Pull up your camping chair, pack up the sunscreen and enjoy some rousing brass music as Vermont Symphony Orchestra brings pomp and circumstance to Pinnacle Ski & Sports, 1652 Mountain Road, for a free concert, July 14, 6 p.m.
In keeping with the spirit of the American brass band tradition, the program will include timeless favorites, cinematic moments and new sounds that will give listeners a chance to reflect as well as recharge. Selections range from Dvorak to Sousa to Stephen Foster and Lady Wray.
More at vso.org.
New Music: Lady Wray (aka Nicole Wray) – Games People Play
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Close to home and far afield: Vermont Symphony Orchestra showcases its best across Vermont
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ON the morning of the 28th of April 2016, in Troon, Ian Gordon killed his wife Patricia. The couple had been married for 43 years. Ian was self-employed painter and decorator. He stopped working to look after Patricia in 2015. She suffered from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Her health was seriously deteriorating, and continued to deteriorate into 2016. Experiencing pain, lethargy, and breathlessness, the 63-year-old believed she was suffering from lung cancer. So it proved. But she also suffered from acute anxiety, particularly associated with hospitals and medical treatment. This had an obvious impact on her capacity to engage with her physicians. The diazepam and tramadol were providing only very temporary relief from the chest and back pain caused by the extensively necrotic malignant tumour in her lungs. In the early hours of the morning, Patricia attempted to end her life by taking an overdose of the pain-relief medication she had been prescribed. The evidence sugg
Updated: May 19, 2021, 9:24 pm
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Mark Johnston was killed in Broughty Ferry in 2017
A psychiatrist who requested a hospital bed for a patient told a court he is “surprised” he managed to be discharged days before stabbing a man to death in Broughty Ferry.
David Reid stabbed Mark Johnston at least 120 times, believing he was the Devil.
Before the killing, he had told family members and medical workers about delusions that “demons” were trying to harm him and asked for treatment.
Reid, 47, from Dundee, who suffers from paranoid schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, was admitted to Royal Cornhill Hospital in Aberdeen but doctors ruled he was not ill enough to be detained for urgent treatment and he left.