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Wednesday, 3 May 2017

20 Thoughts While Watching Victoria Justice’s New Show




Lindy the big sister: scold li'l sis for being MIA for three days, then follow up with the promise of good ol’ fast food. Turns out to be the worst drive-thru lane in the world as her little sister gets abducted after going out to pee. Of all the people in the lane who saw what was happening, no one bothered to help or even shout for help, leaving Lindy to clamber over all the cars in vain unblocked games minecraft.



Three years later and Lindy's doing some sort of mind computer thing, trying to help a woman find her missing daughter. Is she wearing invisible Google Glasses? Oh, this is all just in her imagination.

"You owe me." "You love it." Poor sweet geek is under Lindy's spell, of course.

This voiceover by the serial killer would be creepy if it wasn't so laughable.

Not really into Ben, the ex who lied about being a cop and turned hacker Lindy over to the authorities. Getting a tito vibe, or maybe it's because Victoria hasn't aged one bit since her Victorious days unblocked games 500.

Victoria really looks like Nina Dobrev's doppelganger, doesn't she?

A secret club inside a flower shop? So hipster.

Ah, dating apps. Nothing bonds people who hate each other's guts more than the common struggle to find true love.



"What, they (Lindy's friends) have to sanction this?"

"Yeah, they put me on this stupid thing."

"How stupid can it be? I met you."

This Aussie boy is cuuute!

So is this other detective, the tough cop to Ben’s good cop. Future love interest, spotted.

Those abs do not lie.



This show really likes gross close-up images. Emphasis on gross.

Of course Lindy wants to go on a date with the possible cyber stalkers she met the night before.



"He's pretty cute for a mad man," the snarky friend says, ready with the just-saying-what-everyone-else-is-thinking look.

"Don't drink and date stalkers." Because you'll unknowingly switch phones with a guy and lead the cyber stalker to him.



Of course Ben is already shirtless on a rooftop.

And now they're making out on the rooftop. While the serial killer is probably watching them right now. Get a room for your own sake!



Not to take anything away from Ben's abduction and the sick mind game this serial killer is playing, but he really left a MacBook Air for Lindy to watch Ben's final moments? This serial killer is loaded. Or maybe the laptop came with the apartment he broke into.

So many deaths in one episode—this show is not kidding around.
Who could the killer be? Someone searching for perfection, but I bet that's just the tip of the iceberg. It's probably someone close to Lindy, someone you won't see coming, like the other cute cop or her best friend. Or maybe it's a bunch of people like the A team onPretty Little Liars.

Monday, 18 April 2016

Full docket for Canada’s first aboriginal Justice Minister

Her docket could hardly be any busier.

For Canada’s first aboriginal federal Justice Minister, the task ahead is replete with the immediate – marijuana legalization, promised changes to a terrorism bill and a framework for assisted suicide – and the longer-term, including a possible rollback of the Conservative government’s tough criminal laws that helped cause the indigenous population in federal jails to spike.

And if that were not enough, as Attorney-General, Jody Wilson-Raybould, 44, is tasked with advising the Prime Minister on legal issues across all of government. Which gives her influence over the reshaping of Canada’s relationship with its First Nations, one of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s stated priorities, on everything from land claims to education to policing.

And that could mean a shift from the federal government’s traditionally adversarial relationship on land claims and other issues, said John Borrows, the Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Law at the University of Victoria and a former professor of Ms. Wilson-Raybould’s.

“Right now, the litigation files often pit First Nations against the federal government. It’s fair to say that in most ... aboriginal title and treaty cases, the federal government is arrayed against the First Nations and Métis communities. She has options … it doesn’t always have to be on the oppositional side. It’s consistent with the role of the minister of justice to try to facilitate reconciliation and craft litigation opinions that go toward settlement as opposed to ending up in court.”

Josh Paterson, the executive director of the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association and a former First Nations lawyer, called the appointment “remarkable and important. For the statement to be made that the Crown justice representative, the leading law officer the Crown has, is going to be an indigenous person – that matters in and of itself.”

