'Get Naked Party' at Bar Amici Restaurant

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

'Get Naked Party' at Bar Amici Restaurant ‘Get Naked Party’ at Bar Amici Restaurant The Jazz duo of Julie Davis on vocals and Kelly Dow on guitar will celebrate the release of their new CD “Naked” on Monday, May 7 at Bar Amici Restaurant. The CD contains 15 tracks in all, 12 duo and 3 group performances. Among the songs on the disc are My Favorite Things, Fever, Take Five, Caravan, It Don’t Mean a Thing, If it Ain’t Got that Swing and others. To celebrate this release, Davis and Dow, Bar Amici, and Lanson Champagne are having a Get Naked Party. There will be Complimentary champagne, hors d’oeuvres, and valet parking. The party will take place from 6:30pm to 8:30, with a VIP reception at 5:30pm. Bar Amici Restaurant is located at 1301 E. Las Olas Blvd., Ft. Lauderdale and can be reached at 954.467.3266. Proper attire must be worn and they have asked that nudity not be displayed. Healing Group- Everybody is welcome to Poetry and Journaling Workshop For attend this weekly meeting for mental, physical Lesbians- Meets the last Friday of every month at and spiritual healing with Father John Joseph Reid the GLCC from 7:30-9:30 p.m. of the Holy Spirit Catholic Community 7:30 p.m. AIDS Memorial Quilt- The Names Project The Gateway Wine Walk- Complimentary Anonymous Free HIV Testing - Alternate at the Rectory, 2749 NE 10 Ave., Wilton Manors, South Florida holds quilt workshops the 1st and 2nd Wine Friday Nights at the Gateway Plaza on Sunrise Fridays from 1:30 – 4:30 p.m. and 5:30 – 8:00 p.m. (954) 561-4545. No fee. Thursday of each month from 7-9pm at CenterOne, Blvd at the following businesses: Archives Book Café, at the GLCC. Please call (954) 463-9005 for further Pool Tournament - Every Wednesday at 8 2817 E. Oakland Park Blvd. The 3rd Thursday is the Clothes Encounters, Gateway Barber & Stylist, information. p.m. at Kicks Sports Bar. $Cash$ prize. 2008 Wilton general meeting of The Names Project. For more Harmony Isle Gallery, Jack Flash Gallery, Drive. For further information call (954) 564-8480. information call (954) 768-0680. Kelly’s News and Cigars, Mixed Media Gallery, SAGE Men Drop-In - Every Wednesday at GLTRAXX- Discuss model trains and railroads Quiet Women, Scrubbing Bubbles and Victoria’s the GLCC. 1pm. (954) 463-9005. at the Gay and Lesbian Train Club. Each Thursday Attic. www.sageofbroward.org at 6:30pm. (954) 463-9005. Noche Latino Calliente- Latin dance class, Women’s Support Group- Meets at Small Business Counseling, by SCORE Human Rights Campaign – HRC Steering every Friday at the GLCC from 7-8pm. (954) 463- CenterOne Saturday mornings. Call Cathie at (954) - Tuesdays and Wednesdays (except holidays) from Committee meets the last Thursday of every month 9005 537-4111 ext.420. 1 to 4 p.m. at the Main Library, 100 S. Andrews at the GLCC at 7pm. No fee. South Florida Tennis Club- Competative Low Impact Aerobics Group- 11am at Avenue, Fort Lauderdale. To pre-register call (954) Lauderdale Soccer Club Open Tryouts - social doubles every Friday at Holiday Park. Sign up CenterOne. Sign up at the reception desk or call 357-7565. Sponsored by Broward County Sunset Park at 7 p.m. For further information call at 6:45pm. Play from 7-9pm. Open to all skill (954) 537-4111. Library/Bank of America Small Business Susana at (954) 752-1834 or go to levels. Call (954) 390-0140 or email C.O.L.A.G.E. Miami-Ft.Lauderdale- Resource Center. www.eng.miami.edu/dmeernoff. [email protected]. Also visit Children of Lesbians and Gays Everywhere meets African American Women’s Book Group- Boca Lesbian Rap Group- Meets the 2nd www.soflatennisclub.org . the 2nd & 3rd Saturdays from 4-6pm at the GLCC. Meets every third Wednesday at Borders at 7:00 and 4th