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 This Mortal Coil 
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Postby Macc » Tue Apr 09, 2013 12:49 am


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Former British PM Margaret Thatcher dead

Former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher has died at the age of 87 following a stroke.

As Britain's longest-serving 20th century prime minister and the only woman to have held the job, Baroness Thatcher presided over a decade of radical change in Britain.

Baroness Thatcher died peacefully on Monday morning, said Lord Tim Bell, a spokesman for the Thatcher family.

"It is with great sadness that Mark and Carol Thatcher announced that their mother Baroness Thatcher died peacefully following a stroke this morning," Lord Bell said.

British prime minister David Cameron paid tribute to Baroness Thatcher as "a great leader, a great Prime Minister and a great Briton."

"It was with great sadness that I learned of Baroness Thatcher's death," he said.

Queen Elizabeth said she was sad to hear the news of Thatcher's death and sent a message of sympathy to her family.

From the day in May 1979 that she arrived in 10 Downing Street with her trademark handbag, the grocer's daughter used no-nonsense rhetoric and a steely power over her male acolytes to take stagnant Britain on a journey of economic reform.

She was also one of the few prime ministers to have an ideology named after her: Thatcherism's appeal was to the individual, its rhetoric was all about freedom and an end to class division, about less state control and more private enterprise, about smashing anything that believed in collective power, from trade unions to the Soviet bloc.

"There is no such thing as society," Baroness Thatcher once famously declared, and some individuals indeed prospered.

Mass privatisations of state companies like British Telecom gave the common man and woman the chance to own shares, and business regarded her reforming zeal with almost religious reverence.

Under her Conservative government, Britain's legions of council house tenants got the chance to buy their own homes.

But others felt the sharp end of Thatcherism. Unemployment soared, the jobless grimly referring to themselves as one of "Maggie's 3 million".

Coal miners striking against pit closures were finally crushed in 1985 after a bitter struggle which saw pitched battles on picket lines, and there was unrest as police battled youths in the inner cities.

Still today, many blame a perceived lack of community spirit in Britain on Baroness Thatcher's legacy.

Margaret Hilda Thatcher was born a shopkeeper's daughter in October 1925 in the town of Grantham, eastern England. She attended the local grammar school and won a place at Sommerville College, Oxford, where she obtained a second class degree in chemistry.

She married businessman Denis Thatcher in 1951, and two years later she bore twin children - journalist Carol and businessman Mark.

She was elected to parliament's lower House of Commons in 1959 and ousted former prime minister Edward Heath as opposition Conservative leader in 1975.

Arguably Baroness Thatcher's toughest test occurred early in her tenure, when in 1982 Argentina seized the Falkland Islands, a distant British possession in the south Atlantic.

British forces were dispatched, the islands recaptured after a bloody 74-day war, and Baroness Thatcher's reputation soared.

Her right-wing Conservative Party, which had been flagging in the polls, defeated the Labour opposition in the 1983 election, a feat she repeated again in 1987.

Internationally, Baroness Thatcher quickly won more adulation and respect than she would ever enjoy at home, forming a close alliance with US president Ronald Reagan in the Cold War stand-off with the Soviet Union.

It was Europe, however, that proved her undoing. Despite helping European partners forge the single market in 1987, Baroness Thatcher always waxed sceptical about Europe, eventually igniting the coup within the Conservative Party that ended up with chancellor John Major replacing her in 1990.

By the time the Tory plotters closed in, the one-time Iron Lady's hold over the country was slipping. Anger over her plans to abolish local government rates and replace them with a flat-rate "poll tax" which would be levied regardless of income had led to a huge riot in London in March 1990, with thousands of protesters battling police in the centre of the capital.

Separately, the Europe issue came to a head in November 1990 when deputy PM Geoffrey Howe resigned over Mrs Thatcher's refusal to set a timetable for Britain to join the European single currency - which would go on to be the euro.

Standing up to deliver his resignation speech in the House of Commons, Mr Howe, a former staunch Thatcher ally, declared that her stance was "rather like sending your opening batsmen to the crease only for them to find the moment that the first balls are bowled that their bats have been broken before the game by the team captain".

Mr Howe's speech emboldened Tory rebels but it was down to another former Thatcher government insider, former defence minister Michael Heseltine, to attempt to deal the killer blow.

When Mr Heseltine challenged for the Tory leadership later in November, Thatcher won. But Mr Heseltine's 152 votes were enough to force the issue to a second ballot. Rather than face that humiliation, the Iron Lady resigned, leaving Downing Street in tears.

Even after Mr Major's accession, Baroness Thatcher towered over the Tory right, inspiring Eurosceptics and ensuring that the party remained bitterly divided.

Despite her reputation as a wilful leader who fought tirelessly for her political convictions, Baroness Thatcher took great exception to being portrayed by opponents as being hard and uncaring.

After moving to the upper House of Lords as Baroness Thatcher, she wrote her memoirs and carried out lecture tours around the world.

However, Baroness Thatcher's doctor banned her from public speaking in 2002 following a series of small strokes which aides said left her sometimes confused and with a failing memory.

In 2008 Baroness Thatcher collapsed at a House of Lords dinner due to low blood pressure and in the same year it was revealed that she had been suffering from dementia.

In 2009 rumours circulated in Canada that Baroness Thatcher had died after a minister sent around a text message saying that his cat "Thatcher" had passed away.

News that the former leader had died reached even prime minister Stephen Harper, but the confusion was cleared up after calls to Downing Street.


