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Thursday 28 April 2011

Should children read 50 books a year?

Michael Gove has come back from the US with a laudable, but badly formulated, idea that "our children should be reading 50 books a year". Gove is a passionate advocate for excellence in music and literature, but this is silly.

 Well-intentioned, but utterly wrong-headed. Anyone with children will know that.

Does the secretary of state for education seriously expect British schoolkids to read a book a week?

I wonder: how many new books has Gove read this year? According to the Gove Quotient, it should now be 12 – and rising. (I don't count browsing.)

Of course our kids should read more (and better), but cramming them like force-fed battery geese is no way to promote the idea of reading as a lifelong joy. Reading should be a private pleasure.

 Children should be encouraged to try different kinds of book. To browse the shelves of the library (assuming it has not been closed). Reading for personal satisfaction and fulfilment should take place at whatever speed works best for them.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/booksblog/2011/mar/22/michael-gove-children-reading-week

Andrew Marr reveals he took out superinjunction.....

BBC presenter Andrew Marr said on Tuesday he had taken out a superinjunction to protect his family's privacy.
Marr said he felt "uneasy" and "embarrassed" about the use of the high court injunction, which he won in 2008 to suppress reports of an extramarital affair.
He said the use of the so-called rich man's gag "seems to be running out of control" and said he would no longer seek to prevent the story being published.

Friday 22 April 2011

Lindsay Lohan`s necklace...

The owner of a US jewellery store at which Lindsay Lohan is accused of stealing a 2,500 dollar (£1,500) necklace has said the actress came into her shop three times within a week and looked at several items but never purchased anything before walking out wearing the necklace.

Sofia Kaman told a Los Angeles judge she waited a day to report the necklace stolen because Lohan had told her she would return the next day to purchase a ring.

Friday was the first time Ms Kaman had seen the 24-year-old Mean Girls star since the January 22 store visit.

The store owner told Lohan's preliminary hearing that it was 10 minutes before she realised that the star had left wearing the necklace.

http://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/liverpool-news/breaking-news/tm_headline=lohan-left-shop-wearing-necklace&method=full&objectid=28570676&siteid=50061-name_page.html

Liverpool's mammoth £25m-a-year Warrior kit deal rewrites the record books

Liverpool have wrapped up a £25m-a-year kit deal with Boston-based company Warrior Sports — a record for English football and twice what adidas currently pay.
Warrior, a subsidiary of New Balance, will take over from adidas ahead of the 2012-13 season and it is expected to be a long-term relationship which puts Nike’s deal with Manchester United - worth £23.5m - into the shade.
The news comes as a huge blow to their current kit manufacturers as Liverpool's shirt is the fourth-highest selling replica in the world.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-1379466/Liverpools-mammoth-25m-year-Warrior-kit-deal-rewrites-record-books.html#ixzz1KFMhScJK

Thursday 21 April 2011

Bratz v Barbie

Barbie-Bratz Catfight Ends With $90m Payout.

The company behind Barbie has been told to pay nearly $90m (£54m) to a rival toymaker after a seven-year legal row about who created the younger Bratz line of dolls.

http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/Business/Barbie-Bratz-Mattel-Told-To-Pay-Nearly-90m-To-MGA-Entertainment-After-Seven-Year-Legal-Battle/Article/201104315977172?lpos=Business_First_Home_Article_Teaser_Region_2&lid=ARTICLE_15977172_Barbie%2C_Bratz%3A_Mattel_Told_To_Pay_Nearly_%2490m_To_MGA_Entertainment_After_Seven-Year_Legal_Battle

Holiday getaway could lead to snarlups....

Motoring organisations expect the busiest Easter on the roads for several years, with Britain forecast to bask in glorious weather in one of the hottest Aprils on record. But the temptation to make a getaway could lead to snarlups, they warn.

Temperatures are likely to reach 26C in London and parts of the south-east over the four-day break, more than 10C higher than the national average for this time of year.

