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福岡大大濠と滋賀学園、再試合へ 「気持ち充実してる」

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■選抜高校野球 延長15回を戦い抜いて引き分けた4校が28日、 再試合に臨む。 第1試合に登場した福岡大大濠と滋賀学園の 選手たちは、 2日前の 激戦の 疲れを感じさせないプレーを見せた。 試合は序盤、 点を取り合…
■選抜高校野球
延長15回を戦い抜いて引き分けた4校が28日、再試合に臨む。第1試合に登場した福岡大大濠と滋賀学園の選手たちは、2日前の激戦の疲れを感じさせないプレーを見せた。
試合は序盤、点を取り合う展開になった。
福岡大大濠の先発マウンドには、26日に一人で196球を投げ抜いたエース三浦銀二君(3年)があがった。前の試合の後、宿舎でストレッチを繰り返し、27日の練習では柔軟体操とキャッチボールで体を慣らした。「しっかり調整できた。ここまできたら負けたくない。全国優勝につながるよう勝ちにつながる投球をしたい」と意気込んだ。
4番の東怜央君(3年)は「1日空いたことで精神的にも肉体的にも楽になった。チーム全体が良い雰囲気だ。打点を稼いで三浦を楽にしてあげたい」。八木啓伸監督も「中軸が打点をあげる得点パターンにもっていきたい」と話した。
滋賀学園の山口達也監督は再試合を前に「選手たちの気持ちは充実している」と話した。田井改周主将(3年)によると、多少の疲れは残るがチームの士気は高いという。「甲子園で多く戦えるのがうれしい」
先発マウンドには、今大会初登板となる光本将吾君(2年)が上がった。捕手の後藤克基君(3年)は「力のある重い思いボールを投げられる投手なので、緊張でフワフワ、ガチガチにならないように声をかけていく。気分的には、前の試合のことを忘れて挑む」と話した。
1回戦で延長14回を投げ抜き、引き分けた2回戦でも八回から登板した棚原孝太君(3年)は、前の試合の後、体力回復に努めたという。「疲労が取れていい状態。登板機会があればコーナーをつくピッチングをしたい」
背番号15の内野手田中嘉津磨君(3年)は「みんな疲れているけど楽しそうな様子です。出番があったらプレッシャーを感じず、練習してきた成果をしっかり出したい」と話した。
第2試合の健大高崎(群馬)と福井工大福井も午前中に甲子園に入り午後1時半開始予定の試合に備えた。(加藤美帆、菅沢百恵)

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名古屋で桜開花宣言 今後7~10日で満開の見込み

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名古屋地方気象台は28日、 名古屋市で桜が開花したと発表した。 平年よりも2日、 昨年よりも9日遅い観測。 気象台によると、 午前10時すぎ、 名古屋市千種区の 気象台にある標準木の ソメイヨシノが5、 6輪咲いてい…
名古屋地方気象台は28日、名古屋市で桜が開花したと発表した。平年よりも2日、昨年よりも9日遅い観測。気象台によると、午前10時すぎ、名古屋市千種区の気象台にある標準木のソメイヨシノが5、6輪咲いているのが確認された。天気が大きく崩れなければ、今後7~10日で満開となる見込み。28日の名古屋市の最高気温は平年並みの16度の予想。

