thatcher's, at Christie's auction house in London, Spitting Image was a satirical puppet show televised in Britain in the 1980's and 1990's. Former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, whose conservative ideas made an enduring impact on Britain died Monday April 8, 2013. She was 87. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant, File)
FILE - This is a Wednesday, Nov. 7, 2007 file photo of a Spitting Image puppet of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher now Baroness Thatcher's, at Christie's auction house in London, Spitting Image was a satirical puppet show televised in Britain in the 1980's and 1990's. Former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, whose conservative ideas made an enduring impact on Britain died Monday April 8, 2013. She was 87. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant, File)
FILE - This is a Sunday June 18, 2006 file photo of Elvis Costello as performs with Allen Toussaint and the New Orleans Horn Section during the Playboy Jazz Festival in Los Angeles, Calif. Costello was critical of Margaret Thatcher's government in the 1980's in the song "Tramp the Dirt Down," Former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, whose conservative ideas made an enduring impact on Britain died Monday April 8, 2013. She was 87. (AP Photo/Lucas Jackson, File)
FILE - This is a Thursday June 28, 2007 file photo of The Spice Girls, from left Victoria Beckham, Melanie Chisholm, Geri Halliwell, Emma Bunton, and Melanie Brown as they pose for the photographers on the grounds of the Royal Observatory in Greenwich, London. Geri ?Ginger Spice? Halliwell paid tribute to ?our 1st Lady of girl power, Margaret Thatcher. Former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, whose conservative ideas made an enduring impact on Britain died Monday April 8, 2013. She was 87. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
FILE - This is an undated film image provided by on Feb.1, 2011 by The Weinstein Company, Meryl Streep as she portrays Margaret Thatcher in "The Iron Lady." ?The Iron Lady,? a biopic about Margaret Thatcher starring Streep as the former British prime minister.Former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, whose conservative ideas made an enduring impact on Britain, died Monday April 8, 2013. She was 87. (AP Photo/The Weinstein Company, Alex Bailey, File)
LONDON (AP) ? Margaret Thatcher was not just a political titan, she was a cultural icon ? skewered by comedians, transformed into a puppet and played to Oscar-winning perfection by Meryl Streep.
With her uncompromising politics, ironclad certainty, bouffant hairstyle and ever-present handbag, the late British leader was grist for comedians, playwrights, novelists and songwriters whether they loved her or ? as was more often the case ? hated her.
SATIRICAL TARGET
Thatcher's free-market policies transformed and divided Britain, unleashing an outpouring of creative anger from her opponents. A generation of British comedians, from Ben Elton to Alexei Sayle, honed their talents lampooning Thatcher.
To the satirical puppeteers of popular 1980s TV series "Spitting Image," Thatcher was a cigar-smoking bully, a butcher with a bloody cleaver, a domineering leader ruling over her docile Cabinet. One famous sketch showed Thatcher and her ministers gathered for dinner. Thatcher ordered steak. "And what about the vegetables?" the waitress asked. "They'll have the same as me," Thatcher replied.
In the U.S., "Saturday Night Live" got in on the act ? albeit more gently ? making the Iron Lady the subject of several skits. In one of them, Monty Python member Michael Palin played the prime minister shortly after her election in 1979, poking fun at her helmet of hair.
MUSICAL OPPOSITION
Pop was political in Thatcher's day, as the bitter social divisions of the 1980s sparked an angry musical outpouring.
"Whenever I'm asked to name my greatest inspiration, I always answer 'Margaret Thatcher,'" musician Billy Bragg, one of her most vocal opponents, said in 2009. "Truth is, before she came into my life, I was just your run-of-the-mill singer-songwriter."
Bragg was a member of the 1980s Red Wedge movement that campaigned against Thatcher and the Conservatives and for the Labour Party.
"I see no joy, I see only sorrow, I see no chance of your bright new tomorrow," sang The Beat, urging Thatcher to resign in "Stand Down Margaret."
In "Tramp the Dirt Down," Elvis Costello imagined the day of Thatcher's death: "When they finally put you in the ground, I'll stand on your grave and tramp the dirt down."
Former Smiths frontman Morrissey went even further, lyrically fantasizing about "Margaret on the Guillotine."
But for some later musicians, Thatcher was a positive figure.
Former Spice Girl Geri Halliwell ? who sported a Union Jack mini-dress as part of the 1990s girl group ? tweeted Monday: "Thinking of our 1st Lady of girl power, Margaret Thatcher, a green grocer's daughter who taught me anything is possible."
LITERARY INSPIRATION
Thatcher has made appearances in several novels written or set in the 1980s.
In Salman Rushdie's 1988 book, "The Satanic Verses," she was "Mrs. Torture." Despite his political opposition to Thatcher, Rushdie remembered her on Monday as a "considerate" woman who had offered him police protection after the novel brought a death sentence from Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini.