Ms. Wilson-Raybould is no stranger to busy dockets. As a provincial prosecutor at Vancouver’s Main Street courthouse in Vancouver from 2000 to 2003, at a time when local police were still laying charges for marijuana possession, she was involved when judges regularly dismissed criminal charges because of excessive delay.

She has been immersed in aboriginal issues since childhood, as the daughter of outspoken native leader Bill Wilson – who once told Pierre Trudeau that one of his daughters would be prime minister – and granddaughter of the late aboriginal elder Ethel Pearson. “The acorn doesn’t fall far from the tree – she’s part of a tradition of social responsibility,” said Terry La Liberté, a Vancouver criminal lawyer. She has been regional chief of the B.C. Assembly of First Nations since 2009, and before that a member of the B.C. Treaty Commission, overseeing treaty negotiations between aboriginals and the Crown.

Ms. Wilson-Raybould has been an elected councillor of the We Wai Kai Nation and lives in Cape Mudge Village on Quadra Island, according to a Liberal website. Her husband, Tim Raybould, a management consultant who has a PhD from Cambridge University in England, is Westbank First Nation’s chief negotiator for self-government, and senior policy adviser to the First Nations Finance Authority.

Eric Gottardi, a Vancouver defence lawyer, said Crown attorneys and the defence bar are pleased with the appointment. “She worked in the very busiest front-line courthouse that we have in this province.”

He said he expects her to be open to a greater emphasis on rehabilitation and restorative justice, including such measures as restoring the use of house arrest after the Conservatives banned it for more than 30 criminal offences.

Under the Conservatives, dozens of laws setting out mandatory minimum sentences were among those that pushed the aboriginal inmate population to 23.2 per cent in federal jails, although aboriginals make up just four per cent of Canadians. Other laws also fell hard on aboriginals, such as a victim surcharge that the Harper government made mandatory for all convicted criminals, no matter how poor. Aboriginal Canadians who committed mostly minor offences were at the heart of test cases on the law in several provinces.

Ghislain Picard, the Quebec chief of the Assembly of First Nations, applauded the appointment. “The indication Mr. Trudeau has seen fit to nominate one of our people in a very, very high-profile portfolio certainly indicates his willingness to strengthen the relationship with our peoples.”

William Trudell, the head of the Canadian Council of Criminal Defence Lawyers, said he expects an open, consultative approach that will include police, the Crown, judges and defence lawyers, and that will “enhance justice in this country and internationally.”

Mr. Paterson described Ms. Wilson-Raybould as “very smart. She listens. I think she is going to be very thoughtful about a whole range of changes made by the last government that negatively impacted people’s rights.”

Chief justice hammers 'gratuitous criticism'

Deputy Chief Justice Dikgang Moseneke (left) and Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng at the press briefing on Wednesday. (Delwyn Verasamy. M&G)
The South African judiciary will meet with President Jacob Zuma to discuss the recent attacks on it, Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng told a media briefing on Wednesday.

“We will meet with the head of state to address repeated and unfounded criticism [of the judiciary],” Mogoeng announced at the briefing at a hotel at the OR Tambo airport on Wednesday. This followed an extraordinary judicial heads of court meeting

The criticism “has the potential to delegitimise the courts … [the law] should not be undermined” he said.

The comments were made following attacks by senior ANC leaders and its alliance partners on the judiciary.

A general disdain for the judiciary by some ANC members was heightened after the party was criticised for allowing Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir to leave the country. The International Criminal Court (ICC) had indicted Bashir, who was attending an African Union summit in South Africa, over war crimes and crimes against humanity. But government said it was just respecting its African obligations.

In the subsequent uproar and further court action over Bashir’s departure, ANC secretary general Gwede Mantashe accused the judiciary of “overreaching” and “contradicting the interest of the state versus judiciary”.

Minister of Police‚ Nkosinathi Nhleko‚ also said in June that some judges had met with people “to produce certain judgments”.

And the ANC Youth League and the South African Communist Party are allegedly going to organise mass protests against the “biased” judiciary.

Mogoeng told the gathering that “judges like others should be susceptible to criticism but it should be fair and in good faith”.

