• This is Slide 1 Title

    This is slide 1 description. Go to Edit HTML and replace these sentences with your own words. This is a Blogger template by Lasantha - PremiumBloggerTemplates.com...

  • This is Slide 2 Title

    This is slide 2 description. Go to Edit HTML and replace these sentences with your own words. This is a Blogger template by Lasantha - PremiumBloggerTemplates.com...

  • This is Slide 3 Title

    This is slide 3 description. Go to Edit HTML and replace these sentences with your own words. This is a Blogger template by Lasantha - PremiumBloggerTemplates.com...

Monday, 7 November 2011

Casares actually inherited its name from Julius Caesar, who is said to have ridden himself of a nasty skin complaint thanks to his visit to the Hedionda baths

For here, in this sleepy, undeveloped valley is the still-standing Roman bathhouse, where it is said Caesar himself once bathed around 60 BC.

Having survived for over 2000 years, it is a privileged place to spend an hour and the perfect reminder of the rich heritage that has been left on the Andalucian coastline by a succession of marauding cultures.

Casares actually inherited its name from Julius Caesar, who is said to have ridden himself of a nasty skin complaint thanks to his visit to the Hedionda baths, which literally translate as ‘foul-smelling woman’.

But these days there is nothing foul about the classic ‘white town’, which was first shaped by the Romans and later the Moors, who inhabited the region for over 700 years.

Perched on a rocky outcrop and pouring down two sides of a ridge, this most spectacular of Spanish towns looks impressive from every side.

A photographer’s dream, few towns can compare in terms of subject matter.

Backed by the soaring peaks of the Sierra Crestellina, and views towards the Med and Africa, Casares is also blessed with fabulous walks and wildlife, including a colony of vultures and other rare birds, including eagles.

An enterprising company has recently produced an excellent map of the nearby walks, one of which ascends straight out of the village on a steep path into the verdent hills.

Up here the views stretch all the way to Gibraltar and Africa and you will find yourself completely on your own. Well apart from the odd sheep or goat.

In fact, the town is fast becoming known for its excellent goats cheese and yoghurts. Award-winning Quesos Crestellina produces a fantastic range of organic cheeses from its herd of 400 goats that spend the day up on the peaks.

A family-run affair which dates back over a century, owners Ana and Juan run a tight ship aided by their son Juan, who does all the marketing.

“We sell the cheese all over Spain and yoghurts to the local school, as well as the five star Finca Cortesin hotel,” explains Ana, whose shop also stocks some of the region’s best quality local produce.

Head up into the village for a general wander, in particular admiring the labyrinthine Arabic quarter, with its narrow streets and low rise houses. The most impressive part is the Alcazar (or fortress) at the top of the town, first built by the Romans and later strengthened by the Moors.

From here you have spectacular views and an attractive 16th century church that has been recently renovated.

On your way down take a look out for the street Calle Carrera, where one of Andalucia’s heroes Blas Infante was born. Infante, who was shot during the Civil War, was the man who planned, forged and declared Andalucian independence (in nearby Ronda, for history buffs), before being killed at the age of 41.

Nearby Manilva also has its fair share of history. This is clear from the huge expanse of ruins – much of them Roman – that lie, largely ignored, next to the fortress at Manilva port, known as Duquesa.

It is an interesting area, including a bath house, villas and a necropolis, most of which was discovered in the late 1980s, and which one hopes will be properly excavated in the near future.

The fort itself is well worth a poke around. Built in the 1760s to protect the town against continual incursions by pirates, it is incredibly solid and earnt its builder Francisco Paulino a title and the honour of commanding a cavalry company.

It is here where the town hall of Manilva has its archaeological team, which has recently been busy investigating an exciting Roman discovery in the town.

The substantial remains of a kiln dating back to 2AD are in a good condition and were found alongside a series of fragments of pottery.

It is thought the unique design may be the only existing example in Spain and could serve as further evidence of the town’s key role in exporting ‘garum’, one of the most popular products during Roman times.

Then known as Saltum, Manilva became famous for the delicacy, a pungent paste made from fish guts.

Exported to the Eternal City of Rome via boat, it needed to be stored in well-made pots, called amphoras. And it now seems likely that the recently discovered kiln may be where these were made on an almost industrial scale.

While the centre of Manilva is not of great interest, one of the things you cannot fail to miss is the large amount of vineyards clinging to the steep slopes that drop away from the town.

Mostly Moscatel, the vines are largely for growing grapes for raisins, although in recent years there has been an attempt to return to winemaking, with some astonishingly good dessert wine.

“We have seen a lot more people interested in buying the sweet wines over the last few years,” explains local shopkeeper Maria Esteban, who sells the wine, plus a lot more local produce from her unmissable shop Frutas Pascal y Hijos on a bend on the way into town.

Sunday, 6 November 2011

study of pathological altruism

Jenny needed to go to A&E. Now. Martha grabbed her keys and glanced longingly towards the paprika-scented stew. Jenny, her new neighbour from two doors down, had called just as Martha and her husband Jim had begun eating dinner.

Martha chided herself: what was she doing thinking of her own needs in this sort of situation? She remembered Jenny's moans on the phone. With a whisk of her coat and a bye-bye to her husband, Martha slipped out into the chill.

Seven hours later, utterly exhausted, Martha returned from A&E. Jim smiled ruefully as he welcomed her. "Always the do-gooder," he said, kissing her on her forehead. "You've such a good heart. Sometimes too good." Martha felt better at the kind words. Still, she would go about exhausted all day tomorrow. But she loved the children she cared for – that's why she'd chosen nursing as her profession. The thought slipped in unbidden: "All this drama, just because Jenny had a migraine?" Stop that, Martha told herself. Migraines, she knew, could be dangerous. And the medications had reduced Jenny's pain.

A few days later, Jenny called from work. Her older son wasn't answering the phone. He must have slept through his alarm. More than that, he'd just taken a new job; it was important he be there on time. "Martha, could you please check on him? The key is under the doormat..."

Martha was always happy to help. But this? It felt odd. Maybe Jim had a point – maybe she was too kind. But still, Martha hated to disappoint. She'd always been that way; even as a child, she had been a mainstay in caring for her mother, whose depression had ultimately led to alcoholism.

Martha found Jenny's son snoring on his bed. "What are you doing sleeping in?" Martha demanded, her voice shaking with anger. Martha was surprised – she rarely got mad at anyone. Except herself.

Jenny called again the next day. She wasn't feeling well – another migraine coming on. Could Martha pick up her toddler from the nursery and handle him for a few hours? "I know I've been a burden, but really, I so need your help right now. I don't have anyone else."

Martha was beginning to get the sense that, at home, Jenny's little boy didn't get the attention he deserved. He'd begun clinging to Martha every time he saw her. It suddenly struck her that Jenny had never said thank you for any of her help. Martha couldn't help but reprove herself for the thought – a thank-you shouldn't be necessary for helping others. "Yes, I'll be right there," she replied.

Martha's tale shares elements with similar stories that unfold every day across the world. She is an altruist whose generosity of spirit creates more problems than it solves. She finds it difficult to say no to others, even when they impose sorely on her good nature.