She was a major, though mostly unseen, presence in Alan Hollinghurst's Booker Prize-winning 2004 novel "The Line of Beauty," set during the height of Thatcher's rule. The prime minister's appearance at a Conservative lawmaker's party ? where she sends the crowd into a tizzy and dances to the Rolling Stones with the novel's young protagonist ? forms the dizzying pivot of Hollinghurst's tale of 80s power and excess.
STAGE AND SCREEN STAR
Thatcher's transformation into a stage and screen character started not long after she took office. Thatcher's personal papers include an account of an excruciating 1981 evening that she and her husband, Denis, spent at a West End farce titled "Anyone for Denis?"
On stage, Thatcher remains a potent figure, a shorthand for the 1980s. In the Olivier- and Tony Award-winning musical "Billy Elliot," coal miners sing "Merry Christmas Maggie Thatcher," a song with music by Elton John and lyrics that say: "We all celebrate today 'cause it's one day closer to your death."
The London production of "Billy Elliot" kept the song in on Monday, after polling the opinion of the audience.
West End theatergoers are currently flocking to see "The Audience," a play about meetings between Queen Elizabeth II and the 12 prime ministers of her long reign. The play is a gentle liberal drama, and Haydn Gwynne's strident Thatcher is gently rebuked by the monarch over her opposition to sanctions against apartheid South Africa.
On-screen, the character of Thatcher had a jokey cameo at the end of the 1981 James Bond movie "For Your Eyes Only," but for left-wing directors, she was no laughing matter. Stephen Frears' "My Beautiful Laundrette" was one of several 1980s films that depicted Thatcher's Britain as a land of poverty and racism as well as economic enterprise.
Others have mined the drama of a hardworking grocer's daughter who became Britain's first female prime minister. In the 2008 TV movie "The Long Walk to Finchley," Andrea Riseborough played the young politician fighting for a seat in Parliament. The next year "Margaret," with Lindsay Duncan, depicted the end of her career via a Cabinet coup in 1990.
The most acclaimed recent screen Thatcher was Streep's turn as the aged politician looking back on her life in the 2011 film "The Iron Lady." Streep won an Academy Award for a performance that humanized a divisive character.
Streep said Monday that Thatcher's political legacy was "worthy for the argument of history to settle."
"It is hard to imagine a part of our current history that has not been affected by measures she put forward in the U.K.," Streep said. "But to me, she was a figure of awe for her personal strength and grit."
___
AP National Writer Hillel Italie contributed to this report. Jill Lawless can be reached at http://Twitter.com/JillLawless
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The Calaveras County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday will discuss the site for a new animal shelter and alterations to the board?s meeting schedule and format.
A pair of afternoon study sessions are planned. The first will focus on Animal Services, about six months after the division transferred from the Sheriff?s Office to the Environmental Management Agency.
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The primary topic of the session will be reconsideration of the May 2011 decision making a property at Highway 4 and Vallecito Road in Angels Camp the preferred site for a new animal shelter.
The current shelter at the Government Center in San Andreas is woefully inadequate, according to Grand Jury findings, though it has undergone considerable improvements since a scathing 2002 report.
The county is planning a partnership with the nonprofit Calaveras Humane Society, in which the government provides land and utility infrastructure while the Society raises funds to construct and eventually staff a new shelter.
The Angels Camp site was seen as more centralized and favored by the Society and a majority of supervisors two years ago. However, a report written by Environmental Management Agency Director Brian Moss for Tuesday?s meeting gives preference to a parcel carved out during the construction of a new justice center near the Government Center. Another Government Center had been rejected in the earlier workshop.
The county already owns the Government Center land, utilities have been installed nearby to service the new jail and Sheriff?s Office under construction, the location is familiar to the public, and less grading is needed to make the site buildable, according to Moss.
?The location is perfect ? it can accommodate long-term growth. It can accommodate some large animals,? said board Chairwoman Merita Callaway. ?A lot of the environmental work is already done because of the courthouse project. The (California Conservation Corps) has already done a lot of clearing of the land.?
Calaveras Humane Society spokeswoman Jean Macomber said the Society would reserve its comments until the study session.
The study session will also consider an increase in dog licensing fees from $12 to $15.
The second study session will take a look at the board?s meeting schedule. The board meets the second and fourth Tuesday of each month, with special meetings in between as needed. The cut back from four monthly meetings to two about two years ago was cited as a cost-savings measure but has been unpopular with the public.
The board has also discussed the possibility of occasional meetings at night and/or outside the county seat of San Andreas in recent years. A majority in favor of such a move has not been achieved, but a new board seated in January with three new members is yet to deliberate the matter.
Also to be discussed are procedures regarding disruptive public comments. Meetings of recent years with strained budgets have been plagued by out-of-order remarks by audience members after official public comment periods have closed.