“It should be specific and clear … gratuitous criticism is unacceptable.”

Asked by members of the media about what the judiciary thinks of Mantashe and Nhleko’s comments, Mogoeng said the judiciary is not targeting a particular comment but just want to make a broad statement.

“Our intention is not to individualise our response to the situation … We will not go blow by blow with any personality.”

Asked what he hoped the meeting with Zuma would achieve, he said “the head of state is best placed to address issues that are raised”.

“We can’t pretend that nothing has been said because something has been said. One of the healthiest approaches to challenges that judges must adopt… [is to] raise those issues with the powers that be … behind closed doors and leave them to address them.”

He also raised concern over the disregard for court orders, but qualified this by saying only a few court orders have not been honoured by government.

“The concern in our statement must be coupled with the reality that only… [a] few court orders have not been honoured by government.

Deep reflection

“Because we are only aware of one eyebrow-raising apparent disregard for a court order … we believe that this meeting and our concerns that have been raised are strong enough to discourage anyone who was thinking of disregarding court orders, to think twice.”

He said he didn’t think this was a moment of crisis for the judiciary but a moment “for deep reflection, brutal self-introspections, institutional introspection”.

“I will not try to anticipate what the president responds. But I am confident that he will reflect on what is happening now and [what is in] our statement… and deal with the engagement with a seriousness with which it deserves.”

While Mogoeng spoke, SACP president Blade Nzimande announced at the party’s congress in Soweto that the media must respect “our views” to criticise the judiciary. He went on to say that criticising those who attack the judiciary was ideological blackmail which needed to be fought.
Other members of the legal fraternity also attended the meeting.

Busani Mabunda, co-chair of the Law Society of South Africa and president of the Black Lawyers Association, told the Mail & Guardian that “it is incumbent upon the profession to stand up and talk to these issues and spare the judiciary from assuming this role”.

Gcina Malindi, advocate at Advocates for Transformation, said the fraternity agreed with Mogoeng “who has indicated that if there are criticisms they have to be specific and they have to be clear”.

“We agree that the judiciary is not beyond criticism but gratuitous criticism and attacks on the judiciary do not strengthen democratic principles ... It undermines democracy and the judiciary.”

Friday, 22 January 2016

How to Look and Behave Like Victoria Justice

Steps


1. Get her style. Vic's style is pretty simple, yet rocking. She likes simple colors and pretty tight dresses that end above her knee. She loves to wear blazers, and she also likes leather. You will see her often with skinny jeans or printed jeans. She also likes boots and clutches. To pull off this chick's style, you can get a fancy dress that goes above your knee, and add some boots and a simple clutch. You can also create an outfit with some skinny jeans and a blazer.



2. Change your hair to look like hers. Victoria's hair is beautiful. It is brunette, and she keeps it at a middle part. She rarely has it sleek straight and usually has it wavy, somewhat layered. She loves to wear bands around her forehead and she often clips sections of her hair/bangs up. To pull off her hair look, you can get some fun yet simple clips and clip up your bangs or sections of your hair. You can straighten it or keep it wavy. You can always have it at a middle part and she usually has it wavy most of the time.


3. Do your makeup like hers. Her makeup is very natural and simple. If you are fine with wearing lots of makeup, here is your perfect Victoria Justice makeup look: foundation, slight bronzer, orange-ish blush, not too bright eyeshadow, brown or black eyeliner, slight mascara, natural - looking lip gloss or lipstick. If you do not want to wear lots of makeup, you should curl your eyelashes, wear light eyeshadow, lip gloss, and maybe some blush, foundation, bronzer, etc. Victoria also looks great in orange lipstick, but if you want to try to wear this look, be careful because it looks good on few people, especially people with her kind of tan skin color. Keep it natural and fun!


4. Find your talents. As we all know, Victoria is extremely talented. She is an actress and songwriter. If you want to go all out to be more like her, you may want to consider trying to get into some of these topics. You can take singing or acting classes... along with both! She is not afraid to sing in front of a crowd and is fabulous at acting. She is also a dancer, and is great at dancing. To get talent like hers, find a natural talent. If you want, you can also work for one. Follow your dreams!