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核兵器禁止条約:日本「実効性ない」演説 交渉不参加表明

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ニューヨークの 国連本部で27日、 核兵器禁止条約の 交渉会議が始まった。 日本政府の 高見沢将林(の ぶしげ)軍縮会議代表部大使は演説で、 交渉には核軍縮での 協力が不可欠な核兵器保有国が加わっておらず、 日本が「建設的かつ誠実に参加することは困難」 と述べ今後の 会議への 不参加を表明。 岸田文雄外相も28日午前、 東京での 記者会見で会議について「我が国の 主張を満たすもの ではないことが明らかになった。 日本の 考えを述べたうえで今後この 交渉に参加しないことにした」 と明言した。
ニューヨークの国連本部で27日、核兵器禁止条約の交渉会議が始まった。日本政府の高見沢将林(のぶしげ)軍縮会議代表部大使は演説で、交渉には核軍縮での協力が不可欠な核兵器保有国が加わっておらず、日本が「建設的かつ誠実に参加することは困難」と述べ今後の会議への不参加を表明。岸田文雄外相も28日午前、東京での記者会見で会議について「我が国の主張を満たすものではないことが明らかになった。日本の考えを述べたうえで今後この交渉に参加しないことにした」と明言した。
高見沢大使は核兵器とミサイル開発を続ける北朝鮮に触れ、禁止条約で脅威は解決できず「現実の安全保障を踏まえずに核軍縮は進められない」と主張した。
また、核保有国抜きの禁止条約は実効性がなく「核兵器国と非核兵器国、さらには非核兵器国間の分裂を広げ、核なき世界という共通目標を遠ざける」と訴えた。日本は核拡散防止条約(NPT)強化や核実験全面禁止条約(CTBT)早期発効に努力するとした。
これに先立ち、広島と長崎の被爆者を代表して日本原水爆被害者団体協議会の藤森俊希事務局次長が演説。「同じ地獄をどこの国の誰にも絶対に再現させてはなりません」と述べ条約制定を訴えた。政府演説については記者団に「このままでは建設的なことはできないので出ないという発言は、唯一の戦争被爆国の政府が言うことではない」と批判した。
国際NGO「核兵器廃絶国際キャンペーン」(ICAN)の川崎哲・国際運営委員は、北朝鮮を理由に核兵器を禁止できないとの主張は「論理が逆。北朝鮮のような国が増えるかもしれないから、核兵器を禁止しないといけない」と述べた。【小田中大、ニューヨーク國枝すみれ、竹内麻子】

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© Source: http://mainichi.jp/articles/20170328/k00/00e/030/172000c
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Шокін судиться за посаду

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Колишній генпрокурор Віктор Шокін намагається через суд поновитися на посаді. Відповідний позов він подав до Вищого адмінсуду, пише “Українська правда”. Позов зареєстрували 13 березня 2017-го, про що існує повідомлення на сайті суду. Справу розглядатиме колегія суддів,…
Колишній генпрокурор Віктор Шокін намагається через суд поновитися на посаді.
Відповідний позов він подав до Вищого адмінсуду, пише “Українська правда” .
Позов зареєстрували 13 березня 2017-го, про що існує повідомлення на сайті суду.
Справу розглядатиме колегія суддів, головуючий суддя – Валентин Мороз.
Розгляд призначили на 10 квітня на 15:30.
“У своїй позовній заяві він просить визнати незаконними та скасувати постанову ВР України про надання згоди на звільнення президентом Віктора Шокіна з посади генпрокурора України”, – інформують у прес-службі суду.
Також Шокін просить визначити незаконним і скасувати указ президента від 3 квітня 2016-го про звільнення з посади генпрокурора і указ президента від 23 червня 2016-го №269/2016, а також про поновлення його на адміністративній посаді.
ЧИТАЙТЕ ТАКОЖ: “Йду до коханки”: Шокін прокоментував інформацію про свій стан здоров’я

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© Source: https://gazeta.ua/articles/politics/_sokin-suditsya-za-posadu/762064
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В Киеве разблокировали центральный офис "Сбербанка"

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В Киеве размуровали центральный офис «Сбербанка» Сообщается, что уже полностью размуровали вход в здание
Фото: 112.ua
Протестующие разблокировали помещение “Сбербанка” в центре Киева,28.03.17
Фото: 112.ua
Протестующие разблокировали помещение “Сбербанка” в центре Киева,28.03.17
В центре Киеве на улице Владимирской разблокировали помещения “Сбербанка”. Об этом в эфире ” 112 Украина ” сообщил корреспондент.
“Вход в здание уже размуровали, здесь прямо на тротуаре лежат бетонные блоки. Часть блоков уже загрузили в грузовик. Часть наклеек, которые были наклеены на стекло и стены здания “Сбербанка”, также убрали”, – сообщил журналист.
Как сообщалось, 13 марта протестующие в Киеве зажгли файеры после того, как установили перед входом в отделение бетонные блоки .
Напомним, 18 марта в Тернополе замуровали бетонными плитами здание российского “Сбербанка” .

