[Abel-tasman] New Vehicle Super Bowl Price Reduction

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Fri Jan 31 19:37:01 CET 2014


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WASHINGTON  Former Secretary of State Colin Powell says the jury verdict 
that freed the killer of Florida teenager Trayvon Martin was "questionable." 
But he isn't sure it will have staying power in the public 
consciousness.Speaking on CBS's Face the Nation, Powell said cases like 
Martin's "blaze across the midnight sky" and are forgotten.The first black 
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and first black secretary of 
state, Powell says America has come a long way toward racial equality 
50 years after Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech. 
Powell recalled being refused service when trying to buy a hamburger before 
the Civil Rights Act of 1964.Minorities have many more opportunities today, 
but Powell says King would still demand work on education, housing and 
economic opportunities.
er, Joan of Arc in Lillian Hellman's adaptation of Jean Anouilh's 
"The Lark." The play had a six-month run, primarily because of the 
notices for Harris.The actress was something of a critics' darling, getting 
good reviews even when her plays were less-well received. These included 
such work as "Marathon `33," "Ready When You Are, C.B.!" and even 
a musical, "Skyscraper," adapted from an Elmer Rice play, "Dream Girl."Her 
third Tony came for her work in "Forty Carats," a frothy French 
comedy about an older woman and a younger man. It was a 
big hit, running nearly two years.Harris won her last two Tonys for 
playing historical figures -- Mary Todd Lincoln in "The Last of Mrs. 
Lincoln" and poet Emily Dickinson in "The Belle of Amherst" by William 
Luce. The latter, a one-woman show, became something of an annuity for 
Harris, a play she would take around the country at various times 
in her career.The actress liked to tour, even going out on the 
road in such plays as "Driving Miss Daisy" and "Lettice & Lovage" 
after they had been done in New York with other stars.Harris' last 
Broadway appearances were in revivals, playing the domineering mother in 
a Roundabout Theatre Company production of "The Glass Menagerie" (1994) 
and then "The Gin Game" with Charles Durning for the National Actors 
Theatre in 1997.In 2005, she was one of five performers to receive 
Kennedy Center honors.Harris was born on Dec. 2, 1925, in Grosse Pointe, 
Mich., the daughter 

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