Martha's deep-seated desire to help others has grown from a variety of sources. Her early interactions with her mother and other caregivers helped prime her neural system to be able to bond with other people. In Martha, it may have over-primed her system – studies have revealed that sensitive children can be so overly concerned about others, taking little gratification in their own successes, that they mature with a tendency towards guilt, depression – even anorexia. When a child is placed in a position where they must care for a parent while growing up, it can strengthen the predisposition. A seemingly perfect, empathetic, caring child can actually be heading for problems.

People such as Jenny, on the other hand, who thoughtlessly take advantage of others' good nature, may show characteristics of "attachment disorders". Such individuals may not have had adequate nurturing as they matured, so it is difficult for them to bond with others. Or they may not have been able to accept nurturing even if it was present, due to their own personality quirks.

Personality traits and underlying dispositions are also, of course, shaped by subtle genetic differences, often rooted in the evolutionarily ancient affiliative oxytocin and vasopressin systems. These genetic differences can predispose us towards more or less sensitivity to the feelings of others – towards becoming the Marthas or Jennys of the world.

Females, in particular, often receive an early wash of empathy-predisposing hormones while still in the womb. Thus, many girls show a predisposition for empathising – intuiting and being concerned about the thinking of others. As these girls mature, the early influences can be reinforced by societal expectations. (When Martha's husband Jim graces her with a kiss, it is emblematic of how women are more commonly rewarded for their helpful actions.)

Researchers are still homing in on the motivations for altruism – helping others at cost to ourselves – but it seems to arise partly due to our internal reward system. We get pleasurable sensations from helping because it activates, among other regions, our nucleus accumbens – the same part of the brain activated by gambling or drugs. Helpfulness, particularly self-righteous helpfulness, may be a type of addictive behaviour.

Professor Simon Baron-Cohen, an autism expert at Cambridge University, has posited two primary ways of interacting with and perceiving the world. The first is systemising: looking rationally at the world and how systems within that world operate. The classic systemiser is a coolly rational engineer, such as Martha's husband. Jim may have trouble intuiting when his wife is upset, but he can tell what's wrong with an engine just by listening. Baron-Cohen provides good evidence that Asperger's and autism may be extreme forms of systemising. Strong systemising skills are more often seen in men, although women can also have strengths in this area. The other way of interacting with the world is through empathising – viewing the world from an emotional basis in relation to its impact on others. Empathisers, with their strong concerns for how others feel, tend towards the caring professions. Women often have far stronger empathising skills than men.

But while there has been substantial research on autism and Asperger's – that is, extreme systemising – there has been almost no scientific research on the extreme form of empathising, such as that shown by Martha. Yet, as we've begun to unravel the cultural and biological underpinnings of altruistic behaviour, we're beginning to understand that some people can have a heavier dose of the genetics related to caring for others. This, combined with environmental influences (as with Martha's depressed mother) and cultural influences (compliments from others in relation to caring behaviour), can lead to an overemphasis on helpful behaviour without taking into account the very real problems that can result. This may be related to the amorphous condition of co-dependency – a desire to help others so overpowering that it loses touch with reason, ultimately leading to irrational, unnecessary harm.

Martha was lucky to find a supportive husband. Some hyper-empathising women fall in with an abusive husband, while some highly empathetic men end up with a harridan of a wife. Such individuals can find it virtually impossible to extricate themselves from the situation – their very compassion makes them easier to manipulate and control. (It's your own fault that you made me beat you!) In fact, there is evidence that more altruistic people are victimised more often.

So why have researchers avoided the study of problems of "niceness" for so long? It may simply be that it's hard to admit that a helpful personality might actually be harmful. We all idealise altruism. Without it, human sociality would function like bearings with no oil – soon, everything would seize up. Why study problems related to such a helpful quality? Don't we run the risk of discouraging it? These are important concerns. But we must also look at the very real personal cost of neglecting study of this area.

Physicians who administer painful procedures learn to turn off their empathy when they need to. They have to, or they'd burn out from feeling others' pain. A small altruistic act – empathy for one in pain – is suppressed in favour of the greater altruistic act of therapy. Why don't we teach nurses such as Martha about these types of strategies to assist them in their jobs, as well as their personal lives?

In any case, helpful hyper-empathisers form only one slip-road on to the well-intentioned highway to hell. Another route includes individuals who are self-righteously certain their approach to helping others is correct, refusing to take into account any view that diverges from their own. And yet another involves well-meaning people who simply don't have access to the facts necessary to make a truly informed decision. Who would vote for a politician who touted the importance of ethics even as he made a practice of steering national legislation so as to cheat taxpayers of millions for personal profit? In large part, only those unaware of the depths of that politician's perfidy.

Pathological altruism, an important new area of research, provides a vital framework for understanding these types of behaviours and their consequences. As Hitler noted, it was when he appealed to the Germans' best traits – their sense of caring – that he hooked them aboard the National Socialist juggernaut. To explain: we tend to think of genocide as a horrific event growing solely from hatred. But the reality is that genocide is supported through a yin and yang of hatred and altruism – hatred for those demonised as "the inhuman other", and altruism for those in the in-group. A typical Hutu during the Rwandan genocides, for example, would not have woken in the morning and thought, "I'm going to be evil today and go about killing innocent people!" No; they did as they were told, preemptively slaughtering those "cockroach" Tutsis in the name of self-defence. The genocide occurred, in these terms, to help fellow Hutus. Suicide bombers share similar feelings.

Genocide and suicide bombing may seem a far stretch from someone such as Martha, but the underlying principles are related. Altruism may feel right and altruism may feel good, but not all acts of altruism are right and good. Consider the kindly mother who gives her son candy whenever he asks, and ends up with a morbidly obese teenager.

Once you take altruism off its pedestal and are willing to examine it rationally, you begin to see pathologies of altruism all around: well-meaning actions that result in worsening problems. Let's take the concept of political correctness, which involves sacrificing one's own self-interest and self-expression in the belief that doing so will avoid doing anything that might inadvertently make others feel uncomfortable. This has become a powerful tool to harass and silence people. The American journalist Juan Williams, for example, was fired from his job on US broadcaster National Public Radio for admitting that he feels nervous when he sees a traditionally dressed Muslim boarding a plane. Williams' book, Muzzled: the Assault on Honest Debate, soon hit The New York Times' bestseller list, striking a powerful chord because similar problems hit the headlines every day.

The widespread practice of open-minded tolerance of cultural differences has come to mean that truly intolerant practices, including deeply ingrained second-class treatment of women, are treated as simple alternative lifestyles. Thus, non-judgmental open-mindedness has allowed intolerance to take deeper root in society.

If we can learn about the perils of total acceptance through the filter of pathological altruism, can we gauge more, too, about a contentious area such as live-organ donation – an issue that has long aroused passions in the UK? Such a donation is meant to help another, even while there is an obvious cost to oneself. This is altruism, sure – but is it pathological? The crux of the dispute is whether this act has what a rational outside observer would see as irrational and substantial negative consequences.