5. Get Vic's attitude. Victoria's attitude is great. She is always smiling, acting, singing, and more! She likes to pose for the camera and often shows her nails, waves, or does peace signs. Be sure to remember that beautiful smile! If she is wearing a hat, she sometimes holds it or holds it up. She likes to blow kisses to the camera or just do her beautiful, modest smile. Be nice to others, and don't bully. Never be shy and have confidence in your true self.


6. Stage, Girlfriend! Victoria is great on stage, especially considering that she is an actress, songwriter, and dancer. She is a very busy girl, and last year only had six days off of her total working hours. If you have stage fright, consider getting rid of it. You can practice on stage, starting out with a small crowd, or just in front of your friends and working your way up to what you are most comfortable with.


7. Take good care of yourself. Victoria's body is very thin and slim. She has a tan, including on her stomach and looks great in a bikini. She keeps her skin very healthy and loves to be out in the sun with her friends. She also enjoys going on boats and spending time with friends and family. Try exercising for at least 30 minutes a day. It is also proven that if you want to get a better body, or just be a healthier you in general, it depends on your diet more than physical fitness activity.

Justice Statement sketches Victoria’s future


Kết quả hình ảnh cho general information about Victoria Justice

The state government has released a 10-year plan to make Victoria’s justice system more efficient, cohesive and sensitive to the needs of victims, minorities and the disadvantaged.

The Attorney-General’s Justice Statement, which took two years to complete, lists 25 initiatives to be implemented within a decade to modernise the justice system.

Releasing the statement on 27 May, Attorney- General Rob Hulls said the blueprint set the government’s vision for justice for the next five to 10 years.

“It is the product of the most comprehensive analysis ever undertaken of our legal system by the Department of Justice,” he said.

The Law Institute and other legal groups welcomed the general direction of the statement, but expressed some disappointment at the lack of detail.

Among the major initiatives announced in the Justice Statement were:
a review of jurisdictional thresholds between the Supreme, County and Magistrates’ Courts;
a review of the Crimes Act 1958, the Evidence Act 1958 and the Bail Act 1997;
an overhaul of criminal and civil rules of procedure;
the establishment of a process of discussion with the community on human rights, including examining a charter of human rights and responsibilities; and
increasing the age limit of the Children’s Court from 17 to 18.

One of the major areas to be reformed as outlined by the Justice Statement is the relationship between the Supreme, County, Magistrates’ and PERIN Courts.

The statement says that the state government will examine the jurisdictional relationships between the Supreme and County Courts, the County and Magistrates’ Courts, the Magistrates’ and PERIN Courts and the breadth of County Court appeal rights.

With regard to the relationship between the Supreme and County Courts, the Justice Statement says that there are two reasons for considering expansion of the Supreme Court’s role.

“First, there may be complex trials being heard in the County Court that should be more appropriately heard in the state’s superior court.

“Second, and subject to the availability of adequate resources, the capacity of the County Court to deal with its workload would be enhanced by trying such complex and significant trials in the Supreme Court.

“The government will work with the courts to identify opportunities for improved coordination between the Supreme and County Courts to allow their workloads to be shared where appropriate.”

The government will examine offences currently triable only in the County Court with a view to identifying whether they can also be heard in the Magistrates’ Court.

It will also raise the Magistrates’ Court’s jurisdictional limit for the value of property destroyed, damaged or stolen to bring it into line with the imminent rise of its civil jurisdictional limit from $40,000 to $100,000.

The government has also confirmed it will carry out a long-time promise to raise the jurisdictional age of the Children’s Court from 17 to 18 years. This move will take 17-year-olds out of the adult justice and jail system.

This reform has drawn applause from the Law Institute, which has long lobbied for the jurisdiction change.

Institute CEO John Cain said the announcement was “a significant change in policy” that would be well received by the profession.

With regard to the management of courts, the Justice Statement proposes to build better communications between the state jurisdictions to help improve the use of resources.