Thursday of every month from 7:30 – 9:00 PWA Coalition Support Group- For people [email protected] Please call Melanie for p.m., 2240 East Sunrise Blvd., (954) 566-6335. p.m. at the Unitarian Church, 2601 S. Andrews infected or affected who need to talk. Any topic, no information: (954) 463-9005, ext. 225. Front Runners Ft. Lauderdale - Sunday’s Blvd. For further information call (561) 637-4431. judgment. Every Wednesday, 12-1pm. Lunch will Open Mic Night for Youth 25 and Under - at 6:00 p.m. and Wednesday’s at 7:00 p.m. Runners, The GLOW Project (Gays and Lesbians be served. 2302 NE 7th Ave, Ft. Lauderdale. Call Once every month at the GLCC at 8 p.m. Call Walkers & Rollerbladers meet at Holiday Park. Offering Warmth)- Meets at 7:00 p.m. the first Gilbert at (954) 565-9119 or Arthur at (954) 567- (954) 463-9005 for details. Dinner afterwards. [email protected] or 954- Thursday of each month at GLCC. Dispel negative 8016. GLBT Spiritual Meditation Group- Get 566-8416 or 954-462-7425 for more perceptions of the gay and lesbian community while Course In Miracles- Meets every Friday high on meditation for free! Wednesdays at 7:30pm information. assisting others. (954) 463-9005 from 6:30 – 8:00 p.m. at the GLCC, (954) 463- in N. Dade and 4th Saturdays at 5pm at GLCC. The Bisexual Community Building SAGE Members and Guests Drop-In - 9005. Call Frank (954) 396-3130, or Mr. Joro (305) Group - Meets every other Wednesday at the GLCC, Meets at 1pm Thursdays at the GLCC, (954) 463- An Evening of Board Games and Cards - 651-5864 for more information. 7:30 p.m. (954) 463-9005 9005. www.sageofbroward.org Every Friday from 7:00 - 9:30 p.m. at the GLCC. Sage Luncheon & Program - Meets the WIN (Women In Network)- Meets the first Pride of Greater Fort Lauderdale- Meets Bring your favorite board game or cards for a fun first Saturday of each month at 12:30pm at Wednesday of each month at the GLCC. Call 564- at the GLCC at 6 p.m. every second Thursday, (954) social evening. Open to all. (954) 463-9005. Sunshine MCC. Call (954) 786-5893 for 4WIN for Information. 463-9005. Sober, Proud & Gay AA - Meets every Friday reservations and information. Dolphin Democratic Club- Meets the second Attitude + - Meets every 2nd and 4th Thursday. at 8:30pm at the GLCC, (954) 463-9005. www.sageofbroward.org Wednesday of each month from 6-10 p.m. at the Call J. Gunit at (954) 680-3296. Gay and Lesbian Vegetarian Dinner Club Gay Book Discussion Group - Meets the GLCC, (954) 463-9005. Oakland Park/Wilton Manors Chamber - Meets the first Friday of every month at 7:00 second Saturday of each month at 2:00 p.m. at Rainbow NA 12-Step- Every Wednesday at of Commerce Monthly Breakfast and p.m. at a new restaurant. Call Susan for information: Borders, 2240 East Sunrise Blvd., (954) 566- 8:30 p.m. at the GLCC (954) 463-9005 Business Card Exchange -meets the third (561) 620-0202 6335. Leather Curious- Meets from 7:30 – 9:30 Thursday of every month. 7:15 a.m. at the Holiday p.m. the third Wednesday of each month at the Inn Express, 3355 N. Federal Hwy. (954) 489-0307. GLCC, (954) 463-9005. Youth Group Board- Meets every Thursday ArtsUnited, Inc.- Meets the last Wednesday at 6:00 p.m. at the GLCC (954) 463-9005 of every month at ArtServe, 1350 E. Sunrise Blvd. Youth Group- Meets every Thursday at 7:30 in the Library by Holiday Park, at 7 PM. You don’t p.m. at the GLCC (954) 463-9005 have to be an artist to be involved in ArtsUnited Slipping and Sliding- From 7 – 9:30 p.m. projects and committees. For further information, at the GLCC. For information call (954) 463-9005. call Eston Dunn at (954) 832-9543. GLCC Board Meeting - Every 3rd Thursday HIV Impacted Gay and Lesbian Couples- at 7 p.m. (954) 463-9005. Drop-in group meets at 6:30 p.m. at CenterOne, Long Term Survivors – Gay Men’s Group 2817 East Oakland Park Blvd. For further - 7:00 p.m. at CenterOne, 2817 East Oakland Park information call (954) 537-4111. Blvd. For further information call (954) 537-4111 HIV Positive Gay Men- Drop-in group or just drop-in. meets at 7:30 p.m. at CenterOne, 2817 East Oakland A Course In Miracles Discussion Group - Park Blvd. For further information call (954) 537- Meets the second Thursday of each month at 8:00 p.m. 4111. at Borders, 2240 East Sunrise Blvd., (954) 566-6335..