Reasonable people would agree that a healthy person donating their heart would be irrational – you've only one to give, after all. But reasonable people could disagree about the donation of a kidney. The drawbacks for the donor, who loses the spare organ and risks surgical complications, must be contrasted with one who would lose a life without that kidney. There is no right answer. Few, save the self-righteous, would mandate that one must give a kidney if it would save a life. Yet few, again save the self-righteous, would outright ban kidney donation. It seems that a reasonable approach as to whether or not to donate a kidney should be an individual choice made after careful examination of the risks and trade-offs. As to whether one should be paid for organ donation, there are valid arguments on both sides. The trick is to look at this emotionally laden area with dispassion – not always easy to do.

A quite different topic which has been much in the news lately is that of wages and benefits for public-service union members. If you look only at a single union, and listen to their arguments, you can't help but see that they have a good point – you might go so far as to actively support their cause, even to the extent of preferring, say, a financial settlement that might perhaps benefit them rather than you. Teachers, police, and nurses, for example, do deserve to be paid well.

The problem is that whatever union leaders might say about their union supporting the public at large, they are focusing only on their members, not on the good of the country as a whole. (In this sense, unions are precisely like corporations, beholden only to their shareholders.) By the time one might add up all the benefits that thousands of unions might feel they deserve – benefits that, taken individually, look deserving – the public coffers are under water. In fact, by focusing on only small, individual beneficial actions – a raise for the police here, for teachers there – we miss the greater pathology. The government can end up printing money it doesn't have and hyperinflation results, as in Argentina. Or rioting strikers who feel entitled to ever-more benefits bring the country to its knees, as in Greece. Or the government can sail along without passing a budget, as in America, and suffer ignominious and ruinous downgrade for its lack of financial stewardship. Trying to help everyone, in other words, means that everyone suffers.

Yet altruism is one of the most important qualities humans possess – and what better time to reflect on how truly to be kind, than in the run-up to World Kindness Day next Sunday? Acknowledging that well-intentioned people can and should sometimes take a corrective course of action so their altruistic efforts are truly helpful – both for others and themselves – is what the study of pathological altruism is all about.

two Ferraris in one, with all the extra opportunities for enjoyment that brings

 

Price: About £198,850 
Engine: 4,499cc, V8 cylinders, 570bhp 
Transmission: Seven-speed sequential gearbox, rear-wheel drive
Performance: 199mph, 0-62 in 3.4sec, 21.2mpg official average, CO2 307g/km

In the minds of some, this should not be allowed. That it is suggests that the EU compliance office responsible for certifying vehicle-noise levels has a local branch in Ferrari's home of Maranello, staffed by ex-Ferrari employees. How else can I be sending gloriously explosive soundwaves of fuel-combustion across the valleys of Emilia-Romagna in a brand new, fully certified Ferrari? And discover that, contrary to the likely response in the UK, the locals smile and wave at the source of the sound?

As for me, I'm hearing it in better Sensurround than ever before, as this new version of the 458 Italia is currently roofless. It is called 458 Spider, but unlike previous Spider versions of mid-engined V8 Ferraris, it has not a fabric convertible roof but a hard one made of two flat aluminium panels. Their folding is electro-hydraulically powered, of course.

So the new open Spider is a coupé-cabriolet (CC), which instantly brings notions of extra weight and aesthetic challenge. Few CCs are genuinely good-looking, although the job is easier when there are just two seats and thus a shorter roof. And with the roof in place, the Spider looks much like the Italia coupé. The only obvious differences are the lack of the small rear quarter windows and a different rear deck: while the coupé has a large, sloping rear window through which you can see the engine, the Spider has a vertical rear window immediately behind the occupants and the engine is covered by the panel under which the roof sits when folded. The engine's air intakes are repositioned, too, under slots in the rear deck. Just as well, as leaving them near your ears would be too much of a good thing with roof stowed.

In Race mode, rather than the usual Sport mode, the loudness is on offer all the time, which it is not in the coupé. Ferrari figures that those who buy the open car are especially likely to want to hear the engine, but there are times in towns when the inevitable attention can get embarrassing. Best to keep Race for open spaces. Or tunnels, in which a blast up to the 9,000rpm point of peak power and peak screaming is irresistible.

How much power? An extraordinary 570bhp, making it ridiculously rapid. There is also very strong pulling power from relatively low engine speeds, and gear shifts, the work of a near-instant via shift levers either side of the steering column, are inherently smooth.

As I squirt the Spider through bend after bend, revelling in its grip, thrilling to little tail-slides as I squeeze the power, there's an occasional tremor through the steering column, but that's as far as the disturbance goes. The structure is significantly more rigid than the old F430 Spider's, and it feels it. With side windows up and the little rear window set to the optimal midway position, there's not much buffeting from the wind, either. This is as close to the perfect open Ferrari as it's possible to get.

The Spider has to be stationary to open the roof, but 14 seconds of aluminium choreography later the roof is closed. Now it's just like the coupé inside, albeit 30kg heavier and the view over your shoulder almost non-existent. But, at speed, the roof proves a fine piece of engineering. There is practically no wind noise at all, such is its sealing.

This is truly two Ferraris in one, with all the extra opportunities for enjoyment that brings – even if having the second personality facet does demand an extra £25,675. If you can afford an Italia coupé, though, you can probably run to a Spider. In which case, do it.

Saturday, 5 November 2011

'I am proud to say that I am a fortunate homosexual man. I am very blessed to be who I am.

The 39-year-old, who is a father to three-year-old twins Matteo and Valentino, has been in a relationship with Carlos for four years.

Ricky Martin is apparently keen to marry Carlos Gonzalez (Getty Images)Ricky Martin is apparently keen to marry Carlos Gonzalez (Getty Images)

He chose to apply for Spanish citizenship in order to take advantage of the country's decision to legalise same sex marriage in 2005, reports El Pais.

The government was seemingly pleased to welcome the Livin' La Vida Loca star and, unusually, did not ask him to renounce his Puerto Rican or US citizenship.

Ricky is yet to comment on the reports, but the newspaper claimed he intended to tie the knot in Spain rather than one of the US states that allows same sex marriage, as he wanted to pay tribute to prime minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero's support for gay rights.

The singer surprised many of his fans when he came out last year by releasing a statement that read: 'I am proud to say that I am a fortunate homosexual man. I am very blessed to be who I am.'




Is Cognitive Behavioural Therapy really the answer to Britain's depression 'epidemic'?

 