The government will improve coordination between the courts and the agencies that provide and receive the business of the courts, especially in the criminal jurisdiction. These bodies include the Office of Public Prosecutions, Victoria Police and Victoria Legal Aid.

The Justice Statement raises ways to improve the current capacity of courts in the areas of information technology, research and management information, staff, facilities and budget.

In terms of information technology, the Justice Statement says most of the current system is ageing and has little flexibility to support the changes envisaged by the Justice Statement and the yet-to-be-released Court Strategic Directions.

A planned integrated courts management system will provide an electronic registry with a common entry point for all courts, better online court information and urgent development of electronic case document management.

The government will develop a strategic facilities plan as a blueprint for the design and construction of future court facilities.

“It will address emerging pressures, such as the ageing and cramped accommodation used by the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (VCAT), and the increasing diversity of services provided from court buildings,” the Justice Statement says.

However, the Justice Statement does not specifically mention a new building for the Supreme Court, for which the Law Institute has recently lobbied.

Speaking after the release of the statement, Supreme Court Chief Justice Marilyn Warren said she was unaware at this stage of the government’s plans for a new building.

One of the more detailed sections of the Justice Statement deals with a review and rewrite of three major pieces of legislation: the Crimes Act 1958, the Evidence Act 1958 and the Bail Act1977.

The statement describes the Crimes Act as an “increasingly difficult and inaccessible piece of legislation”.

“The Act is no longer logical or coherent and is really an ad-hoc compilation of almost self-contained Acts.

“This is not just a housekeeping issue. Slight differences between similar provisions in the Act result in wasteful and time-consuming technical arguments over how to interpret and apply the provisions.”

The review of the Act will modernise the language and elements of the most important offences and consolidate and clarify the existing law rather than redefine or codify principles.

Similar reviews will be conducted for the Evidence Act and Bail Act.

The government will also review the state’s criminal and civil procedures.

Among the criminal procedural reforms being mooted are:
increasing the capacity for judicial management of cases in the Supreme and County Courts;
investigating the viability of a sentence indication scheme to encourage defendants wanting to plead guilty;
another review of the committals process to ascertain the success of the 1999 review and where further reforms can be made; and
expanding the deferred sentencing option to allow greater scope for restorative justice initiatives.

In the civil area, the Justice Statement calls for greater consistency in civil litigation procedures between courts and reforms to the processes for beginning litigation, including the possibility of common commencement forms between jurisdictions.

Other potential areas of civil procedure reform include compelling plaintiffs to be more specific about which causes of action they intended to rely on in their pleadings and a restriction of discovery to documents directly relevant to the issues.

The statement also makes a push for increased use of alternative dispute resolution (ADR) through its Gateways to Justice project.

The project will identify the spectrum of ADR services, develop an approach to dealing with different types of disputes and provide information on the best services to deal with those disputes.

It will provide ways to allow a matter to move easily between ADR services.

The government will enact legislation that will give magistrates the same power as Supreme and County Court judges to order mediation between litigants.

The Justice Statement confirms the government’s new framework for the regulation of the legal profession, which was released last year.

The new framework will include a Legal Services Board, which will be the peak body in the regulatory system.

A Legal Services Commissioner will be the single entry point for complaints and will have the power to investigate and prosecute lawyers. The Commissioner will have the power to delegate that power to the Institute or the Victorian Bar.

It is anticipated that VCAT will hear all prosecutions against lawyers and civil disputes between lawyers and their clients in a Legal Practice List.

While the Justice Statement deals mainly with court and legislative processes and procedures, it also examines ways to protect and enhance human rights and to address disadvantage through the justice system.

One of the suggested ways to protect human rights is the introduction of a charter of human rights and responsibilities, known in some countries as a Bill of Rights.

The statement calls for a public discussion on the best form of enshrining human rights and responsibilities.

It says that a US-style Bill of Rights was the least appropriate form for Victoria’s Parliamentary democracy as opposed to the Statutory Charter of Rights favoured by the UK and New Zealand.

