Police officer A KENDAL woman was sentenced to a curfew after she admitted assaulted a police officer Rhiannon Stewart used threatening or abusive words to cause alarm of distress in Barrow on May 28. On the same day, the 23-year-old assaulted police officer Liam Poole and damaged a pillow and mattress belonging to Cumbria Police. The defendant, of Lound Road in Kendal, pleaded guilty to the offence at South Cumbria Magistrates Court. She was sentenced to a curfew keeping her home at between 5pma and 7am for 16 weeks. She was told to pay £75 compensation to the officer and fined £200.
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Paul Glazer stood awkwardly in a dark-blue suit at a podium at the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange.
The occasion: the 2018 kickoff for the sun-drenched local franchise of the Sohn Investment Conference, a pediatric cancer charity.
Other Sohn speakers that day included Jefferies global strategist David Zervos, Seth Fischer of Hong Kong hedge fund Oasis Management, and activist Bart Baum of Ionic Capital Management. They all crowded together in front of a wall of videos to press a blue switch to start the day’s trading.
“The market is open,” a computer-like voice droned amid cheers and applause, according to a video of the event.
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The scales of justice Rhiannon Stewart, of Kendal, used threatening or abusive words in Barrow on May 28. On the same day, the 23-year-old also assaulted police officer Liam Poole and damaged a pillow and mattress belonging to Cumbria Police. The defendant, of Lound Road, is due to be sentenced for the offences at South Cumbria Magistrates’ Court on July 26.
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Stephanie Buck looks on as Doug Hill plays at the debut of the Richmond Community Street piano at Sundial Square in 2014. Buck hopes to raise another $1000 to help to keep the street piano going for another decade, with the Pretty Crafty Market helping fundraise this month. Rather than replace it, she decided to try to raise the $3000 needed for new bass strings and hammers, that would see it last it another 10 years. “It brings so much joy,” Buck said. All sorts of people sat down to play the piano, including international students, who did not have an instrument at home, she said.