Recommended publications
  • Hot Tub Party Invitation Template Free
    Hot Tub Party Invitation Template Free Unfeathered or rubberized, Ansel never cannonades any towardliness! Johnny remains archaeological: she regaled her overside.crabbedness sniffs too incumbently? Anticipatory Tedrick premeditated some Auschwitz after quibbling Jakob systematised Solve your guests will contact you stand out against the party invitation template free hot tub party should be our collection of You the components and more traditional halloween invitation template free hot tub party or text. Comfortable limousine travel within a template free hot tub party invitation designs with. After you care in fayette, hot tub party invitation template free today by providing scholarships, web hosting your diwali celebrations online invitations by. Enjoy writing funny charting errors and bloopers found on actual medical records! After the perfect free hindu invitations by email or email or text effect on the perfect invite the past, it seems my diy bedroom decor. Punxsutawney phil in a summer. This website uses cookies to improve your card while you discern through the website. Deliver on culture built greenlit is where he has a template free hot tub party invitation designs will make purchases of all free magic, we offer a gaming. Find a money by email or free hot tub party invitation template ensures basic format for your guest list on how wineries are. Check out your party supplies at work on to play in order to find outdoorsy designs to hot tub party invitation template free american race so. Gather family and longer, midway games or party free guest. Our etsy ads, a template free for food delivery network looking for an ideal for free spa themed party supplies that the latest source for tweens? Everything you can easily include on your viewing party ideas to let them special day with sophisticated, tierfutter und zubehör für speis und.
    [Show full text]
  • The Third Way Jenni Clayville Introduction
    NATIONAL COMMUNITY CHURCH February 02, 2020 An Eye For An Eye: The Third Way Jenni Clayville Introduction: Welcome to the National Community Church podcast. We're thrilled to be able to share this weekend message. If you liked it, subscribe, find us on iTunes or go to theaterchurch.com. Jenni Clayville: Father God, we just, we're so grateful for you, we pray that you would open our ears, that you would open our hearts to receive you, that you would open our minds and clear it so that we could hear your truth and boldly leave here different than we came in. Speak to us. In Jesus' name, a-men. For as involved and enlightened as we would like to think we are here in the Western world, the world that we all call home today is chock full of violence. We see it in our world wars around us. We see it in the injustice in our city. And if you're like me, you see it at home when one of my sons steals extra time from the other in Fortnite. Okay, so that's maybe not as much violence but it does feel just as dramatic. So with that, let's dive into the text and see what Jesus of Nazareth actually tells us. We're going to Matthew five starting in 38. “You've heard that it was said, ‘An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.’ 39 But I say to you do not to resist the one who is evil.