So there are going to be even more CBT therapists - on top of the 10,000 we’ve already been promised, the Health Secretary has just announced plans to fast-track hundreds more. All these therapists are going to cost millions (around £250million). So what a waste it would be if the Government’s psychotherapy plans were founded on false evidence of what works. Throwing away taxpayers’ money wouldn’t be the worst of it. Think of the thousands of people suffering from anxiety and depression who would have their hopes raised then dashed. Luckily, despite what the doom-mongers are saying, that’s not what is about to happen. In fact, the Government’s plans are a once-in-a-lifetime chance to cure many of the one in six of us who suffers from these conditions. Sadly, such exciting possibilities are lost on some critics who rail against the type of therapy that will be offered - CBT. This treatment draws on the obvious truth that how we feel is inextricably linked to the way we think and behave. It isn’t remotely sinister and is rather simple - and it works. Many of my patients have been helped by CBT. Sally’s was a typical case. A 42-year-old mother of two, she had been depressed for a year. She tried to put a brave face on things, but knew it was affecting her kids, and that was breaking her heart. Looking at her thought patterns, it was clear that she believed she was a failure and couldn’t do anything right. This meant she had stopped trying to do new things and had become withdrawn. But when together we looked for evidence to support these negative thoughts, it wasn’t there. Despite thinking otherwise, Sally was a good mother and people liked being around her. But her depression had skewed her perception. We started to make a list and focused on these positives, and slowly Sally’s mood lifted. Eventually, she had the confidence to do voluntary work. This led to a further reappraisal of those negative thoughts and she began to see that she was far from a failure. That process, examining our thoughts, testing them against reality and finding a new, more realistic script lies at the heart of CBT. It is not about brainwashing people with positive thoughts; it is about replacing negative thoughts with more realistic ones. Of course, it doesn’t work for everyone. Lord Layard, the economist who’s the inspiration for this expansion of NHS therapy, thinks it will help half of all those who are treated. Some people just don’t take to its approach and others have deeper problems. Cost is, of course, a factor. CBT is quicker as it usually involves 16 weeks therapy, whereas other therapies tend to be open-ended and are, therefore, more expensive. Maybe cost shouldn’t be a factor, but it always will be. What about those other therapies, I hear Oliver James and others ask? The truth is, there is more evidence for CBT’s efficacy, and in an age of evidence-based medicine those other therapies will always be on the back foot. In any event, of course, in the modern NHS patients are supposed to be offered a choice. Here, I do have some sympathy with the scheme's critics. I think other therapies should also be on offer, and I suspect, over time and given local realities they will be. But I won’t have people undermining the Government’s plans. I have seen CBT work. It was CBT therapy, in 1998, that first made me hopeful that my depression could be cured. Like many, I needed deeper therapy, too, but many others don’t want to dig deeper if they don’t have to. That is why CBT is a good first foundation for this new psychotherapy service. Therapists spend a lot of time trying to get patients to give up knee-jerk negativism and embrace the hope that things might turn out better than they expect. With all due respect, I would give the same advice to the critics of CBT.  * Derek Draper's book Life Support: A Survival Guide For The Modern Soul is published by Hay House on April 2 (£8.99). WHAT IS CBT?                                                                    CBT is a short-term psychological treatment based on the idea that negative thinking and behaviour can trigger problems such as depression or panic attacks. During treatment, the therapist helps you identify these negative thoughts - and encourages you to work out a way of looking at things more positively. CBT is used to help with a wide range of mental health and physical conditions, including phobias, anger, relationship problems, sleep problems and eating disorders. The process was developed by the American psychiatrist Aaron Beck in the Sixties. He believed that our emotions and moods were influenced by our patterns of thinking. But rather than focusing on past events in your life such as your childhood - as most of the older psychotherapies do - CBT focuses on the here and now. Sessions of CBT usually last around an hour - it’s common to have between six and 16 sessions during a course of treatment. If you feel CBT may be suitable for you, talk to your GP about a referral - it is available on the NHS, but there is usually a waiting list of several months. There are private CBT therapists, who charge around £50 to £100 a session. But first check that your therapist is registered with the British Association of Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies (BABCP).

Friday, 4 November 2011

Ricky Martin and Benicio del Toro now have Spanish nationality.

The concessions were granted by the Spanish cabinet on Friday

Benicio del Toro and Ricky Martin - Archive photos EFEBenicio del Toro and Ricky Martin - Archive photos EFE
enlarge photo
 

Ricky Martin and Benicio del Toro now have Spanish nationality. The news of the concession was given by the Government on Friday to the artists who were both born in Puerto Rico. 

Spokesman José Blanco made the announcement after the Friday cabinet meeting.
He said that the two ‘recognised in different artistic facets’ wanted to share their Spanish nationality with all the Spanish people and therefore the Government congratulated them for it.
There is widespread speculation that the decision will allow Ricky Martin to marry his boyfriend, the economist Carlos González, in Spain.

Also granted nationality on Friday was Yisi Pérez, wife of the El País journalist, Mauricio Vicent, whose accreditation as a correspondent in Cuba was removed by the Cuban authorities. 

Read more: http://www.typicallyspanish.com/news/publish/article_32580.shtml#ixzz1cmPtmd1C

Ricky Martin granted Spanish citizenship

 

Puerto Rican pop singer Ricky Martin was given Spanish citizenship today, the country’s government said. The star, who came out in 2009 reportedly wants to take advantage of Spain’s gay marriage laws. Spokesman Jose Blanco told a news conference that ministers had agreed to grant him a “letter of naturalization”, issued in special circumstances, because of his “personal and professional links with Spain”. Spanish newspaper El Pais reported that Martin sought citizenship in order to marry boyfriend Carlos Gonzalez Abella, with whom he is bringing up his twin three-year-old sons. Spain passed legislation allowing same-sex marriages in 2005, only the third country to do so at the time, with 20,000 gay couples entering into marriage since. Appearing on the Larry King show last year, he had said: “I would get married… There are many countries around the world where same-sex marriage is a right. Not in Puerto Rico, unfortunately. And not in many states in America. “Yes, we could go to Spain and get married. We can go to Argentina and get married. But why do we have to go somewhere else? Why can’t I do it in my country where the laws are – you know, protecting me?” He added: “I can go to Spain. I have many friends in Spain. And get married. And make it very beautiful and symbolic. But… I [can't] do it in the backyard of my house. I want to have that option. I don’t want to be a second class citizen anymore. I pay my taxes. Why can’t I have that right?

Italy government hangs by thread as coalition crumbles

 

Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's fate hung by a thread Friday and desertions from his crumbling centre-right coalition may have already robbed him of the parliamentary numbers he needs to survive. Berlusconi, caught in the crossfire from European powers and a party revolt at home, agreed at a G20 summit in France to IMF monitoring of economic reforms which he has long promised but failed to implement. But this may soon be irrelevant for the Italian leader, who will return to Rome later Friday to face what looks increasingly like a deadly rebellion by his own supporters. With financial markets in turmoil over the situation in Greece and Italy viewed as the next domino to fall in the euro zone crisis, calls are mounting for a new government to carry through reforms convincing enough to regain international confidence. Berlusconi has consistently rejected calls to resign and says the only alternative to him is an early election next spring, rather than the technocrat or national unity government urged by many politicians and commentators. Yields on 10-year Italian bonds reached 6.36 percent by early afternoon, creeping closer to 7 percent, a level which could trigger a so-called "buyers' strike" where investors take fright and refuse to buy the paper. Two deputies from Berlusconi's PDL party this week defected to the centrist UDC, taking his support in the 630-seat lower house of parliament to 314 compared with the 316 he needed to win a confidence vote last month. But at least seven other former loyalists have called for a new government and could vote against the 75-year-old media magnate. "The (ruling) majority seems to be dissolving like a snowman in spring," said respected commentator Stefano Folli in the financial daily Il Sole 24 Ore. Other commentators spoke of an "inexorable" revolt against Berlusconi. Even Defence Ministry undersecretary Guido Crosetto, a Berlusconi loyalist, said on television: "I don't know how many days or weeks the government has left. Certainly a majority relying on a few votes cannot continue for long." PATRONAGE Berlusconi, one of Italy's richest men, still has significant powers of patronage and he and his closest aides are expected to spend the weekend trying to win back support for a parliamentary showdown Tuesday. Some rebels have already threatened to vote against Berlusconi in the vote to sign off on the 2010 budget. Berlusconi faced concerted calls to resign when he lost a previous vote on this routine measure, which was almost unprecedented. Although it is not a confidence motion, he would come under huge pressure if he suffered a second defeat. "Unpopular prescriptions are necessary and this challenge cannot be faced with a 51 percent government," said UDC leader Pier Ferdinando Casini, in a reference to Berlusconi's weakness and a widespread feeling that the reforms can only be passed with a broad consensus. The premier has promised European leaders that he will call a formal confidence motion within 15 days to pass amendments to a budget bill incorporating new measures to stimulate growth and cut Italy's huge debt. That will be in the Senate where he has a more solid majority but it could still bring him down. Berlusconi, beset by a string of sex scandals and court cases, has consistently resisted pressure from groups ranging from a powerful business lobby to the Catholic Church to stand down.

six-year-old female falcons have proved an unmitigated hit through the Alicante portion of the Volvo Ocean Race

 

Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing Team certainly has a strong Abu Dhabi flavour.