Homebase has reported a 20% rise in barbecue sales compared with Easter last year and said it would sell enough gas "to fuel 300,000 barbecues… and enough garden chairs to fill Westminster Abbey 30 times over".

Road

The AA expects traffic to start building , with a total of 10m cars – a third of all vehicles in the UK – on the move during the long holiday weekend. It estimates that the recent spike in petrol and diesel prices will add an extra £2 to to the cost of each 100 miles driven by holiday motorists.

According to Trafficmaster, the hotspots will be the A21, M3, M4, M5, M11 and M27. Additionally, the cross-Channel routes – the M20, A20 and A2 to Eurotunnel, Folkestone and Dover – are expected to be exceptionally busy. Although most restrictions for roadworks will be lifted during the Easter period, some big works will still go ahead, bringing congestion on the M1 between junctions 10 and 14 and the M25 between junctions 18 and 21A, and junctions 27 and 30.

The M1 still threatens to disrupt north-south journeys after a fire under a raised section of the motorway in north London forced the Highways Agency to implement lane closures and speed restrictions. Three lanes should be reopened by Thursday but a 50mph speed limit will still be in place for safety reasons. The government has urged motorists to consider alternative routes such as the M40 and A1.

Edmund King, president of the AA, said the temptation to hit the road, lured by good weather and the long break, could be tempered by punishing fuel prices. "The roads are still going to be busy but I think drivers will choose to go to the closest beach. So we predict that there will be slightly shorter trips, as many drivers try to economise."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/apr/20/easter-holiday-travel-uk

Tuesday 19 April 2011

Kanye West

The 33-year-old rapper paired a printed silk top from designer womenswear brand Celine with baggy jeans, a thick gold necklace and multiple woven wristbands when he performed at the festival in California on Sunday.

Appearing to over 75,000 fans, Kanye closed the festival, and made a point of informing the audience during his performance that it was the most important show he'd played since his mother died in 2007.
http://www.glamourmagazine.co.uk/celebrity/celebrity-news/2011/04/19/kanye-west-wears-womens-fashion-coachella-festival-2011

Benefits of alcohol

"Drawn on note paper"

Benefits of alcohol

Alcohol consumed in moderation is thought to help reduce the risk of heart disease. Indeed, alcohol consumption in conjunction with high intakes of fruit and vegetables may well explain the so-called 'French paradox'. The French diet is considered to be very high in fat, especially saturated fat, yet the death rate from coronary heart disease (CHD) remains relatively low.

A research study published in 1992 suggested that the low death rates from CHD could be due to the relatively high consumption of wine in France. A similar pattern of diet and alcohol consumption has also been found in other south European countries where heart disease rates are also lower compared with other parts of the world.

These observations prompted a long series of research studies analysing the relationship between wine and CHD.

It's still not entirely clear how alcohol reduces your risk of CHD, but it's now known a large proportion of the risk reduction is due to moderate alcohol intake raising 'good' cholesterol concentrations in the blood, so reducing the risk of blood clots.
Red wine, in particular, also contains flavonoids that act as antioxidants, which help to reduce the build up of atherosclerosis (when fat builds up on the inner walls of arteries). Red wine seems to help maintain the flexibility of the blood vessel walls.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/health/treatments/healthy_living/nutrition/healthy_alcohol.shtml

Friday 15 April 2011

Unexpected arrest in phone-hacking case .......

The News of the World reacted to the unexpected arrest of one of its most senior reporters by clearing his desk.

Despite the paper having promised that it would co-operate fully with police inquiries, executives descended on the desk of former news editor James Weatherup moments after learning of his arrest. Under the eyes of their legal team, they bagged up notebooks, papers and recording machines and removed them "via our lawyers", a firm whose identity the publisher refused to confirm.

A few hours later, the police arrived and took the bags to Scotland Yard. Detectives also conducted a search in the tabloid newsroom while staff were asked to decamp to a nearby bar.

The unexpected arrest of Weatherup, one of the most senior journalists at the News of the World, at his home leaves little room for doubt that the new police team investigating the phone-hacking scandal is determined to succeed where its much-criticised predecessors failed.