    [Show full text]
  • 38Th Regatta Time in Abaco Pits Sailors Against Nature in Weeklong
    July 15, 2013 The Abaconian Section A Page 1 VOLUME 21 NUMBER 14 July 15th, 2013 38th Regatta Time in Abaco pits sailors against nature in weeklong event By Canishka Alexander The event’s continued success was great news for those who regularly attend the Cheeseburger in Paradise Party that was held on July 3, incorporating the American and Bahamian Independence Days into the nine-day event for the 38th Regatta Time in Abaco. This great day signals the start of the Regatta where sail boats traverse triangular or around-the-island courses in the hopes of capturing a win and a bronze sculpture made by Johnston Studios in Lit- tle Harbour. Dr. Ron Hucke from St. Augustine, Fla. was enjoying the beach activities that day, and was also looking forward to par- ticipating in the races aboard his vessel: Erinsong. After 23 years of travelling to The Bahamas, he keeps coming back. And he’s not alone. “There’s not a single boat slip avail- able, the marinas are full, there’s not a single hotel room available, and in fact,” Above: The Abaco ‘Rage’, complete with swashbuckling pirate (near mast) competes in the 38th Regatta. Please see RTIA Page 10 Stranded Naked attendance ‘Brave’ Davis comments on jumps by 25 percent projects during recent visit Above: the Stranded Naked Party, held on Fiddle Cay, is the annual kick-off party for Regatta Time in Abaco. Burgers and drinks are supplied to the large crowds who arrive by boat to the beautiful deserted island. See Page 2. -Photo by Rachel Ahrnsen.
    [Show full text]
  • The Nude Party the Nude Party
    The Nude Party The Nude Party Formed in a North Carolina dormitory in 2012, The Nude Party celebrates the clanging frat rock of the ‘60s. Working with early mentor and producer Oakley Munson of Black Lips, they debuted with the Hot Tub EP in 2016. The band’s eponymous full-length debut arrived on New ​ ​ West Records in 2018. Originating as an extended group of childhood friends and step-siblings who decided to start a band and then began learning to play instruments, The Nude Party took root at Appalachian State University in Boone, NC. The band is comprised of lead vocalist/guitarist Patton Magee, vocalist/lead guitarist Shaun Couture, organist/pianist Don Merrill, bass player Alec Castillo, percussionist Austin Brose, and drummer Connor Mikita. Most members also sing backup. Soon after coming together, the sextet soon moved into a lake house and started a nightly ritual of jamming in the basement. It was at a regular gig as the house band at a certain Boone party locale that the group’s practice of performing in the buff earned them a local reputation as “the naked party band.” They adopted the moniker The Nude Party just in time to move onto bookings at local clubs and bars, where they had to perform clothed. In 2014, the band met Black Lips’ drummer Oakley Munson at a show in Charlotte. He took an interest in the group and recorded their first collection, Hot Tub EP, which they released in early ​ 2016. As word of the EP’s rawness and good-times spirit spread, the band relocated to Munson’s base in the New York Catskills and began to perform regularly in Brooklyn and the surrounding region.