 

ALICANTE, Spain // Fern and Ying sat unvisited in the front right corner on Thursday midday. They appeared to relish the solitude even as they declined to comment.

These six-year-old female falcons have proved an unmitigated hit through the Alicante portion of the Volvo Ocean Race, the lines to pose with them often snaking out the door and down the wharf.

"Since I've been here, in three weeks we've done just under 10,000 photographs," said Bryan Paterson, their English owner and handler. "Three weeks. A bit mad, really."

As the Abu Dhabi Tourism Authority (ADTA) and its chairman, Sheikh Sultan bin Tahnoon, have envisioned the Volvo Ocean Race as a fresh way to introduce Abu Dhabi to the world, the pavilion here on the Mediterranean shore has done likewise in microcosm. Nicknamed the "Oasis", it has joined with all the other temporary structures in a temporary neighbourhood.

From left to right, they line the shore in front of the six boats that will make off for the ocean on Saturday: Puma (the American sporting-gear company), then Telefonica (Spanish telecommunications giant), followed by the Volvo pavilion itself, then Abu Dhabi, Groupama (French insurance company), Sanya (a second tourism concern, this time for the Chinese resort island) and Camper (Spanish footwear company).

All along, the longest lines have formed outside Abu Dhabi's vivid red structure, owing to Fern and Ying, and to a booth at which people have their names written in Arabic, and to another booth drawing hand tattoos. Cost to visitors: zero.

 

 

"From our perspective, it has been great, a useful platform to host our guests," said Carla Nebreda, of the ADTA communications team. "It's a great venue to showcase Abu Dhabi."

Last Thursday, for example, ADTA held a gathering as the skipper Ian Walker introduced the crew, providing a bit of insight into each sailor.

Adil Khalid and Butti Al Muhairi, the Emirati sailor and Emirati reserve sailor and Shore Team member, welcomed guests and answered interviewers' questions.

"This has been interesting for people," said Khalid, all set for his first ocean race. "They like to see what Abu Dhabi looks like, and the falcon, that's our heritage. And the handwriting, they love that and they say they're going to post it in their room." The 23-year-old Khalid stopped through to greet visitors and pose for photos at times when not out in the bay or at the row of team base camps that lines the jutting edge of the shore. Visitors have asked one predominant question, according to Paterson, who brought his falcons from England as quarantine regulations mandate that they hail from Europe.

 

 

"They ask you what the connection is," Paterson said. "And so I explain a little about a thousand years of hunting in the desert." Often he explains that on the yacht just steps out the door, a sail showcases a falcon emblem.

The pavilion is two-storey, with its front lobby anchored by a glass-encased replica of the Abu Dhabi village constructed for the third stopover of the 10-stop race. It has a kitchen and an air-conditioned meeting area. Paul Fox, a contractor working for M-Sport, the motorsport company that delivers the pavilion materials, said assembly of the structure required eight men. Almost immediately after the Abu Dhabi yacht Azzam shoves off to sea on Saturday, they will begin the fine art of deconstruction, which will require two to three days.

The entire edifice will fit into three containers, Fox said. From there, this very pavilion will turn up at stopovers in Sanya, China (the fourth), and Lorient, France (the ninth). That means it is likely that Fox will drive it all the way to China and all the way back to France, itself a global adventure, and that Fern and Ying might well turn up again in France. "The birds are really good," Fox said. "They don't bite you or anything."

 

Thursday, 3 November 2011

Maurice Boland launches iTalk FM radio

 

THIS month radio presenter, Maurice Boland, will launch iTalk FM, a new radio station on the Costa del Sol. The radio station will be based at the Five Star Kempinski Hotel in Estepona, according to Boland. Presenters include: Mat Court, Jack Jackson, Stephen Ritson, Sheila Sanderson , David Jelley, Richie Allan, and Maurice Boland, according to a statement from the presenter.