The regular session will feature a pair of items related to the jail and Sheriff?s Office project. A proposal calls for a ?field work directive? to speed up processing of unforeseen add-ons to the project. A staff report found that a directive will lead to work proceeding on projects with unknown costs at the time they are undertaken. It should save money in the long run by reducing construction delays due to lag time in getting supervisors? approval for ?change orders,? the report stated.
The board will also consider entering three contracts for a combined $550,000 to furnish the new buildings.
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PUBLIC MEETING: Calaveras County Board of Supervisors, 9 a.m. regular meeting, 1:30 p.m. Animal Services study session, 2:30 p.m. board policies and procedures study session, Tuesday, Government Center, 891 Mountain Ranch Road, San Andreas.
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Source: http://www.uniondemocrat.com/News/Local-News/Site-for-new-pet-shelter-on-docket
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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ? A federal judge on Friday struck down an effort to form a class action lawsuit to go after Apple, Google and five other technology companies for allegedly forming an illegal cartel to tamp down workers' wages and prevent the loss of their best engineers during a multiyear conspiracy broken up by government regulators.
U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh in San Jose, Calif., issued a ruling Friday concluding that the companies' alleged collusion may have affected workers in too many different ways to justify lumping the individual claims together. She denied the request to certify workers' lawsuits as a class action and collectively seek damages on behalf of tens of thousands of employees.
The allegations will be more difficult to pursue if they can't be united in a single lawsuit. Koh, though, will allow the workers' lawyers to submit additional evidence that they have been collecting to persuade her that the lawsuit still merits class certification.
"Plaintiffs appreciate the court's thorough consideration of the evidence and are prepared to address the court's concerns fully in a renewed motion," employee attorney Kelly Dermody wrote in a Friday email.
Apple Inc., Google Inc. and the other companies targeted in the lawsuit have been vigorously fighting the allegations. More is at stake than potentially paying out significant damages to more than 100,000 workers. If the lawsuit proceeds, it could also expose secret discussions among prominent technology executives who entered into a "gentlemen's agreement" not to poach employees working at their respective companies.
The case, filed in San Jose federal court, already has disclosed emails raising questions about the tactics of Apple's former CEO, the late Steve Jobs, and Google's former CEO, Eric Schmidt. Other sensitive information has so far been redacted in various court documents, including parts of Koh's 53-page ruling, but more dirty laundry could be aired if the lawsuit proceeds.
The lawsuit is trying to hold the companies accountable for an alleged scheme that cheated employees by artificially suppressing the demand for their services. The complaint hinges on the contention that the workers would have gotten raises either from their current employers or at other jobs if an anti-poaching provision hadn't been imposed. In most instances, the recruiting restrictions were in place from March 2005 through December 2009, according to the lawsuit.
Besides Apple and Google, the lawsuit is aimed at computer chip maker Intel Corp., software makers Intuit Inc. and Adobe Systems Inc., and film makers Pixar and LucasFilm, both of which are now owned by Walt Disney Co.
With the exception of LucasFilm, all the companies being sued settled similar allegations of an anti-poaching conspiracy with the U.S. Justice Department in 2010. The government opened its investigation in 2009 after finding evidence that the companies had reached behind-the-scenes agreements not to recruit each other's employees without permission. Apple, Google and the other companies lifted their poaching prohibitions without acknowledging any wrongdoing, as part of their settlement with the Justice Department.
Documents filed in the lawsuit indicated executives knew they were behaving badly. Both Schmidt and Intel CEO Paul Otellini indicated that they were worried about the anti-recruiting agreements being discovered, according to declarations cited in Koh's ruling. Nevertheless, Schmidt still fired a Google recruiter who riled Jobs by contacting an Apple employee, according to evidence submitted in the case.
Sometimes, workers who applied for a vacant position of their own volition were turned away if they were employed by one of the companies already adhering to the recruiting restrictions.
In her ruling, Koh said there's evidence that some of the employees working at the companies named in the lawsuit probably didn't earn as much money as they would have in a completely free market.
"The sustained personal efforts by the corporations' own chief executives...to monitor and enforce these agreements indicate that the agreements may have had broad effects on (their) employees," she wrote.
The problem with the lawsuit, Koh said, is that the circumstances for each employee differ too widely to qualify as a class action.
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KABUL (Reuters) - A helicopter crash in eastern Afghanistan killed two American members of the NATO-led force on Tuesday, spokesmen said.
There were no reports of enemy activity in the area, said Captain Dan Einert, a spokesman for the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force.
U.S. military spokesman Colonel Thomas Collins said both the dead were from the United States.
The helicopter went down in Pachir Agam district of Nangarhar province, said Ahmad Zia Abdulzai, a spokesman for the governor's office.
No other details were immediately available.
(Reporting By Katharine Houreld; Editing by Nick Macfie)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/afghanistan-helicopter-crash-kills-2-members-nato-led-131446273.html
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