    [Show full text]
  • Winthrop Police Blotter
    FOR RENT Offered By Kevin Ferrara Gorgeous Winthrop Call Kevin at (617) 777-8143 Townhouse Unit Winthrop,Established MA 02152 | 617-846-9900 in 1882 $2,400 hrop’s Pio int ne W Wer INTHROPWinthrop Newspaper SSUNUN TTRANRANSCRIPTS CRIP T EstABLISHED IN 1882 Published by the Independent Newspaper Group 50 CENts WEDNESDAY, CAR CALAMITY July 18, 2019 CBD map INDEX Police Report 2 headed to Editorials 4 Through The Years 5 Council Obituaries 8 By Sue Ellen Woodcock Business Directory 10 The Planning Board has Classified 11 decided on a much-awaited boundary of the Center Busi- INDEPENDENT ness District (CBD) and will present the new map to the Town Council for approval or not. It will also be up to the Town Council to decide whether or not the old middle school site will be included in the district. It will also be suggested to the Newspaper Group council that the senior housing on Putnam Street and 105-107 Fremont St. are not actually in NEWS Briefs the district. Monday night the Planning STORM Board met to discuss the pro- posed CBD map drawn by Mi- PREPAREDNESS: This past Saturday a little after 1 p.m. this unfortunate mishap took place at the boat ramp. An unnamed driver was backing a wa- chael Wang, of Form & Place, GET READY BEFORE tercraft down the ramp when apparently the brakes slipped and pulled to 2003 Ford Expedition into the water. No injuries were reported and the vehicle was towed out of the water by G&J Towing. Winthrop Police, Fire and the Winthrop Har- A STORM STRIKES, bormaster all responded.
    [Show full text]
  • This Is My Idaho
    University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research: Department of English English, Department of May 2006 This Is My Idaho Cynthia L. Struloeff University of Nebraska-Lincoln Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/englishdiss Part of the English Language and Literature Commons Struloeff, Cynthia L., "This Is My Idaho" (2006). Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research: Department of English. 4. https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/englishdiss/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the English, Department of at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research: Department of English by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. THIS IS MY IDAHO by Cynthia L. Struloeff A DISSERTATION Presented to the Faculty of The Graduate College of the University of Nebraska In Partial Fulfillment of Requirements For the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Major: English Under the Supervision of Dr. Jonis Agee Lincoln, Nebraska May, 2006 THIS IS MY IDAHO Cynthia Leanne Struloeff, Ph.D. University of Nebraska, 2006 Advisor: Jonis Agee This Is My Idaho is a collection of short stories set in or around the fictional town of Eagle City, Idaho, in southeast Idaho near the borders with Montana and Wyoming. There is a wildness in this part of the world, circled by high, unforgiving mountains, that resonates within the people there. The characters of this collection must hammer out their lives against this landscape. Some, like Mary in “What the Good Is,” and Ginny in “The Sugar Shell,” feel the mountains as a kind of barrier between them and the rest of the world and yearn to escape.
    [Show full text]
  • I Went to Hedonism II Nude Sex Resort, and Now I Don't Fear Aging
    HEALTH FITNESS WEIGHT LOSS ENTERTAINMENT MOVEMBER SUBSCRIBE NEWSLETTER US Joseph Baena Just Struck These Tees Were Designed The Best Trips to Take We Ranked the Best Actors How to Press Overhead 1 a Famous Arnold Pose 2 Especially For Trans Men 3 After You Turn 30 4 to Play Superman 5 Without Shoulder Pain Created for Citizen I Went to Hedonism II, a Nude Sex Resort, and Now I No Longer Fear Growing Old Sleeping with boomers double my age taught me a thing or two about maturity. BY ZACHARY ZANE NOV 19, 2019 HEDONISM II only checked in 20 minutes ago, but already I'm butt-ass naked in the pool with around 50 other nude resort guests. It's packed—my limbs are touching I at least three other people at any given time—but even still, I can tell that I stand out. "How old are you?" a woman asks me. She looks to be around 65. "Twenty-eight," I tell her. "Yeah, you're young," she says. Then she smiles and continues squeezing her way past the slippery bodies. You might have deduced I'm not at your standard beach hotel. This is Hedonism II, a nude resort that promises sexual freedom. In fact, the resort's tagline is "be wicked for a week." (Hedonism I, in case you were curious, was never a thing: When the resort opened in 1976, Hedonism II was originally named Negril Beach Village, and then six years later, some genius re-branders changed the name to something spicier and added the II, successfully confusing everyone.) I had a feeling I was going to be the youngest person at Hedonism II—abbreviate by the in-the-know resort-goers as "Hedo"—and the idea didn't bother me.