In terms of reducing discrimination, the government will look at new ways to improve compliance with the Equal Opportunity Act 1995 through such means as industry-based codes of practice, accreditation and model-employer schemes.

It will encourage employers to audit and monitor their workforces to identify barriers to employment and will also vet all legislation to ensure unintended discrimination does not happen.

The government will look to expand the use of current programs and specific problem-solving courts, such as Koori Courts and Drug Courts.

It will also look to develop a Victims’ Charter that will state the rights of victims of crime, including their right to protection, information, compensation and support during the court process.

Writing in the introduction of the Justice Statement, Mr Hulls said the document was “not a culmination but an inception”.

Yet despite this assurance, the legal profession has expressed disappointment at the lack of detail in the 71-page document.

Mr Cain said the blueprint should have contained more detail.

“There are many broad-brush statements with lots more work to be done.

“The opportunity for the Institute and the legal profession in that is to ensure we are in on the ground floor in working with the government as they put the meat on the bones of the Justice Statement.”

Victorian Bar Council chair Robin Brett QC said the statement was “a good start” but had a long way to go before it became a series of concrete changes.

“I am not surprised because I think it was only ever intended to be a general overall statement of objectives,” Mr Brett said.

“But yes, we certainly do see that pretty much every single part of it needs to be refined and developed and put into a series of concrete proposals.”

Mr Brett applauded many of the government’s initiatives, including the lifting of the Magistrates’ Court’s civil jurisdiction limit to $100,000, the review of the three major pieces of legislation and the emphasis placed on the importance of the rule of law.

However, Mr Brett said he was disappointed by the lack of decision in relation to the division of business between Supreme and County Courts.

“That is obviously a major matter that will need to be addressed.”

Shadow State Attorney-General Andrew McIntosh labelled the document “all rhetoric and no substance”, but welcomed initiatives to expand the Koori Court and diversion programs.

For a copy of the Justice Statement, go to http://www.justice.vic.gov.au.
The Justice Statement’s 25 initiatives




The Justice Statement contains 25 initiatives that state Attorney-General Rob Hulls has vowed to undertake during the next decade.

Following are the initiatives listed in the Justice Statement.

1. Review and replace the Crimes Act 1958, Evidence Act 1958 and Bail Act 1997 by 2007.

2. Review criminal jurisdictional thresholds between Magistrates’, County and Supreme Courts.

3. Evaluate recent initiatives to streamline criminal procedure, focusing on opportunities for committal procedure reform and procedure to encourage early guilty pleas.

4. Continue to implement recommendations from the Sentencing Review 2002 and investigate the introduction of express statutory discounts for guilty pleas.

5. Review the infringement process to ensure its continuing fairness, while providing an effective procedure for recovering unpaid fines.

6. Develop agreed models for managing court resources.

7. Improve accessibility, especially for those in regional Victoria, from multicultural and indigenous backgrounds or with a disability.

8. Develop new systems to improve service, efficiency and coordination between jurisdictions. A new technology platform will expand the opportunities for online service, improved case management, in-court services and information.

9. Modernise the skills and qualifications for court staff.

10. Develop a strategic facilities plan for the construction of future courthouses.

11. Review the Coroner’s Act 1985 to improve the Coroner’s Court’s capacity to contribute to accident prevention and safety strategies.

12. Implement the reforms to the legal profession’s regulatory structure announced in 2003 to provide a simpler and more efficient and accountable regulatory structure.

13. Pass a new Legal Profession Act to implement the recommendations of the National Legal Profession Project.

14. Review the current requirements for admission to practice and post-admission training schemes, such as mandatory continuing legal education.

15. Establish a Gateways to Justice project that provides an integrated approach to dispute resolution policy and services, and delivers a range of court-based and non-court based dispute resolution processes.

16. Raise the Magistrates’ Court civil jurisdictionto $100,000 and examine the current thresholds between the Supreme and County Courts, and between the Magistrates’ Court and VCAT in relation to small civil claims.

17. Work with the courts to overhaul the civil rules of procedure to reduce court delays, streamline litigation processes and improve consistency between jurisdictions.