It was three weeks ago that the News of the World dumped a vast archive of data at Scotland Yard's door – a trove that has turbo-charged the Met investigation.

The data, which comprises millions of emails from everyone at the newspaper – and which the NoW previously claimed had been lost – could implicate the paper in more instances of malpractice than have been previously suggested.

There are 8,000 emails relating to Sienna Miller alone. An examination of their contents could reveal that many more public figures were targeted by the newspaper, in addition to the 24 who are already bringing legal actions, including football agent Sky Andrew and the former culture secretary Tessa Jowell.

It was also anticipated that the archived data would include email exchanges between the most senior executives on the NoW, including its former editor Andy Coulson, who resigned as David Cameron's media adviser in January, and Ian Edmondson, Greg Miskiw, and Neville Thurlbeck, journalists on the paper. Edmondson and Miskiw had already been implicated in the affair by paperwork seized from Glenn Mulcaire, the private investigator who was on the NoW's books.

What was not expected, however – even by the most senior executives at the paper – was that a new name would be discovered amid the mountains of data, along with evidence so strong that an arrest could be made.

Weatherup's arrest stunned those at the highest level of the paper. News International executives have been saying privately that they were confident Edmondson and Thurlbeck were the only staffers still working at the paper who were likely to be implicated in hacking. The Met was so determined to conceal the new direction of its investigation that Weatherup, 55, was not given notice that he was being investigated by police officers.
Unlike his colleague and former colleague Thurlbeck and Edmondson – who were arrested last week on suspicion of unlawfully intercepting mobile phone voicemail messages – he was not given the chance to voluntarily attend a police station before being placed under arrest.

Instead, Weatherup – the third news editor under Coulson and one of a handful of senior employees who would take part in private discussions of major news stories with other senior members of the paper – was arrested in an early-morning swoop that left both his family and News International reeling.

Not only was his house in Romford, Essex, searched but also the contents of his desk are now being examined by police – the third time Scotland Yard has seized all official and personal material belonging to a NoW employee in little more than a week. What is also significant about yesterday's arrest of a hitherto relatively unknown figure is that the police have worked at such intensity and speed.

Until last week, former royal editor Clive Goodman, jailed in January 2007, was the only News of the World journalist to be arrested for listening to private voicemail messages. No other reporters or executives were questioned in the initial police investigation. It was only after a series of high court cases brought by Miller, the football pundit Andy Gray and others that the Met was forced to reveal material found on Mulcaire's computer, during a 2006 raid of his home.

In contrast, the 45-member new team, Operation Weeting, have arrested three current or former NoW journalists in the past nine days alone over possible involvement in alleged phone hacking at the paper.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/apr/14/phone-hacking-arrest-news-of-world

Wednesday 13 April 2011

Health Secretary Andrew Lansley has apologised to the Royal College of Nursing

Health Secretary Andrew Lansley has apologised to the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) admitting his message on NHS reform has not been well communicated.


After an unprecedented vote of no confidence at the RCN conference, the Health Secretary said he wanted to take the time to listen to concerns from the health service frontline.
Mr Lansley was speaking ahead of discussions with 65 nurses as part of the Government's "listening exercise" on its controversial plans for the NHS.
He has come under fire at the RCN conference for declining to deliver a speech to all delegates.

Earlier, nurses voted 99 per cent in favour of a motion of no confidence in his management of the reforms, to one per cent against.
Angry delegates said Mr Lansley's plans would ruin the NHS and lead to worse patient care.
Mr Lansley said: "I did read what was said this morning and the result.

"I'm sorry if what I'm setting out to do hasn't communicated itself," he added.

He said he believed there was a "shared objective" in ensuring an NHS free at the point of use and a comprehensive, high-quality service.

"My view is that we are working together to support these principles and if we've not got that right we will do so with your help," he said.

Mr Lansley insisted he had always wanted to hear more from nurses about their views on the reforms.
"Listening to the vote this morning, if I've not got that message across then I apologise."