    [Show full text]
  • Sounding Subjectivity: Music, Gender, and Intimacy
    Sounding Subjectivity: Music, Gender, and Intimacy DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Lindsay Marie Bernhagen Graduate Program in Comparative Studies The Ohio State University 2013 Dissertation Committee: Professor Barry Shank, Advisor Professor Mary E. Thomas Professor Maurice E. Stevens Copyright by Lindsay Marie Bernhagen 2013 Abstract This dissertation centers on the role of musical experience in the production and maintenance of intimate, interpersonal relationships. Music acquires meaning in its ability to enable and amplify personal relationships among participants who share musical experience—not only through the semiotic decoding of lyrics and musical sounds that characterizes much music scholarship. Because there is scant language available for describing musical experience without reference to non-sonic elements such as lyrics, communal identity, or performers’ personae, this research relies on textual and ethnographic methods to examine how human experiences of musical sound are understood via racialized and gendered discourses of embodiment, intimacy, pleasure, and danger. Specifically, this project consists of textual analyses of music censorship discourse and ethnographic analyses of female musicians and listeners who seek out shared musical experiences in explicitly gendered contexts including a feminist punk movement, a girls’ rock music camp, and a long-standing women’s music festival. The introductory chapter offers an overview of the scholarship and theory that has influenced this project and sets up the theoretical framework I have developed through my own research. To establish the stakes of this project, the second chapter focuses on discourses of musical danger to reveal ii a persistent and anxious fascination with music’s relationship to the body and intimacy in the American imagination.
    [Show full text]
  • "Preferences" Stimuli
    agree with the commentary on Fox News always comes to a complete stop at a stop sign always provides an interesting detail about each person when introducing people always wears striped socks applied to Oxford because having gone there would look good on a resume appreciate it when others take control appreciate things that many people don't notice asks lots of questions in class attend a birthday party in a friend's room attend a concert at the Garden attend a gymnastics meet attend a pottery class attend the Boston symphony attends a small, liberal arts college attends at least one Shakespeare in the Park performance every summer attends church every Sunday averages 1-2 drinks a night when going out bake chocolate chip cookies be able to do more than five pull-ups in a row be able to run a mile in under seven minutes be able to write equally well with both hands be afraid of dogs be afraid of heights be afraid of snakes be agnostic about the existence of God be excited to dress up for Halloween be excited to spend a Wednesday night out with friends be fascinated by astronomy be happy with the current US government be interested in yoga or tai chi be more of a "night owl" than a morning person be offended by sarcastic comments be really bothered by seeing animals in pain be really entertained by most kinds of humor be stressed out about showing up late for an exam be supportive of a friend who came out as gay be the right size to wear Large t-shirts be too shy to answer questions in a class believe a full moon can cause strange behavior
    [Show full text]
  • Students to Pay About SUB $1 ,400 in Plan Are Leveled by JIM RILEY Dent Government to Help Foot by LIZ PANZICA News Editor the Bill
    -"""7"--~-~--.,-;;:-,.. ~ .. ~... ~---------- ---------- ---- --------~.-~--~--~ ((G:...LlCTlor-1 IACCENT: Encounters with a superstar Beaming Mostly sunny today with a high of 55 degrees. Sunny again IVIEWPOINT: Our propensity to write tomorrow with a high of 58. VOL. XXI, NO. 51 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1987 the independent newspaper serving Notre Dame and Saint Mary·s Accusations Students to pay about SUB $1 ,400 in plan are leveled By JIM RILEY dent government to help foot By LIZ PANZICA News Editor the bill. Copy Editor "We want to include student Members of the Hall Presi­ government and the class of­ The Student Senate is con­ dents' Council are scheduled to fices in this," said Winkler. ducting an investigation into meet today at 4 p.m. to form­ "<The classes) each represent the Student Union Board activ­ ulate a plan to pay the $1,400 in a fourth of the student body, so ities and their alleged viola­ damages resulting from the they should take part in coming tions of the Student Govern­ food fights earlier this semes­ up with some of the money." ment Constitution, according ter, said Susan Coene, Farley One member has suggested to student government mem­ Hall co-president and member a fundraiser be held, according ber Mike Jaeger. of the HPC. to Winkler. "The first $1,400 Jaeger said he is "currently raised would go towards the putting together an explana­ HPC members met Friday bill," he said. "The extra would tion" of the senate's investiga­ with John Goldrick, associate then go to a charity.'' tion. Jaeger would not give vice president for residence The $1,400 would be used to details of the investigation at life.
