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THE BRITISH & IRISH LIONS OFFICIAL TECHNOLOGY PROVIDER UNLOCK THE POTENTIAL IN YOUR PEOPLE For 800 years, the City of London Corporation has helped deliver public services to this dynamic international hub. To keep pace, Deputy Town Clerk Susan Attard chose Microsoft Dynamics to transform the City of London contact centre, giving her team a complete view of callers and the ability to quickly respond to them. Today, 95% of calls are answered within 20 seconds and 75% of callers rate the service as excellent. With Microsoft Dynamics, the City of London Corporation is helping citizens in a decidedly modern way. microsoft.com/uk/dynamics
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new 3d printer technology working from a template of the young mrs thatcher, the tory party hope to reconstruct a new leader Home The UK Independence Party gave the government and opposition a jolt by doing well in the elections for 34 English councils, increasing its number of councillors from eight to 147 and gaining a projected national vote share of 23 per cent (compared with 25 per cent for the Conservatives, 29 per cent for Labour and 14 per cent for the Liberal Democrats). In a parliamentary by-election at South Shields, the Lib Dems were driven into seventh place, with only 352 votes, with Labour retaining the seat with 12,493 and Ukip coming second with 5,988. Nigel Farage, the leader of Ukip, grinned a good deal and said ‘Send in the clowns,’ throwing back at him Kenneth Clarke’s pejorative description of Ukip supporters. Lord Lawson, the former chancellor of the exchequer, called for Britain to leave the EU, saying that it would be financially beneficial. Nigel Evans, the Deputy Speaker of the House of Commons, was arrested by police investigating complaints from two men of a rape and a sexual assault. He was bailed until 19 June, but he requested not to sit during the debate on the Queen’s Speech. Lord Patten, the chairman of the BBC Trust, said that the corporation might have to pay compensation to the 13 women whom the broadcaster Stuart Hall, aged 83, admitted indecently assaulting between 1967 and 1985. During a trial at the Old Bailey, the court was told that Eddy Shah, the former newspaper owner, aged 69, had sexual relations with a girl when she was aged 14 and 15 in the 1990s. Jimmy Tarbuck, the comedian, aged 73, was arrested and questioned about an alleged assault of a young boy in the late 1970s. In the Queen’s speech the government promised another Dangerous Dogs Bill and a single state pension of £144. The Queen will not attend the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Sri Lanka in November, and will be represented by the Prince of Wales. There were 22 serious incidents involving people trying to use the new 111 health helpline, according to Pulse, the GPs’ magazine. Commercial call-centre staff from Wrexham flew to Auckland, New Zealand, to work during the day there to cover night shifts back home. Sir Alex Ferguson, aged 71, is to retire as manager of Manchester United at the end of the season, after 26 years. Abroad Israel made two air attacks on Syria, which it said were meant to stop the dispatch of Fateh-110 missiles to Hezbollah in Lebanon. Hundreds of Syrians fled coastal areas around Baniyas, where government forces were accused of carrying out massacres. Carla Del Ponte, a member of a UN commission investigating the use of sarin gas in Syria, said on television: ‘The first indications we got ... were about the use of nerve gas by the opposition.’ John Kerry, the US Secretary of State, visited Moscow for talks with President Vladimir Putin abut Syria. Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian leader, visited China. Benjamin Netanyahu, the Prime Minister of Israel, visited China separately. the spectator | 11 may 2013 | www.spectator.co.uk The number of those known to have died in the collapse of a clothing factory complex in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, on 24 April rose to 705. In Dhaka, 27 people died as police dispersed demonstrations organised by Hefazat-e Islam, a coalition of Islamist groups. In Pakistan, Imran Khan fell 15 feet on to his head from a platform while electioneering, and was kept in hospital for several days. Two Iranians convicted of possessing explosives were sentenced to life imprisonment by a Kenyan court. A bomb was thrown into a Catholic church in Arusha, Tanzania, during its official opening, killing one and wounding dozens; four Tanzanians and four Saudi Arabians were arrested. Unemployment in America fell to 7.5 per cent in April, its lowest since December 2008. Three women who disappeared between 2002 and 2004 were rescued from a house in Cleveland, Ohio, and a 52-year-old former school bus driver and his two brothers were arrested. A newly-wed bride and four women friends were burnt to death when a stretch limo burst into flames on the San Mateo bridge in San Francisco. A handgun manufactured by a 3D printer was successfully fired at Austin, Texas. The European Central Bank cut its main interest rate from 0.75 to 0.5 per cent. Giulio Andreotti, seven times prime minister of Italy between 1972 and 1992, died, aged 94. A tornado in the Italian region of Emilia-Romagna damaged hundreds of houses and snatched cows from fields. CSH 7