Pageviews from the past week

Labels

'Fast Eddie' (1) 'I am proud to say that I am a fortunate homosexual man. I am very blessed to be who I am. (1) 'Six feared dead' and thousands evacuated as cruise ship hits rocks off coast of Italy (1) .Estepona Town Hall (1) 000 (1) 000 Gallic expats living in the UK. (1) 000 Nail Polish (1) 000 boob job (1) 000 damages in hacking case (1) 000 heart attack deaths (1) 000 investment. (1) 000. (1) 18 Best Places to Retire Overseas (1) 2012 (1) 24-Hour Film Challenge in Marbella (1) 26 (1) 5 Top Ways Stars Lose All Their Cash (1) 500 complaints a day (1) 500 handbag (1) 800 'jet-set' extras needed (1) 835 rose pink sequinned Jenny Packham dress for the party (1) : People don't really want to grow up (1) A NEW breed of super-rich is crawling out of the mahogany woodwork in Australia. (1) A Nation 'Addicted' To Statins... (1) A TRUSTED accountant who fleeced $45 million from financial group ING Holdings has been jailed for at least seven years. (1) A barrage of new by-laws has been issued to control the holidaymakers (1) A glamorous French politician is set to become France’s first ever ‘MP for Britain’ to represent more than 100 (1) A4e boss Emma Harrison to step down from government role (1) ARE YOU ADDICTED TO BUSYNESS ARE YOU A SOCIAL MEDIA ADDICT (1) ASTON MARTIN ONE-77 (1) AWARE2 gigapixel camera (1) Addicted to stress (1) Alex Salmond wants Scotland to join the European Union in its own right and that means joining the euro – and leaving the pound (1) Alexa Chung range a hit (1) Alice Walton (1) American street artist Frank Shepard Fairey works on his latest piece (1) An anti-British backlash gathered pace in Germany yesterday as David Cameron and Angela Merkel struggled to disguise the gulf between them on how to tackle the eurozone crisis. (1) And Beer (1) And where is this heaven (1) Animal-human hybrid stickers invading Parisian streets (1) Apple Megastore in Marbella soon | Malaga Tourism (1) Asil Nadir faces £34m theft charges in biggest ever fraud trial (1) Assange seeks political asylum (1) At least four people (1) BBC Radio Sheffield will be broadcasting programmes throughout the festival of Ramadan. (1) BBC bill for first and business class travel soared by 60 per cent in the last financial year despite the corporation's pledges to cut expenses. (1) BMW to sell luxury cars for less online (1) BRITS ABROAD (1) Bacon (1) Bali jails Australian boy over cannabis possession (1) Bank tax dodges halted by retrospective law (1) Barclays Bank told by Treasury to pay £500m avoided tax (1) Barclays caps bonuses at £65 (1) Barclays clocks up 1 (1) Benalmadena Council has installed cameras and signs by the entry point to Las Yucas (1) Benedict (like Bill W) realized we must understand our dependence on God before being restored to sanity. (1) Bentley Continental GT (1) Bernie Ecclestone (1) Biggest solar storm in years races toward Earth (1) Bobbi Kristina Brown 'found getting high after Whitney Houston's funeral' (1) Bolivia nationalized the company that runs the three largest airports in Bolivia because the government claims the company did not invest in improving the airports. (1) Brad Pitt is reportedly utilising his free time to plan his wedding with Angelina Jolie. (1) Breaking Free of the Co-dependency Trap (1) Britain's royal family celebrated Queen Elizabeth's 85th birthday Saturday (1) British auction house is selling artworks collected by Germany born photographer Gunter Sachs (1) British bonds win 'safe haven' tag in eurozone debt storm (1) British woman falls off hotel balcony when having sex (1) Britney Spears announces UK shows (1) Briton killed and wife kidnapped in Kenya (1) Britons win case against Spanish developers (1) Brussels gives green light for storage of Olive Oil (1) Butler gets death threats over film (1) Caja Espana savings banks merge (1) California-based Spectrum Wine Auctions is working with London luxury drinks merchant Vanquish to launch a UK auction business. (1) Cannabis: Legal high (1) Captain ordered back onto boat by port officials (1) Casares actually inherited its name from Julius Caesar (1) Cat-Sized Rats Invade Florida (1) Celebrities and millionaires living on one of Britain’s most exclusive estates have become the targets of a crime wave. (1) Celebrity Cruises Taps Top Chef to Join Culinary Team (1) Cheap seats all round as Wills and Kate choose FlyBe (1) Cheryl Cole 'Falls For Hunky Soldier' In Afghanistan | Cheryl Cole (1) Cheryl Cole Cheryl Cole Flies To Afghanistan To Boost Troops' Morale (1) Claridges (1) Claus Mogensen 45 years old is a chronic drug addict who lives in Arhus (1) Come (1) Costa Concordia Cruise Ship Disaster: Captain Says He 'Fell Into Lifeboat' And Could Not Escape (1) Costa del Sol cold weather warning (1) Cowell: Tweet for X Factor faves (1) Crews preparing for Durham Fair (1) DREAMWARRIOR teaches how to become fundamentally present and how to arise in mastery of your mind and ego (1) Daisy Lowe Attends Fashion's Night Out (1) Deadlocked Stanford Fraud Trial Jury Told to Keep Deliberating (1) Deadly Drug Overdose Leads to Pill-Pushing Doctor (1) Demi Moore on road to recovery (1) Denmark. (1) Did the King of Spain try to seduce Princess Diana? (1) Dr. Conrad Murray spent 45 minutes on the phone as Michael Jackson lay dying (1) During experiments on the axons of the Woods Hole squid (loligo pealei) (1) EU condemns Repsol state seizure (1) EURO 2012 POSTERS BY DAVID WATSON (1) Eating nuts can help stave off obesity (1) Elizabeth Taylor's designer clothes to be auctioned (1) Elton John’s husband attacks Madonna after Golden Globes win (1) Emails sent to the Big Pictures agency in 2010 and 2011 contained the flight details of dozens of celebrities (1) Envision (1) Erik Lensherr a.k.a. Magneto (1) Ernest Hemingway’s final visits to Spain are remembered at a new exhibition in Rioja. (1) Eurozone back on the brink as France has credit rating downgraded (1) FISH and chip chain said today it would save the original Harry Ramsden’s restaurant in West Yorkshire with a £500 (1) FLOTILLA of the world's most luxurious super-yachts converged on the Balearic Islands off Spain on Thursday for a very special celebration with a distinctly Australian flavour. (1) FORMER policeman lived the high life in Marbella by running a £300million VAT fraud (1) Facebook May Help Online Luxury-Goods Sales Grow 20% Annually (1) Fake Ryanair pilots sentenced for smuggling cocaine into Spain (1) Family alcoholism linked to kid risks (1) Fashion week photographs of Kate Moss or Agyness Deyn sashaying down the catwalk in the latest season’s designs appear in magazines and on front pages around the world. (1) Ferrari Proves Recession Proof as Ultra-Luxury Sells Out: Cars (1) Ferronats (1) Ferrovial and British air traffic controllers (1) Film festival premieres announced (1) Finca La Garganta (1) Fire (1) Five Britons in court in UK for Mallorca pyramid fraud (1) Five European tourists killed in attack in Ethiopia (1) Former FIA president Max Mosley (1) Formula One supremo Bernie Ecclestone is calling for a U-turn over the calendar reshuffle after the backlash that has been caused by the reinstatement of the Bahrain Grand Prix. (1) Freeze Fresh Herbs in Oil to Preserve Them (1) French judges seek arrest of Equatorial Guinea leader's son (1) Gaga may once again have offended the pious as she emerged as a decapitated corpse from a confession box (1) Gang targets wealthy diners (1) George Washington's copy of US constitution sells for $9.8m (1) German taxpayer would be obliged to subsidise the wages of Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo. (1) Get back on board damn it (1) Goldman Sachs director quits 'morally bankrupt' Wall Street bank (1) Gored bullfighter leaves hospital (1) Greece teeters on edge of bankruptcy as debt talks stall (1) HANGING OUT WITH FRIENDS TODAY (1) HMRC clamps down on Swiss account holders (1) Hacking scandal: the net tightens on the Murdochs (1) Harry Winston Diamond Corp. saw its luxury retail sales nearly double along with a modest increase in rough diamond sales (1) He's in fashion: Robbie was at House