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© Source: http://112.ua/kiev/v-kieve-razblokirovali-centralnyy-ofis-sberbanka-380636.html
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КНДР провела испытания двигателей для баллистических ракет – CNN

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За последние недели это уже третье подобное испытание.
Военные Северной Кореи провели испытания двигателей для баллистических ракет. За последние несколько недель это уже третье такое испытание, сообщает CNN , ссылаясь на свои источники в сфере обороны США.
Испытуемый двигатель может предназначаться для межконтинентальной баллистической ракеты, сообщает канал.
Ранее сообщалось, что в Пентагоне заявляли о возможных новых тестированиях баллистических ракет в ближайшие дни. Военное ведомство отметило, что ведет наблюдение за Северной Кореей при помощи спутников и дронов.
Напомним, 12 февраля КНДР заявила об успешном испытании баллистической ракеты в Японском море. В Пхеньяне утверждают, что таким образом была успешно протестирована возможность оснащения снаряда ядерной боеголовкой и способность его уклонения от перехвата.
Запуск ракеты единогласно осудил Совет Безопасности ООН , пригрозив Пхеньяну “серьезными мерами”.

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Источник: Украина получит безвиз в июне

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В Европарламенте 6 апреля состоится голосование по украинскому безвизу.
Безвизовый режим Украины с Европейским союзом может вступить в силу 11 июня текущего года.
Об этом сообщил корреспондент Радио Свобода Рикард Йозвяк в своем Twitter-аккаунте.
“Для Украины, пленарное заседание Европейского парламента для голосования за “безвиз” состоится 6 апреля и ЕС, вероятно, поддержит его 26 апреля. Подпись (состоится, – ред.) +\- 15 мая, вступление в силу +\- 11 июня”, – написал Йозвяк.
Напомним, во вторник, 28 марта, в силу вступил безвизовый режим между Грузией и Европейским союзом.
Как сообщал MIGnews.com.ua ранее, 6 апреля 2017 года в Европейском парламенте должно состояться голосование относительно предоставления Украине безвизового режима. Накануне голосования в ЕП пройдут дебаты по этому вопросу.

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Kathrada: South Africa's anti-apartheid veteran dies aged 87

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Ahmed Kathrada, who spent 26 years in prison for his activism, was a close associate of Nelson Mandela.
Veteran South African anti-apartheid activist Ahmed Kathrada has died aged 87, his foundation says.
It says Mr Kathrada passed away peacefully in a Johannesburg hospital “after a short period of illness, following surgery to the brain”.
Along with Nelson Mandela, Mr Kathrada was among eight African National Congress activists sentenced to life imprisonment in 1964.
They were convicted of trying to topple the white minority government.
Apartheid was a legalised system of discrimination against non-white people introduced in South Africa in 1948.
But laws that discriminated against non-whites existed prior to that.
Mr Kathrada, affectionately known as Kathy, spent more than 26 years in prison, 18 of which were on the notorious Robben Island, where Mr Mandela was also jailed.
He was not only one of Mr Mandela’s closest friends, but also a human rights activist in his own right who had a long history in the struggle against discrimination and apartheid, says the BBC’s Milton Nkosi in Johannesburg.
He joined the Young Communist League at the age of 12 and later became a member of the Transvaal Indian Congress.
He was released from prison in 1989, and after South Africa’s first democratic elections in 1994, President Mandela persuaded Mr Kathrada to join him in government as his political adviser.
Mr Kathrada left parliament in 1999, but remained active in politics, criticising the recent direction of the ANC and calling on President Jacob Zuma to resign.

