l their baby to the world from the balcony of Buckingham
Palace for the first
time?Unusually
a-line
prom dresses , no bets are being taken from British punters on how big the
crowd might be.But it is a certainty that the turnout will be enormous.will be a
second coming of age for the 31-year-old prince.The Duke of Cambridge’s first
coming of age was that brutal day in 1997 when as a 15-year-old he joined his
brother, Harry, his father, Charles, his grandfather, Philip and his maternal
uncle, Charles, the 9th Earl Spencer, in the long, grim walk from the Kensington
Palace to Westminster Abbey to attend his mother’s state funeral.Like hundreds
of thousands of others, I had camped out overnight to catch a glimpse of Diana’s
horse-drawn cortege as it passed through Whitehall.Despite all the crowds there
wishing him all the best that sunny September morning, and a television audience
that in Britain alone was said to number 38 million people, William was not only
bereft, he looked bewildered and unhappy with the very public life into which he
had been born.RelatedKate Middleton baby has 9-1 odds to be named Victoria,
200-1 odds to be named BarackIs Kate baby watch centred on the wrong
hospital?Rumours of royal ruse grow as media waitThe best royal baby
merchandise!Steve Murray tells you what you wish you were able to buyPlace your
bets: U.bookies offer ‘royal baby specials’ as shops stock up on memorabiliaThat
is why it is such a pleasure to see him today.By all accounts he is grounded,
calm and happy with his lot as he prepares to open a new chapter with a young
woman whom he apparently dotes on and who seems better suited to manage the
turbulent life in a fish bowl than his mercurial late mother was.I have spent
some time recently in Egypt, where the size of the protests for and against the
governments of the moment have been greatly exaggerated by the media.There have
been absurd estimates of 30 million men and women protesting simultaneously
across that country.Even the crowds in Cairo’s Tahrir Square have been grossly
exaggerated.Where I have estimated no more than
20
homecoming
dresses 2016 ,000 demonstrators, I hear on CNN or the BBC that 200,000
people were present.When half a million Cairenes have shown up, the world has
been told that several million people are there.The biggest crowd that I have
ever been part of was Indira Gandhi’s funeral in November 1984.Perhaps three or
four million people, many in dazzling ethnic dress, crowded a dusty, rolling
landscape that was entirely blanketed by humanity for as far as the eye could
see.It has been predicted that that many South Africans will turn out soon in
Pretoria to honour and celebrate Nelson Mandela when his long life finally
ends.But these funerals were exceptional, one-off events.Whether it be for a
funeral, a coronation, a wedding or a jubilee, nobody has been able to regularly
pull a huge crowd the way the House of Windsor can.Nor has anybody felt a need
to inflate their numbers.I first heard of this phenomenon long before I
witnessed it.My mother told compelling stories of VE-Day when as a Wren serving
as a codebreaker in the Royal Canadian Naval Service in London she and hundreds
of thousands of others descended on the Mall in front of Buckingham Palace to
celebrate the allied victory over Hitler with King George VI, his wife, Queen
Elizabeth, and Princess Elizabeth and Princess Margaret.I was reminded of the
enduring bond between the royal family and their subjects, and the pomp and
pageantry that goes with it, when Charles married at St.Paul’s Cathedral and
then buried Diana at the abbey, when Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother was feted
again and again on her 100th birthday and during last spring’s Diamond Jubilee
celebrations when heavy rain did not dampen the ardour of millions of Britons
who lined the Thames to watch Queen Elizabeth II’s slow procession down the
Thames by royal barge.It is into that grand tradition that Prince William and
Catherine
homecoming
dresses for women , the Duchess of Cambridge’s baby is to be born.for the
Executive Summary email briefing to get the news delivered straight to your
inbox first thing in the morning.Markets: By the numbersGlobal markets Tuesday
closeBritain s FTSE 1006,513.Japan s Nikkei14,472.China s Shanghai1,965.Hong
Kong s Hang Seng20,683.The International Monetary Fund is upgrading Canada’s
growth expectations for this year to 1.but warns overall global conditions
remain uneven, weak and perilous.The two-tenths of a percentage point upward
revision for Canada follows a first quarter that topped expectations by coming
in a relatively strong 2.But the IMF believes it will all come out in the
wash.It predicts Canada’s growth rate will rise to only 2.next year, two-tenths
less than its previous forecast issued in April.The latest report from the
Washington-based organization gives little encouragement to those who have long
been calling for the recovery from the crippling 2008-09 great recession to take
root.Canadian PressBlackBerry CEO Heins urges patience at AGMBlackBerry
Ltd.Chief Executive Officer Thorsten Heins asked investors for patience at the
company’s annual meeting Tuesday, following a surprise quarterly loss last month
that raised concerns about its turnaround.The company only introduced its new
line of BlackBerry 10 devices about five months ago, and early sales aren’t an
indication of its long-term prospects, he said at the meeting, held in
BlackBerry’s hometown of Waterloo, Ontario.The new flagship Z10 phone missed
estimates in its first full quarter on sale, contributing to a 28 percent stock
plunge on June 28.This isn’t just the launch of a new product but a whole new
platform.While many will judge us on the basis of one quarter of a single
product, we are not a devices-only product.Financial PostCanadian housing market
defies skepticsCanadian housing starts were stronger than expected in June and
May figures were revised higher, according to data released on Tuesday, the
latest report to show the property market rebounding from last year’.