Music

Sounds familiar: Was this said about Iraq in 2003, or Iran in 2025?

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Analysis   来源:Leadership  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:, 96. The three-time Tony Award-winner was Broadway’s industrious, master melody-maker who composed the music for such classic musical theater hits as “Annie,” “Bye Bye Birdie” and “Applause.” May 15.

, 96. The three-time Tony Award-winner was Broadway’s industrious, master melody-maker who composed the music for such classic musical theater hits as “Annie,” “Bye Bye Birdie” and “Applause.” May 15.

. They say the justification no longer exists, and rights should be restored.Instead, lawyers say the extended state of emergency has become the norm, rather than the exception.

Sounds familiar: Was this said about Iraq in 2003, or Iran in 2025?

“They’ve generalized it,” said Oswaldo Feusier, lawyer and professor at the José Simeón Cañas Central American University, adding that more and more judges are applying the exceptional rules to a broader array of crimes. “To me it’s an abuse of the spirit of the decree.”Just this month, Bukele called — via the social platform X — for the arrest of thehe said had ignored his call to provide free service during the closure of a major highway. The government said it would reimburse them. Despite arrests May 5 through May 7, the 12 people detained weren’t formally charged until May 19.

Sounds familiar: Was this said about Iraq in 2003, or Iran in 2025?

On May 12, dozens of people from an agricultural cooperative protested an eviction outside Bukele’s home. One participant was arrested May 12 and another May 13 for alleged public disorder and aggressive resistance. Their cases weren’t brought before a judge until May 27. The president also used the protest as an example of why the Congress should pass a— which it did days later — because he said they had been “manipulated by globalist NGOs.”

Sounds familiar: Was this said about Iraq in 2003, or Iran in 2025?

The law would require all non-governmental organizations who receive international donations to register as “foreign agents” and the government can then impose a tax of 30%.

Jayme Magaña, a criminal defense lawyer working with an initiative called Wings of Freedom that seeks to draw attention to human rights violations, said she has seen the exceptions under the state of emergency applied to a variety of cases including sexual crimes, drunk driving and robberies. “They’re applying 15 days to the majority,” she said. “This is because the courts are saturated.”The musical is filled with very funny special effects that are decidedly low-tech. At one point, the two leading ladies are replaced by two men duking it out in dresses and wigs. The audience roars at the deception and Gattelli even advised one of the male combatants not to shave his arm hair.

“The audience is in on the joke,” he says. “I love that they go on that ride with us. They’re laughing with us. We’re all laughing together and it feels good.”One scene from the movie needed a lot of planning to make it on stage: The tumble down the elegant mansion stairs by Hilty’s character. Hollywood CGI magic would have to be replicated by Broadway ingenuity.

“The people that know the movie and the fans especially are going to go, ‘How are they going to do it?’ It was keeping me up at night forever because we tried everything,” says Gattelli.The creative team — which also included set designer

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