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© Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-39414785
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Trump executive order will dismantle Obama environmental regulations

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On Tuesday, Trump will sign an executive order which aims to undo Obama’s 2013 Climate Action Plan
Last Updated Mar 28, 2017 3:31 AM EDT
President Trump will sign a sweeping executive order on Tuesday to begin the process of dismantling environmental regulations implemented under the Obama administration to aggressively fight climate change.
The Energy Independence executive order, which Trump will sign at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), attacks the core of President Obama’s 2013 Climate Action Plan. A senior White House official said Monday that the order “directs the EPA to suspend, revise, or rescind the Clean Power Plan,” adding that the EPA would “proceed in a manner that upholds the rule of law” and would continue to abide by the Clean Air Act.
The executive order also mandates that every agency conduct a 180-day review that identifies all regulations and rules that “impede” energy production. Mr. Trump plans to use the reports to craft his administration’s “America First” energy blueprint to serve what the administration calls the “twin goal” of protecting the environment and strengthening the economy by promoting energy production.
According to the senior administration official, Mr. Trump aims to “strengthen the nation’s energy security by reducing unnecessary regulatory obstacles that restrict the responsible use of domestic energy resources. This order will help keep energy and electricity affordable, reliable, and clean in order to boost economic growth and job creation.”
Scott Pruitt , the head of the EPA, echoed the Trump administration’s “pro-growth and pro-environment approach to how we do regulation in this country” on ABC’s “This Week” on Sunday.
But critics argue that Mr. Trump’s anti-climate change initiatives that resist transitioning from coal and gas to clean energy will in fact hurt the economy.
“The best way to protect workers and the environment is to invest in growing the clean energy economy that is already outpacing fossil fuels, and ensuring no one is left behind,” Michael Brune, the executive director of the Sierra Club, wrote in a statement. “At a time when we can declare independence from dirty fuels by embracing clean energy, this action could only deepen our dependence on fuels that pollute our air, water and climate while making our kids sicker.”
Mr. Trump’s executive order also lifts the moratorium on federal coal leasing, rescinds restrictions on hydraulic fracking, and eliminates the National Environmental Policy Act, a set of guidelines for agencies to consider climate change into their decision making process.
While the Trump administration initiates a review of President Obama’s Clean Power Plan, the White House is lifting the moratorium on federal coal leasing, and rolling back the federal regulation of methane emissions from the oil and gas industry.
The senior White House official said that the president and the administration accept the scientific view of climate change but they disagree with the Obama administration over policy prescriptions.
There is no mention of the Paris Agreement on climate change, from which Mr. Trump has previously said he would withdraw. Roughly 200 countries agreed to the climate plan that cuts greenhouse gases, but the senior administration official says that they have not made a final decision on the matter.

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Riots in Paris after police shoot Chinese man dead

