Restaurant owners in Pleasanton not happy parklet program could end ktvu.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ktvu.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A huge model ship in the waiting room of his practice in Mt Victoria, Wellington, meticulously and painstakingly put together by Lamb, is a nod to this. The scrupulousness in his work, be it treating patients directly or in his trials and research, was his trademark. Lamb’s research and trials were a defining part of his medical career. He was a founding member of the Trans Tasman Radiation Oncology Group (TTROG), working with doctors and researchers from Aotearoa and Australia to find better ways of treating cancer patients. He was involved in many trials, including two highly successful international ones focusing on prostate cancer, in which he later specialised.
Debates on the left | Workers Liberty workersliberty.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from workersliberty.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The city agreed to go forward with the decision and it was affirmed by the city council, Pleasanton s deputy city manager Pam Ott said. The intention of the street closures for Weekend on Main is two-fold, she said, to support all downtown businesses by providing additional space in which they can choose to expand as they work to recover from the impacts of COVID restrictions, and to encourage the community to reconnect with downtown while shopping, dining and using the services of the merchants.
PDA Board President Terri Terry said, We are working with all our strength and creativity to bring downtown back as the best place to shop, dine, work, live and play.
The great reviver
MUSIC
Jim Denham looks at the life work of musicologist Alan Lomax, who died last month.
When the great blues guitarist and singer Big Bill Broonzy toured Britain in the 1950s, he was accompanied by the man who had (supposedly) discovered him, Alan Lomax.
Audiences were dismayed to find that the price of hearing Broonzy included being subjected to a tedious, rambling lecture on the history of American blues and folk music, delivered by Lomax. George Melly describes how, at one point Lomax said And when you hear Big Bill. , at which the bluesman, as bored as the audience, muttered If they ever do! .