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RanandyRonee

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Bnnw Cold weather, bad planning to blame for UK salad crisis, Spain says
 Six days before the Turkish Cypriots were due to mark the 39th anniversary of the unilateral declaration of independence, which paved the way for the establishment of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, they were harshly r stanley mugs eminde vaso stanley d that their state is anything but independent. Worse still they wer stanley tazas e shown that, in practice, not even Turkey recognises the breakaway state.This is not something they are unaware of, but the visit of Turkish Vice President Fouat Oktay on Wednesday added salt to the wound. During the visit, Oktay went to inspect the construction site in the Kermia area of Nicosia, where the Kulliye  an Islamic government complex  will be built. No Turkish Cypriot media 鈥?not even the state broadcaster 鈥?were permitted into the area to cover the visit, while a group of protestors were prevented from approaching the site by police.In comments he made to Turkish state media, which were allowed to cover his visit, Oktay warned that those opposed to the Kulliye, which will include a presidential palace, a parliament building, a mosque and park, would find Turkey against them. Turkish Cypriots staged a protest when the project was announced at the end of September, and it has since come under attack by parties, civil society and media. To add a touch of irony, Oktay described the Kulliye as a  symbol of existence, sovereignty and independence  for the Turkish Cypriots.The truth is that it is a symbol of Turkeys sovereignty over the north, discarding any pretence of TRN Ipmu UMaine football racking up commitments for 2012
 FARMINGTON, Maine鈥?A special showing of  Milltown Pride,  a new feature-length film with local Becka Rebert playing a supporting role, will be shown at 6:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, June 3 and 4, in Lincoln Auditorium in the Learning Center at the University of Maine at Farmington.Admission is free and the public is invited to view  the story of a young man who dreams of playing professional baseball, but in South Carolina in the 1920s, the only path to the pros was through a local textile mill,  according to a release from Reberts parents, the Rev. Brian and Sandi Rebert.Rebert, 23, grew up in Farmington and graduated last year from Bob Jones University in South Carolina with a degree in cinema, Sandi Rebert said. She was home-schooled before going to the college.Her role in the film developed after she spent a couple of summers working in production on the film. Last summer, a professor who had seen her act in a directing class recommended her for the supporting role, a comic-relief character in the movie, she said.Shes in a lot of scenes and plays a shy young woman, which is out of character, her mother said.  Shes not a shy person. She also doesnt look quite like herself, stanley cup  with crimped hair and glasses.Rebert wants to go into filmmaking and this gave her experience on both sides of the camera, her mother said.Her production work included things such  stanley cup as making new overalls look old and worn. At times she would spend a whole day putting 200 people in costume for five stanley cup  minute