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NewsHubThough there were no film acting roles on George Michael’s CV, the late singer could still claim to have worked with Lindsay Anderson , the legendary Free Cinema pioneer and director of the influential and incendiary 1968 film If… (not to mention former film critic of this parish).
Both men’s obituary writers tended to overlook this unlikely collaboration but then that’s scarcely surprising given that it never really saw the light of day – at least not in the form that Anderson intended.
He was at an odd stage of his career in the early 1980s. He had been on both sides of the critical divide, having made a rare acting appearance in 1981 in the widely-adored, Oscar-winning Chariots of Fire before then facing critical opprobrium and public indifference in 1982 for his savage state-of-the-nation satire Britannia Hospital , which used the ailing institution of the title as a metaphor for the country.
He turned down another acting role, as the Emperor in Return of the Jedi , and was having his usual difficulty getting a movie off the ground when he was offered the chance to return to his documentary roots by shooting a film about the first western pop group to play in China. That group was Wham!
Anderson, who was then almost 62-years-old, was reluctant at first, as he so often was. “Have I the energy? The curiosity? The conviction?” he wrote in his diary after being offered the job in March 1985. “How on earth have two (lower) middle class boys from Watford managed to transform themselves into these vibrant figures of pop myth…? It’s a complete mystery.”
Still, he pressed on, and had lunch with George Michael and Andrew Ridgeley. “I have really nothing to say to them: confident, bright, uninteresting, respectable, of the Eighties . .. I get the impression they will be reasonably cooperative. Certainly not inspiring.”
The trip was not, all things considered, a huge success. Anderson suffered some medical setbacks. He had rheumatism so severe that he had to use the fingers on his left hand to prise open the ones on his right. Then he tore a ligament while shooting at the Great Wall of China.
He learned that Michael didn’t like being photographed and so the film became more of a portrait of the Chinese people and the gentle culture clash that occurred with Wham! in their midst.
In 1986, Anderson admitted that he had accepted the commission “in a spirit of curiosity. Curiosity about China and curiosity about the odd confrontation of China and Wham! – and even a certain curiosity, not very great, about the phenomenon of Wham! itself.”
But during shooting it dawned on him that he was “not engaged to direct a film of Wham! in China – I was engaged to occupy the position of director .”
A rough cut, titled If You Were There , was viewed by the band’s managers, Simon Napier-Bell and Jazz Summers, in October 1985. Though it was incomplete, suggestions and criticisms were put to Anderson, who responded by writing personally to Michael:
“[Y]ou know that when people who don’t really understand the creative process – whether it is film or music – start formulating criticisms and making demands on a work in progress, it is only too easy for the whole enterprise to founder. .. Jazz and Simon both seem terrified of you – which may be useful sometimes but at other times can be dangerous. I certainly have enough respect for your creative verve and intelligence not to be scared to show you the work, and of course, to be interested in your feelings about it.”
Michael never replied to the letter (though he did see Wham! in China! , as it was now called, at a screening which Anderson said “went extremely well”). The director heard in November that the film was being taken off him and recut.
The finished film moved Wham! to the forefront and China to the background. In the course of researching a Radio 4 documentary about Anderson in 2008, the journalist John Harris saw Anderson’s cut and called it , “a rich, poetic, panoramic portrait of China’s strangeness to the eyes of outsiders…”
Its defining flaw, according to Michael, was that it hadn’t felt “modern” enough.
Anderson died in 1994. His archive is at the University of Stirling and letters held there reveal his fury at the butchering of his film. He called Michael, “a shivering aspirant plucked out of the street, who turns almost overnight into a tyrant of fabulous wealth, whose every command his minions must dash to execute” and “a young millionaire with an inflated ego. . [whose] vision only extends to the top 10 . .. It’ll be interesting to see if there’s any limit to his reckless autocracy.”
Michael apparently blocked a proposed screening at Stirling of Anderson’s version. Andy Stephens, the singer’s then-manager called it “a dreadful film”. But Anderson told his diary: “I do think that between them the Whammies have destroyed, or suppressed, an enjoyable, informative, entertaining and at times even beautiful film.”
The original cut is available to view privately at Stirling. Whether Michael’s death means that it will now be made more widely available (as with, say, Stanley Kubrick and A Clockwork Orange ) is another matter. For now it will have to carry on being the answer to a pub quiz question as well as a jigsaw piece, out-of-reach if not exactly missing, for completists of singer and filmmaker alike.