18. Establish a process of discussion and consultation with the Victorian community on how human rights and obligations can best be promoted and protected in Victoria. This includes the examination of options such as a charter of human rights and responsibilities, new approaches to citizenship and to modernising anti-discrimination law, reducing systematic discrimination and strategies to promote additional change.

19. Supporting the needs of victims of crime and assisting their recovery from these offences, particularly women and children who are victims of family violence and sexual assault. Examine the need for a Victims’ Charter.

20. A report from the Victorian Law Reform Commission on the law of sexual assault will be released shortly and will provide a platform for significantly improving the experience of women and child victims in the court system.

21. Implement the commitment to increase the age limit of the Children’s Court from 17 years to 18 years.

22. Develop and implement a framework for problem-solving approaches in the Magistrates’ Court to consistently address the underlying causes of offending behaviour by people from groups who are over-represented in the criminal justice system. The Koori Court program will be extended to Mildura and Gippsland and a Koori Children’s Court will be established.

23. Adopt a multi-disciplinary approach to address the offending behaviours of people who may be mentally ill, have an intellectual disability, are dependent on drugs or who are homeless, and are caught up in a cycle of offending and punishment.

24. Develop a model for the provision of legal information, advice and assistance in civil matters, as part of the Gateways to Justice project, to make sure these services are more accessible to the community, particularly to disadvantaged groups.

25. Develop new online information resources and explore new ways to provide for civil representation.

Victoria Justice: Nickelodeon star’s Fraze concert cancelled



Jordan Strauss
Victoria Justice arrives at the 26th annual Nickelodeon’s Kids’ Choice Awards on Saturday, March 23, 2013, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP

Contributing Writer

Nickelodeon star Victoria Justice has quietly cancelled several upcoming concerts due to “scheduling conflicts,” including a July 9 performance at Fraze Pavilion in Kettering. The actress-turned-singer has remained relatively quiet about the topic, other than issuing a tweet on March 21 saying she has a “HUGE tour announcement coming on April 1st.” While most of the dates on her summer tour remain on the schedule, Justice also cancelled shows in Las Vegas on June 21, San Diego, Calif. on June 28 and Boca Raton, Fla. on Aug. 17.

If you purchased tickets for the July 9 concert at Fraze Pavilion, don’t fret. Etix automatically refunds credit card orders, including fees, on cancelled events directly to the purchaser’s credit card. All cash refunds must be handled at Fraze Fanfare inside the Town & Country Shopping Center in Kettering.

According to the Fraze’s web site, “There will be a very special announcement on April 1st with new details about a show in your area. At that time you will be given the first opportunity to purchase tickets for the new date and venue.”

Although the third and final season of Justice’s cancelled hit series “Victorious” just ended its run on Nickelodeon, the show remains popular with fans. On Saturday, March 23, “Victorious” won its second consecutive Kids Choice Award for favorite TV show.

Victoria Justice’s Crazy-Flattering Swimsuit Would Look Incredible on Anyone


Photo: James White

Victoria Justice looks absolutely flawless on our November cover, it’s true. But we are also convinced that every body would look amazing in the gorgeous one-piece suit she’s wearing.

Why?

It features criss-crossed straps across the chest that highlight the décolletage, and a flattering midriff-baring cutout that reveals some skin while still covering most of the tummy. Adjustable straps and a back clasp allow you to tighten or loosen as needed for a fully custom fit. And unlike many swimsuits out there, this one provides full butt coverage without looking the least bit dowdy.

The denim shirt also makes for an adorable cover-up, if we do say so ourselves. But the cute doesn’t stop there. Here’s a sneak peak at the rest of our shoot with Victoria, plus all the info you need to shop each look.

Victoria’s wearing on the cover: L Space Madi ($165, nordstrom.com), The Current Elliot denim shirt ($198,neimanmarcus.com) and Stanmore Verses ring ($140, stanmorenyc.com)


Photo: James White

Victoria’s wearing: Ashish lace slip dress (freepeople.com for similar styles). Augden sweater (augden.com)


Photo: James White