of Fraser to launch his menswear label and its first collection (1) Holidaymakers in Spain this summer are facing a surprise new airport tax imposed by the Spanish government (1) Housing Market Woes Even Hit Celebs (1) How Wall Street Bankers Use Seamless To Feast On Free Lobster (1) How clothes retailer Peacocks ran up £750m debts (1) How to Embark on a Spiritual Journey (1) Hundreds of metres under one of Iceland's largest glaciers there are signs of an imminent volcanic eruption that could be one of the most powerful the country has seen in almost a century. (1) Iberia to launch new low cost airline next week (1) Interest in aircraft chartering to London 2012 heats up (1) Is Cognitive Behavioural Therapy really the answer to Britain's depression 'epidemic'? (1) Is it possible to effectively treat addiction without addressing the spiritual aspects of the problem (1) It doesn't matter what it is--an atom (1) Italian Wives ban their husbands from visiting Italian cafe where busty barmaid serves up drinks in skimpy outfits (1) Italy government hangs by thread as coalition crumbles (1) Jaguar C-X16 hybrid concept (1) JetBlue plane in emergency landing after captain's apparent breakdown (1) Johnny Depp hands Keith Richards writer of the year gong (1) KATIE Price is angry. In fact (1) Kelly Hoppen accepts £60 (1) Latvian company creates leather bound Ferrari (1) Let’s clear up a few things about Whitney Houston. (1) Lloyds Bank strips five directors of more than £1 million in bonuses (1) London Fashion Week Is Branded A Big Success For British Fashion Industry (1) London Fashion Week Spring 2012 Preview (1) London Fashion Week is approaching and there arehospitality packages on offer (1) London buses have been booked to carry a Christian advertising campaign expected to start next week (1) London's secret music venue and their livestream act (1) Londoners’ style at Fashion Night Out in West End (1) London’s newest and most fashionable hotel bling is Whitehall’s Corinthia Hotel (1) Luxury Home Foreclosures a Deal for Well-Heeled (1) MALIBU is a 50m motor yacht delivered by the world renowned Amels Shipyard in Holland (1) MINI COUPE (1) Madonna stalker escapes (1) Malaya case hears dramatic statement from Fidel San Román (1) Man in court on murder bid charge (1) Manchester United old boys in Barbados tournament (1) Manchester airport reopens after bomb scare (1) Mandela faces fraud charges (1) Marbella Club Hotel (1) Margaret McKinney presented with human rights award in Spain (1) Marvel character (1) Maurice Boland launches iTalk FM radio (1) McLaren driver Lewis (1) Mercedes' Nico Rosberg was presented with the Lorenzo Bandini Trophy for 2011 in a ceremony in Italy on Saturday night (1) Mercedes-Benz Official Sponsor of London Fashion Week S/S 2012: Show Schedule (1) Merry Christmas (1) Michael Jackson sisters happy with justice (1) Mike Tyson has for the first time revealed his lowest point ever in a searingly candid interview. (1) Millions of Hotmail users cut off by Microsoft 'cloud' failure (1) Mobile phone users suffering from 'text neck' (1) Monster Yamaha’s Cal Crutchlow has said he would like to do the Senior TT on a MotoGP bike (1) More... Make-up of Michael Jackson doctor manslaughter jury revealed as they begin second day of deliberations Dr Conrad Murray: The sleazy lothario who made a perfect fall-guy (1) Morocco yoga courses: Stretching out on a yogic break in soothing Berber country (1) Málaga port's new attraction closed after seven hours (1) NHS must ban 'dangerous' homoeopathy (1) Nats (1) Netflix (1) Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful (1) New Apple MacBook Pro Laptops Go Into Production? (1) New guidelines for Ascot dress code (1) New info about statin safety affects millions (1) No one calls him Sir Allen Stanford anymore. He is inmate number 35017-183. (1) Not everybody is going broke in Ireland these days (1) Now You Can Buy a $250 (1) O (1) Occulto (1) On the run (1) One Hyde Park (1) Paper Passion (1) Passengers feared death after cabin crew accidentally issued emergency landing message (1) Paul Simon's music takes meandering spiritual journey (1) Phone data shows romance 'driven by women' (1) Pilot Strike Affects Scores Of Travelers (1) Pippa Middleton sat front row at the Temperley London show at London Fashion Week (1) Piranha Women who trap well-off men are pure myth (1) Police probe Gold Coast shooting (1) Polo Experience at Tres Rosas Polo (1) Ponzi fraud: two men found guilty of involvement in £115m UK scam (1) Pop legend Lulu and Harry Judd from McFly are putting on their dancing shoes for this year's Strictly Come Dancing competition. (1) Practicing a Rule of Life with others moves us against the grain of our individualistic culture. (1) Premier League footballer Fabrice Muamba is in intensive care after collapsing during an FA Cup tie. (1) Pricey 'Louis Vuitton' condom goes viral online (1) Princes William and Harry fly to Spain for secret weekend hunting trip (1) Princess Beatrice and Sienna Miller. (1) Prostitute in French footballer sex scandal launches own underwear range (1) Protein Rich Diet Good For Losing Weight (1) Qantas grounds all flights (1) Qatar’s royal family has taken over Harrods (1) RBS staff told to pay for their own Christmas party (1) Raids blunt medical marijuana season (1) Rebekah Brooks and husband arrested in phone hacking inquiry (1) Recession causes 2 (1) Red or Black: The criminal thing about Cowell's show? (1) Replacement locks were fitted at their home yesterday after the thugs stole Billie's keys along with her £1 (1) Rich Brits plot escape to France (1) Rich Egyptians weigh emigration as Islamists surge (1) Ricky Martin and Benicio del Toro now have Spanish nationality. (1) Ricky Martin granted Spanish citizenship (1) Rock and roll legend Slash set to jet into Epsom (1) Royal Navy comes to the aid of Spanish trawler under pirate attack (1) Rule of Life is an intentional pattern of spiritual disciplines that provides structure and direction for growth (1) Russian shot in UK was due to give evidence (1) Russia’s wealthiest individuals are keeping a firm grasp on the London luxury home market (1) Ryan Giggs could become the ‘new Tiger Woods’ as sponsors abandon him over his alleged philandering (1) Ryanair has cuts its Alicante services by 50% for next year (1) S SPAIN THE NEXT GREECE? NATION SINKS FURTHER INTO MIRE (1) SCOTLAND'S failure to tackle the scandal of sex trafficking is exposed in a damning report today. (1) SEPLA call 24 more strikes in Iberia (1) SHIP AGROUND: COAST GUARD CONFIRMS 3 DEAD (1) STAR WARS DETOURS™ Trailer (1) Saif al-Islam Gaddafi is pictured sitting in a plane in Zintan after his capture in Libya's rugged desert. (1) Salsa in Buddha Marbella (1) San Diego tax preparer for the wealthy accused of ordering hit on 2 witnesses in fraud trail (1) Secret lives of the movie legends (1) Serbian mafia 'put gangster in mincer and ate him for lunch' (1) Sex on Las Yucas Beach gets a council no (1) Show off your new iPad with these apps that take advantage of the retina display tech (1) Shyness could be defined as a mental illness (1) Sir Paul McCartney and his new wife Nancy are pictured after their wedding in a kooky official portrait taken by Sir Paul's daughter Mary. (1) Snowshoeing in Spain’s Sierra Nevada Mountains (1) Spain Declares War on Online Pirates (1) Spain moves toward freedom of information law (1) Spain takes legal action against Spanair (1) Spain's 4th largest airliner goes broke (1) Spain's Iberia starts low-cost airline (1) Spain's Unicaja (1) Spain’s ‘Cayenne Crisis’ Spreads to BMW as Sales Dry Up (1) Spanish banks in €6bn merger talks (1) Spanish royal family hit by fraud scandal (1) Spanish suburbs transformed into land of shattered dreams (1) Speeding was identified as a possible cause of what is believed to be one of the world's most expensive ever road accidents (1) Steak (1) Strictly star Chelsee Healey says she loves showing off her £3 (1) Summer concerts at the North San Diego luxury hotel and resort move to Saturday nights in 2011. (1) Super Heavy: Mick Jagger's motley crew (1) Surf Air: Can an all-you-can-fly airline possibly work? (1) Swingeing London by Richard Hamilton (1) Syria bloodshed is outrageous (1) THE Queen gave Prince William the go-ahead to rip up the official guest list for his wedding to Kate Middleton (1) TOWIE to shoot summer special in Marbella (1) TWO MILLION EUROS CLAIMED AFTER CANCELLED STONES CONCERT (1) Tattoos are permanent reminders of temporary feelings (1) The 5th stage of Marbella Classic Poker will take place between the 11th and 12th of June. (1) The Abu Dhabi General Prosecution for Public Funds has ordered the detention of two Europeans and other individuals on charges of embezzlement and fraud. (1) The Amy Winehouse Foundation will be launched on September 14 (1) The Duchess of Alba with her new husband Alfonso Díez outside Dueñas Palace in Seville. (1) The Four Steps To Wisdom (1) The Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) has earned one of the highest rates of police killings in the world (1) The King of Spain is a serial womaniser who once made a pass at Princess Diana while she was on holiday with Prince Charles (1) The Oprah Magazine (1) The Teewave AR.1 uses Toray carbon fiber for its chassis (1) The duchess wore a £3 (1) The effect of celebrities on the popularity of a holiday location can be pronounced. (1) The great Asian gold theft crisis (1) The joy of life for my Spanish Rainbow (1) The methane time bomb - Climate Change (1) The richest woman in the world (1) Theophilus London (1) This is the buff soldier who exchanged numbers with Cheryl Cole. (1) Thousands of passengers faced massive travel disruptions across Spain (1) Three people were found alive on Sunday as rescuer workers continued to search a partly submerged Italian cruise ship (1) Tiger Woods' most famous mistress got married Sunday in Las Vegas. (1) To live in communion (1) Tomb opened to investigate stolen baby allegation (1) Treasure hunters eye huge shipwreck haul (1) Trolling Could Get You 25 Years in Jail in Arizona (1) Two police officers were injured in a shoot-out in a raid on a house in Toulouse to arrest suspects in the killings of three children and a rabbi at a Jewish school in southwest France. (1) Two-thirds of smokers try to quit in new year (1) U.K. tax falls on overseas property investors (1) U.S. financier finds Spanish refuge (1) UK Benefit Fraud investigators have recently enjoyed more success in the fight against benefit cheats in Spain. (1) UK photographer Paul Conroy out of Homs (1) US warns of 'credible' Thai terror threat as Hezbollah suspect is arrested (1) Vinnie Jones heads to Marbella (1) Vintage Ads Most Disturbing Household Products (1) Virgin Atlantic employee has resigned following allegations she routinely fed information about the airline's celebrity clientele (1) Virgin buys Northern Rock for £747m (1) Vogue group opens London fashion school (1) What we think (1) Whitney Houston To Make Hollywood Return (1) Whitney Houston's Funeral To Be Streamed Live Online (1) Whitney is laid to rest: Late singer buried at private ceremony in home town (1) Who needs The X Factor when you have your own shoe line? (1) Why don't GPS warn you that statins can harm your memory? (1) Why only you can choose the perfect perfume (1) World Bank warns emerging nations to prepare for slump (1) Yard detectives investigating Maddie disappearance travel to Spain and Portugal (1) You're not in Newscastle anymore: The master bedroom inside the $5.5 (£3.4million) mansion in Beverly Hills Cheryl viewed last night (1) Zumba Fitness is the only Latin-inspired dance-fitness program that blends red-hot international music (1) Zumba's Latin rhythms on the move in the fitness world (1) a body (1) a book has claimed. (1) a company formed by Spanish construction firm (1) a mental state (1) a mountain (1) a photo purportedly of Saif in custody. (1) a plant a storm (1) a scent from Geza Schoen for Wallpaper magazine (1) a situation (1) a sound (1) a thought (1) above a shop in Turnpike Lane (1) alcohol in red wine actually weakens its ability to lower blood pressure. (1) an apocalypse on Earth on December 21 (1) and found to be empty (1) and interior. (1) and some are over Easter (1) best seats at the Olympics will go to the shamed football chiefs of FIFA. (1) body (1) boring and often painful route (1) brand new car from the world’s latest car manufacturer. (1) calling her ‘embarrassing’ and ‘desperate’ (1) committed people can change the world. (1) crash structures (1) crime and tragic overboard deaths are common on cruise vacations (1) deli meat may raise pancreatic cancer risk (1) dervishes: here is the water of life. Dance in it. (1) every beautiful person in the building (1) every historical human being. (1) every legend (1) exploding the common myths about which foods are good for us (1) former X Factor judge and Girls Aloud singer said she would consider becoming a fashion designer and launch her own range. (1) has apparently infringed the copyright of the King of Spain (1) has revealed that his ex-wife spent more than £12 million (1) has surpassed previous records for total sales with their apartment sales exceeding $2.21 billion (1) has won 10 of the 13 tenders to run control towers at Spanish airports (1) heiress to the Walmart supermarket fortune and the the 10th richest woman in the United States (1) holmesandco-london.com (1) in genuine dialogue with others is absolutely necessary if man is to remain human. (1) including Madonna (1) including three children (1) is one of the largest and most exclusive hunting estates in western Europe. (1) is to launch on this side of the Atlantic. (1) its already astronomic offerings are becoming even more bling. (1) jewellery and shoes. (1) makes its wearers smell like freshly printed books (1) marketing experts believe. (1) mclaren 12C spider convertible (1) military and government. (1) mobile (1) more important (1) near the village of Conquista (1) northern Spain is the place to go (1) on the border of Castilla La Mancha (1) opened a spectacular fine art museum in her home town (1) or a galaxy--everything that we know of is changing (1) people don't really want to be happy (1) people don't really want to change (1) power failures (1) prohibiting nudism and sexual activity on the beach (1) real estate company Reyal Urbis filed for insolvency after failing to renegotiate debt with its creditors. (1) says Obama (1) says study (1) says the X Factor supremo is one of the key reasons that his four-year romance with Nicole Scherzinger hit the skids. (1) she’s furious and has something she is desperate to get off that famously pneumatic chest of hers... (1) showing Rolling Stone Mick Jagger in the back of a police car: a great modern history painting. (1) six-year-old female falcons have proved an unmitigated hit through the Alicante portion of the Volvo Ocean Race (1) slow (1) star wars recreations of famous photographs (1) study of pathological altruism (1) thank each and every one of you (1) the American media giant that streams blockbuster movies and TV series over the internet (1) the Formula One chief executive (1) the daily Sun had systematically paid large sums of money to “a network of corrupted officials” in the British police (1) the famed London luxury department store (1) the long (1) the residences at the Mandarin Oriental in London (1) top 10 most expensive classic cars of all time (1) two Ferraris in one (1) we become (1) we tested our cockroach leg stimulus protocol on the squid's chromatophores. (1) were killed (1) where tickets cost a minimum £10 (1) which asserts the power of therapy to change the sexual orientation of gay people. (1) who is said to have ridden himself of a nasty skin complaint thanks to his visit to the Hedionda baths (1) windsurfer Nick Dempsey has the luxury of knowing a spot at London 2012 is already all but his and he's adamant he wouldn't have it any other way. (1) with all the extra opportunities for enjoyment that brings (1) workers pose nude for charity calendar sold under the counter (1) yellow jacket stun gun case for iphone (1)

EVENT Headlines

Popular Posts

Recomended

FeedBurner FeedCount