Doon was doing nothing, just killing time, while he waited for his mam to finish at meeting. Once she went down the steps into the basement he got out of there. The hour was too long to wait and he did not like seeing the others. There was always one freshly dire specimen hanging around outside, wrung-eyed and jitter-limbed and making a pitiable hames of trying to light up a cigarette. Sometimes he recognised the parent of some kid out of his class. He didn’t want to see the parents and he didn’t want them to see him. The meetings were another world. His mam went down there and an hour later she came back out.
He did laps of the town with his hoodie up. The drawstrings of his hoodie had little laminate tubes at the end that flailed as he walked. It was autumn, blond and ochre and umber leaves matted together and turning to slick mush underfoot. He was wearing dark olive combat boots laced tight, the ends of his combat trousers crimped into the tops of the boots. Passing an apartment block he saw something on the blue wooden slats of a bench seat. It was a wallet. He commended himself for noticing it and kept right on walking. As he walked he clenched his stomach muscles, an isometric exercise to promote definition and also a means of keeping warm.
He browsed a Men’s Fitness magazine in a newsagents, reread three times an article detailing the correct techniques for executing power cleans and deadlifts off the rack, and bought a large raspberry slushie. He’d loved slushies as a kid. Every six months or so, usually in one of the small newsagents still scattered around the town, he’d notice the plastic rotors mesmerically churning the blue- and blood-coloured ice in their transparent bins, and would buy one. Only after tasting it would he remember how nauseating they were. Three strawfuls in and there was already the sickly sensation of the syrup turning in his stomach and a bout of brainfreeze running through his head like static.
He went a few doors down, into the lobby of the Western Range Hotel. Still stubbornly sucking on the slushie, he strolled into the hotel bar. The bar was a spacious rectangle of smoked glass, carved teak and piped muzak, and went back a long way. Four men in suits were stalled by the counter, luggage cases on wheels poised beside them like immaculately behaved pets. A pair of them bid goodbye to the others, and headed towards the lobby. Doon watched the automated doors, the way they seemed to flinch before smoothly and decisively giving way. To escape the chatter of the remaining men he went and stood at the far end of the room. A recessed bank of floor-to-ceiling windows yielded a direct view on to the town’s main street, already streaming with Saturday morning shoppers. He watched the flow of bodies, the pockets of arrest within the flow. Directly across the street was the gated rear entrance to the county district court. The gating was innocuous, black bars without identifying signage, and if you did not know it led into the court, you would not have been able to tell. The gate was ajar, a concrete step leading down into the narrow mouth of an alley. In the alley a tall redheaded woman in a suit jacket was urgently conferring with a rough unit on one crutch. The man’s smashed-and-resmashed-looking face, the colour of baked clay, was tilted towards the sky. It was impossible to tell his age. He was leaning on his crutch and staring into the blazing nullity of the sky as the woman attempted to direct his attention to something in the heavy-looking black ledger she was holding tucked against her diaphragm. A page lifted up, levitated free of the ledger and fluttered down the street. The woman cursed, slammed closed the ledger, and stooped after the page as it curlicued along at shin level. The man turned his face from the sky and stared with bovine dispassion at her scooting, bobbing rump.
“You can’t eat that in here.”
Doon turned. The barman was behind him, a kid not much older than Doon with awry lugs glowing either side of his head, his black barman’s shirt squeezed over a snub-nosed paunch.
“I’m not eating anything.”
“That.” The barman pointed at the slushie. “Can’t eat that in here.”
“Don’t make me correct you again, I’m not eating anything,” Doon said, and took an emphatic suck of the slushie. From the depth of the plastic cup came a clotted suctioning noise that reminded him of being at the dentist: Snnnrgggkkk.
“C’mon man,” the barman said, his fussy little face turning the same colour as his lugs. “Just go finish it outside.”
“You get at all your potential customers like this?”
“You’re not a customer.”
“Could’ve been a case I was about to be.”
Snnnrgggkkk .
“Even if you want something, you’ve to finish that outside first.”
Snnnrgggkkk .
“So no one’s allowed just stand here for five minutes, make their mind up on giving you their custom.”
“Not no one,” the barman said, “but you’re you. You’ve to take that outside.”
“Nah.”
“C’mon.”
“This is profiling, lad,” Doon said.
The two men remaining at the bar were watching this exchange. The older, a tall lean man with grey hair, laughed, then cut the air with his hand, like enough.