new 3d printer technology working from a template of the young mrs thatcher,

the tory party hope to reconstruct a new leader

Home The UK Independence Party gave the government and opposition a jolt by doing well in the elections for 34 English councils, increasing its number of councillors from eight to 147 and gaining a projected national vote share of 23 per cent (compared with 25 per cent for the Conservatives, 29 per cent for Labour and 14 per cent for the Liberal Democrats). In a parliamentary by-election at South Shields, the Lib Dems were driven into seventh place, with only 352 votes, with Labour retaining the seat with 12,493 and Ukip coming second with 5,988. Nigel Farage, the leader of Ukip, grinned a good deal and said ‘Send in the clowns,’ throwing back at him Kenneth Clarke’s pejorative description of Ukip supporters. Lord Lawson, the former chancellor of the exchequer, called for Britain to leave the EU, saying that it would be financially beneficial.

Nigel Evans, the Deputy Speaker of the House of Commons, was arrested by police investigating complaints from two men of a rape and a sexual assault. He was bailed until 19 June, but he requested not to sit during the debate on the Queen’s Speech. Lord Patten, the chairman of the BBC Trust, said that the corporation might have to pay compensation to the 13 women whom the broadcaster Stuart Hall, aged 83, admitted indecently assaulting between 1967 and 1985. During a trial at the Old Bailey, the court was told that Eddy Shah, the former newspaper owner, aged 69, had sexual relations with a girl when she was aged 14 and 15 in the 1990s. Jimmy Tarbuck,

the comedian, aged 73, was arrested and questioned about an alleged assault of a young boy in the late 1970s.

In the Queen’s speech the government promised another Dangerous Dogs Bill and a single state pension of £144. The Queen will not attend the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Sri Lanka in November, and will be represented by the Prince of Wales. There were 22 serious incidents involving people trying to use the new 111 health helpline, according to Pulse, the GPs’ magazine. Commercial call-centre staff from Wrexham flew to Auckland, New Zealand, to work during the day there to cover night shifts back home. Sir Alex Ferguson, aged 71, is to retire as manager of Manchester United at the end of the season, after 26 years.

Abroad Israel made two air attacks on Syria, which it said were meant to stop the dispatch of Fateh-110 missiles to Hezbollah in Lebanon. Hundreds of Syrians fled coastal areas around Baniyas, where government forces were accused of carrying out massacres. Carla Del Ponte, a member of a UN commission investigating the use of sarin gas in Syria, said on television: ‘The first indications we got ... were about the use of nerve gas by the opposition.’ John Kerry, the US Secretary of State, visited Moscow for talks with President Vladimir Putin abut Syria. Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian leader, visited China. Benjamin Netanyahu, the Prime Minister of Israel, visited China separately.

the spectator | 11 may 2013 | www.spectator.co.uk

The number of those known to have died in the collapse of a clothing factory complex in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, on 24 April rose to 705. In Dhaka, 27 people died as police dispersed demonstrations organised by Hefazat-e Islam, a coalition of Islamist groups. In Pakistan, Imran Khan fell 15 feet on to his head from a platform while electioneering, and was kept in hospital for several days. Two Iranians convicted of possessing explosives were sentenced to life imprisonment by a Kenyan court. A bomb was thrown into a Catholic church in Arusha, Tanzania, during its official opening, killing one and wounding dozens; four Tanzanians and four Saudi Arabians were arrested.

Unemployment in America fell to 7.5 per cent in April, its lowest since December 2008. Three women who disappeared between 2002 and 2004 were rescued from a house in Cleveland, Ohio, and a 52-year-old former school bus driver and his two brothers were arrested. A newly-wed bride and four women friends were burnt to death when a stretch limo burst into flames on the San Mateo bridge in San Francisco. A handgun manufactured by a 3D printer was successfully fired at Austin, Texas. The European Central Bank cut its main interest rate from 0.75 to 0.5 per cent. Giulio Andreotti, seven times prime minister of Italy between 1972 and 1992, died, aged 94. A tornado in the Italian region of Emilia-Romagna damaged hundreds of houses and snatched cows from fields.

CSH

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