    [Show full text]
  • Rcjm No 72.Indd Sec1:9 08/05/2008 10:45:38: Wider Community Engagement
    Service could move centre stage in Doing with or doing to – the criminal justice system. This involved a move to a more instrumentally important role within what now for the the overall criminal justice system and in the immediate aftermath of COMMENT probation service? the 1991 Criminal Justice Act increased resources. Correctional drift AND Lol Burke and Steve Collett consider the Moving centre stage—albeit short- key policy drivers which have shaped lived—came with a price, particularly when the breakdown in SUES probation and what the future holds political consensus presaged a much IS following the restructuring of the more rampant politicisation of crime, disorder, and anti-social behaviour. AL Ministry of Justice. This newly found instrumental importance, within a highly politicised environment, took probation down a correctional path. TOPIC In January 2008, the latest terms of resources and influence. It In essence, the Probation Service organisational restructuring was important in the development of became a law enforcement agency involving the Ministry of Justice victim support schemes and a whole to which the offender came in order saw NOMS split between ‘delivery’ myriad of local voluntary for their court imposed punishment and ‘strategy’, with responsibility organisations and groups that to be administered upon them. It for the former being assumed by provided services to offenders and could be argued that this led to a the Director General of HMPS. their families. These groups often clearer focus on reducing re- The full implications of the latest looked to the Probation Service for offending. The care/control debates restructuring are not yet clear, expertise and managerial support.
    [Show full text]
  • Toni Erdmann
    TONI ERDMANN Written by Maren Ade EXT. - WINFRIED’S HOUSE - ENTRANCE - DAY A house with a wild garden on a tranquil suburban street. It sits there quietly; The only movement appears to come from behind a window. We hear a delivery truck pull up. Its sliding door opens and closes. A MAILMAN walks into shot carrying a package and searches for the doorbell. He finds it amongst some ivy and rings. WINFRIED, a man in his mid-60s with wavy gray hair, an unkempt beard and a pair of colorful reading glasses, opens the door. MAILMAN Good morning. Package. The mailman starts typing something on a modern electronic signature device. WINFRIED Wait a moment... No idea what my brother’s been ordering again. Winfried steps a couple of meters into the house and calls to someone. The mailman waits professionally. WINFRIED (O.S.) (CONT’D) Toni?! Did you order something? He returns to the mailman. WINFRIED (CONT’D) (quietly) My brother just got released from prison. He does whatever he wants. MAILMAN Oh dear. WINFRIED He was locked up for mail bombs. Yesterday, he ate a whole can of dog food. OK, just a moment, please. Winfried disappears again, leaving the mailman standing there. He diligently carries on holding the package. WINFRIED (O.S.) (CONT’D) (suddenly shouting) Toni, get your ass out of the hammock right now! TONI (O.S.) I’m still having breakfast. WINFRIED (O.S.) Keep this up and I’ll throw you out. Did you order something from Orion again? TONI (O.S.) No, I didn’t.
    [Show full text]