Mr Lansley added he was at the Liverpool conference to "listen, not to lecture".

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/4/20110413/tuk-lansley-apologises-to-nurses-dba1618.html

Tuesday 12 April 2011

Kai, drawing in Sefton Park, Liverpool.

This is my grandson, Kai, drawing in Sefton Park, Liverpool.

Named after a local Earl, Sefton Park was completed in the mid 19th century in the south end of Liverpool.
The lush greenery surrounds a large arc-shaped lake, which was a favourite recreation spot for a teenage Paul McCartney who would row boats there.

There is also a bandstand that many locals believe was an inspiration for the Beatles 60s concept Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.

Sunday League football is as popular as ever and keen anglers are out in all weathers.

Monday 11 April 2011

Fernando Torres for sale...?

Roman Abramovich is already going cold on £50million flop Fernando Torres and will consider selling him this summer.
The Chelsea owner drove through the record-breaking signing of the striker from Liverpool in January in the hope that he would make the club a force in Europe


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-1375290/Chelsea-owner-Abramovich-sell-Torres-flop.html#ixzz1JD8Cgejf

Friday 8 April 2011

£138,360: the national debt per UK family

Britains debt mountain is the equivalent of  £138,360  for each household in the country, research reveals today.
http://www.anhourago.co.uk/show.aspx?l=8362994&d=501
Miami Heat's LeBron James secures minority share in Liverpool
The basketball star LeBron James has secured a minority stake in Liverpool after cutting a deal with the club's US owner.


Fenway Sports Group, which also owns baseball's Boston Red Sox, has struck an agreement with James's sports-marketing firm, LRMR Branding & Marketing, to be the representative for the controversial Miami Heat player around the world. In return James will become a minority owner in Liverpool. He said he was "excited to be affiliated with this incredible organisation" and looked forward to donning a red shirt and visiting Anfield
http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2011/apr/07/lebron-james-liverpool

Thursday 7 April 2011

Coca-Cola terminate its contract with Wayne Rooney.....

Wayne Rooney is the latest star to discover that exceptional performances on the pitch can easily undermined by regrettable performances off it.

Coca-Cola announced today that it was terminating its contract with the 25-year-old, thought to have been worth around £600,000 a year.
http://sport.uk.msn.com/msn-world-of-sport/photos.aspx?cp-documentid=156916797

Monday 4 April 2011

Oliver has a way with words.....

'We don't want more people from Sheffield having cheap holidays': Why top Tory policy guru is against building new airports

Oliver Letwin's comments to Boris Johnson leaked.


David Cameron’s top policy guru has sparked anger after declaring that the government should do nothing to help ordinary people take holidays.

Cabinet Office minister Oliver Letwin told fellow Tories: ‘We don’t want more people from Sheffield flying away on cheap holidays.’

The comments were made in a private meeting with London Mayor Boris Johnson, who was pushing for the government to build new airports.
Read more:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1373025/We-dont-want-people-Sheffield-having-cheap-holidays-What-Old-Etonian-Tory-minister-told-Boris.html

Sunday 3 April 2011

Half a million people who currently claim sickness benefits are fit to start work immediately, a minister has suggested. Read more:
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/21/20110403/tuk-500-000-on-sick-are-fit-to-work-6323e80.html
Anyone up for a game of footy` ?
This is an idea I had while watching the grandson playing football, loads of passion and enthusiasm!
A quick pencil doodle of the lovely Christina Ricci, outspoken child-teen starlet of the 1990s. 

Friday 1 April 2011

The University of Liverpool has become the first in the North West to recommend an increase in tuition fees to the highest level of £9,000 a year.

It follows Oxford, Cambridge, Imperial College, Exeter, Durham and Leeds in expressing its intention to set the maximum fee allowed by the government.
The university said the fee increase would enable it to ...
read more, and article provided by:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-merseyside-12775775
This week's Champion carries an article about pothole budgets for Sefton. And it's good news...:
Read more...

http://manorfocus.blogspot.com/2011/03/sefton-roads-to-benefit-from-pothole.html