“Lad’s got a point,” the grey-haired man said to the barman, indicating Doon with a nod of his head.
“We have a policy,” the barman croaked.
“What’s that?” The man went on, “Harass the kid with the skint head and hoodie? So he’s eating a slushie, so what? I worked in a bar myself when I was a young buck. Just let the shift see itself out if it’s going quiet, lad and don’t give patrons grief that aren’t giving you grief.”
Snnnrgggkkk .
“See, listen to the oul fella,” Doon said and grinned at the man.
The man grinned back.
“Let’s resolve this simply,” the man said, taking out his wallet. “I’ll get him something, so then he counts as a customer, and we can all let him finish his drink in peace. Do you want a Coke or a coffee, lad?”
“Pint of Guinness, fella,” Doon said.
“Ha, now, lad. What age are you? I’ll buy you a coffee but I’m not buying a minor a pint on a Saturday morning.”
Doon took an extended, convulsive suck of the slushie’s remnants as the barman beetled in behind the counter. When it was empty, Doon placed the cup on the bartop.
“You’re alright so then. Coffee’s worse for you than drink,” Doon said. He considered the two men again, and grinned. “You boys are in a savagely dapper condition for this town, even of a Saturday afternoon. Is there a wedding in or something?”
The men smiled at each other. The younger one, who had a V-shaped hairline with a bald patch spreading out from his crown, like Zinedine Zidane, shook his head. “We were in for a convention. Sales conference for the NorthWest Connaught Regional Estate Agents Association.”
“Christ, I lost interest halfway through that sentence,” Doon said.
The grey-haired man grinned again.
“So,” the barman interjected, but talking to the man, not Doon. “Did you want a coffee then, or?”
“You heard me decline the fella, didn’t you?” Doon sneered. Now he turned his back on the men, to focus his ire squarely upon the barman. “Congratulations, son, three souls in your dying-on-it’s-hole bar and you’re successfully chasing a third of them off. Profiling is what you were doing.”
Doon began walking backwards towards the lobby, his face bright with contempt.
“Your mam’ll be well proud. Speaking of which, tell her I said hello,” Doon said, and stuck his raspberry-coated tongue all the way out.
He heard the two men behind him chuckle again and his leading heel struck something. “Watch,” he heard the grey-haired man say as he swung his other heel into place alongside the first. He turned, knocking over the carry cases. “Jesus,” Doon said, stepping across the two men at the exact moment they stepped forward to right their luggage. “Sorry,” he said, feinting to step one way, then another, but somehow ending up still between them and the cases. He faced the grey-haired man and grabbed hold of his forearms, as if balancing or restraining him. The man stepped back and Doon stepped with him, like a dance partner.
“Sorry, lads, sorry,” he said to the man. He was close to the man’s face. The man’s face was indrawn and baffled. Then Doon stepped off him. He turned, picked up and righted the man’s case.
“I’m all of a daze with the harassment,” he said, gripping the case’s handle and yanking it twice to extend it out, before offering the handle to the man. The man looked at it, looked at Doon, and took it. Doon was already walking straight towards the automated doors.
He went through the lobby and out on to the street. He looked left and right, because that’s what people do. He checked the wallet, took the nice big fifty, left the two tens and a fiver. He went back in, said, “Found that outside, doll,” to the best-looking receptionist, dropped the wallet on the counter and went straight back out again.
***
His mother, as usual, was one of the first ones out. She came straight up the steps with her head facing forward and did not look back. She handed him the car keys and they walked towards the car park. They passed the apartment block. The wallet was still there, on the bench, and the instant Doon knew his mother would see it, she did. She stopped. “Look at that wallet some eejit’s after leaving there.”
“Come on,” Doon said.
“Check it to see if it says whose it is,” she said, nudging him.
Doon stayed in place. “Leave it. It’s not our concern.”
His mam looked at Doon and smiled. “‘ Not our concern ,’” she repeated. “Christ lad, where you get your talk from sometimes. You sound like a policeman.”
“A policeman’d be over there rooting through it with his big snout.”
“I don’t mean the sentiment,” his mam said, “I mean the tone.”
“Feck off,” Doon said.
“Now, now, don’t be regressing to sewer-mouthery just cos I’ve hit a nerve.”
“You’ve NOT touched a nerve,” Doon snapped.
She placed her hand on his neck.
“I mean you’ve got this authority to you,” she said. “It’s just your way. My lad. Soul of a policeman.”
Colin Barrett’s debut short story collection, “Young Skins” (Vintage), won the Guardian First Book Award and the Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award

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© Source: http://www.newstatesman.com/culture/film/2017/01/why-was-film-about-george-michael-never-released
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