Ian Ward photograph

Ian Ward

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Gender Male
Age 52
Date of birth September 30,1972
Zodiac sign Libra
Born Plymouth
United Kingdom
Height 173 (cm)
Test debut (cap 605) Pakistan
BowlingRight-arm medium
Job Cricketer
Awards A. A. Griffith Medal and Prize
Fellow of the Royal Society
Richard Glazebrook Medal and Prize
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID1472107

Law and Literature: Possibilities and Perspectives
An Introduction to Critical Legal Theory
Sex, Crime and Literature in Victorian England
Law and the Brontës
A Critical Introduction to European Law
Justice, Humanity and the New World Order
The English Constitution: Myths and Realities
Law, Text, Terror
A Guide to Eclectus Parrots as Pet and Aviary Birds
The Margins of European Law
Writing the Victorian Constitution
Kantianism, Postmodernism and Critical Legal Thought
Law, Philosophy and National Socialism: Heidegger, Schmitt and Radbruch in Context
The Inkpen Way
The Magic Of The Matrix: Making Arithmetic Practice Fun
A State of Mind? The English Constitution and the Popular Imagination
Athletics for student and coach
Socialism: The Options
The Killer They Called a God
Slaughter and Deception at Batang Kali
The Pacific War: An Enticing New Way of Examining History
English Legal Histories
Snaring the Other Tiger
De La Salle: The Tradition, the Legacy, the Future
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Ian Ward Life story


Ian James Ward is an English cricket commentator and cricketer. He was a left-handed opening batsman and an occasional right-arm medium bowler.

Birmingham's Commonwealth bull to leave Centenary Square

Feb 16,2020 5:31 am

A huge mechanical bull that starred in the Commonwealth Games opening ceremony is to be removed from its central Birmingham location.

Thousands have visited the 10m-high sculpture since it was placed on display in Centenary Square In July .

The bull was given a after to stop it being dismantled.

Birmingham 2022 said advanced talks were being held with a local venue so it could have a permanent home.

Thursday will be the Last Chance to see the 2. 5-tonne creation in its current place, ahead of Birmingham Pride celebrations.

The bull took a Special Effects team of 60 five months to build.

It wowed visitors to Centenary Square during The Games with regular animated displays, which included smoke and flashing red eyes.

While its head, legs and tail can be manoeuvred by a crew of puppeteers and technicians, since The Games ended it has remained on display as a static piece of art.

Birmingham City Council leader Ian Ward confirmed in August an indoor home would be found for it, since a dense foam outer skin makes The Sculpture vulnerable to colder weather.

Creator Mike Kelt, from Artem, has previously said finding a new site for The Giant structure " ".

Birmingham 2022 said Commonwealth Games organisers had " reassured The Public that they are in advanced discussions with a local venue" so it could " have a permanent home and will remain as a free-to-view attraction".

It added plans were being finalised and organisers confirmed they hoped to announce more in The Coming weeks " once a full feasibility study and safety report is completed".

Birmingham 2022's chief creative officer Martin Green said: " Raging Bull was a delight to work with. Dependable, sturdy, and really quite stoic in his task. "

Mark Starr , who Set Up the @Brummiebull Twitter account to campaign for The Sculpture to stay in The City permanently, has previously said decision-makers were remaining tight-lipped about plans, despite his " fishing".

The Bbc is not responsible for the content of external sites.

" My preferred location is perhaps when Curzon Street Station is built, then it could go there to welcome people to Birmingham, " He Said .

" But I've not had any feedback from anyone who is in the know. "



Source of news: bbc.com

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