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Tue Apr 09, 2013 12:49 am
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Postby phunkyfeelone » Fri Apr 12, 2013 6:48 pm


The people openly celebrating her death should be ashamed of themselves.

Celebrate that she's no longer Prime Minister (in 1990) if you must, but like it or not, she turned the UK into an economic power.


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Postby sharkboi » Mon Apr 22, 2013 5:12 pm


Quote:
Divinyls singer Chrissy Amphlett dies.

Australian rock legend Chrissy Amphlett, best known as the singer of the Divinyls, has died age 53.

Media reports say she was surrounded by family and friends at her New York home when she died.

Amphlett, who grew up in Geelong, Victoria, lived in New York with her husband, former Divinyls drummer Charley Drayton.

The cause of her death is not yet clear.

In 2010 she revealed she had breast cancer but in early 2011 she said she was in remission.

In 2007 the charismatic frontwoman also revealed a battle against multiple sclerosis.

In March, she shared an insight into her health troubles via her official Facebook page.

"Unfortunately the last 18 months have been a real challenge for me having breast cancer and MS and all the new places that will take you," she wrote.

"You become sadly a patient in a world of waiting rooms, waiting sometimes hours for a result or an appointment.

"You spend a lot time in cold machines... hospital beds, on your knees praying for miracles, operating rooms, tests after tests, looking at healthy people skip down the street like you once did and you took it all for granted and now wish you could do that.

"I have not stopped singing throughout all this in my dreams and to be once again performing and doing what I love to do."

Along with singing, Amphlett acted for both the stage and screen and starred alongside Russell Crowe in the musical Blood Brothers in 1988.

The Divinyls' fame peaked with hit 1991 single I Touch Myself, which reached number one on Australian charts and also found success in the US and UK.

"Everybody has always seen it in one way, but I see the beauty of this song," Amphlett said of the song while speaking to Enough Rope host Andrew Denton in 2006.

"It's about both of those sides, our higher self and our lower self and our sexuality and everything."

The band, also known for hit song Science Fiction, was inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame in 2006 but split in 2007 after a short tour.


http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-04-22/d ... es/4644172

:sad:



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Postby phunkyfeelone » Thu May 02, 2013 9:30 pm


Chris Kelly, sound of the early 90's, died today age 34. That's wiggidawiggidawiggida whacked...



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Postby djmenow » Thu May 02, 2013 11:06 pm


I was a fan of Kris Kross back in the day. Had their 3 albums and so sad to go so young.


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Postby UpOver » Fri May 03, 2013 12:22 am


I'm jealous! Makes me ashamed I'm stuck in 60's/70's musical era. But seriously, way to young to strike out.


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Postby atefooterz » Fri May 03, 2013 3:43 pm


Jeff Hanneman R.I.P. \m/ \m/

Founding member of pioneering thrash metal band dies of liver failure

Just over two years after contracting a rare skin tissue disease, Slayer guitarist and songwriter Jeff Hanneman died on Thursday from liver failure at Hemet Valley Medical Center, near his home in Southern California's Inland Empire area.

Slayer made the news public on Thursday afternoon, announcing that the band "is devastated" and calling Hanneman, who was 49, their bandmate and brother. Twitter quickly filled with messages from fans and fellow musicians, many of whom were in Los Angeles for the 5th Annual Revolver Golden Gods Awards show at Club Nokia. Disturbed/Device frontman David Draiman was among the very first, posting "RIP TO A TITAN OF METAL," while drummer Mike Portnoy wrote, "WOW...I'm in shock...RIP Jeff Hanneman."



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Postby Macc » Fri May 10, 2013 9:31 pm


Quote:
Colgate's 'Mrs Marsh', Barbara Callcott, passes away

BARBARA Callcott, who became an icon of Australian pop culture as "Mrs Marsh'' in toothpaste TV commercials, died this morning.

She starred in Colgate's advertising for many years, starting from the late 1970s.

She died peacefully in her home of many years at Noosa on Queensland's Sunshine Coast.

"In honour of her legacy, Colgate will be initiating an education grant in her name in recognition of her contribution to oral health education. Colgate staff are saddened by the news and extend their condolences to Barbara's family," Chris Pedersen, Managing Director, Colgate, said this afternoon.

He said Ms Callcott had continued to support the education of Australian children on the benefits of good oral health habits 'off screen' right up until this month.

Arguably the most famous part of her TV ads was dipping chalk into a dye and cracking it in half to show how a toothpaste could help tooth enamel.


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Postby kirkbright » Mon May 20, 2013 4:39 pm


RIP Penne Hackforth-Jones

Actor Penne Hackforth-Jones, a pillar of Australian films and TV for more than 40 years, died in Melbourne on Saturday from lung cancer, aged 64.

The tributes are flowing for the highly respected performer who made her screen debut in TV.s Riptide in 1969. Devastated to hear Penne Hackforth-Jones has left us. Generous and beautiful, she will be greatly missed,. producer Jane Scott posted on Facebook.

Rip Penelope Hackforth-Jones (actor), Bellbird and many wonderful Australian film and TV productions,. said radio and TV personality Jono Coleman. .Sadly lost so young. I had a big crush on her after Gtk on ABC-tv every night after school..

.A beautiful person with a wonderful voice - worked with Penne for many years at UKTV. Vale Penne - you will be missed,. said Phyllisse Stanton. .Rip Penne a stunningly beautiful woman, .declared actor Chris Haywood.


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Postby modecko » Thu May 23, 2013 8:56 pm


Hazel Hawke dies after battle with dementia

Always like this lady and her dignity.


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