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Sunday 30 December 2012

Adoption reunions: 'There is no doubt that the road gets bumpy'


The day Sue was due to meet her birth father for the first time could not have been more momentous. "I'd wanted to meet my original family for years. I needed to know who I was but, more than that, I hoped it would fill the massive hole I felt as a result of being placed in an adoptive family who didn't get me at all," says Sue, 40.
They arranged to meet at a railway station and she can still remember the butterflies in her stomach. "It felt a big deal for an 18-year-old girl to travel miles by train to meet someone I didn't know. Every 10 seconds or so, someone would walk past and I'd think, is it you?"

He never showed up. "After an hour and a half, I went to a phone box. His wife answered and she came to walk me back to their house, where he eventually turned up with some excuse about work. We hugged briefly and I remember tears, but mainly because I was so traumatised after he hadn't come. That anger and disappointment shaped our relationship. I was never quite able to get past it."

It's hard to imagine a worse start to an adoption reunion. But even highly charged Oprah-style reunions do not always end happily. Some fizzle out; others end abruptly in rows. Some never really take off at all. There is so much emotion invested, so it's little wonder that those involved are often left feeling bewildered and bruised.

"This is the unexpected side of reconnecting that we don't really hear about," says Julia Feast, of the British Association of Adoption and Fostering...........
http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2012/dec/29/adoption-reunions-road-gets-bumpy



Friday 24 August 2012

Early welcome to Nuri Sahin......

A simple Welcome to Anfield, Home Of Liverpool F.C.

Saturday 18 August 2012


Harvey Nichols to open revolutionary new beauty store in Liverpool One



ICONIC store Harvey Nichols today revealed details of its first shop in Liverpool.


The retailer, famous for fashion, beauty and luxury items, will open its doors in the old Habitat unit at Liverpool One.

Beauty Bazaar Harvey Nichols will span three floors and was described as “the one-stop destination for all things beauty”.

Crowds of people are expected to queue for its grand opening in late autumn


The star attraction will be an champagne and cocktail bar, described as an all-day destination in its own right.
Read More
http://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/liverpool-news/local-news/2012/07/27/harvey-nichols-to-open-revolutionary-new-beauty-store-in-liverpool-one-100252-31483418/#ixzz23tUER3pX





Yoko Ono celebrates Liverpool’s past, present and future in artwork for the ECHO





LIVERPOOL’S status as a “world in one city” inspired the artwork created specially for today’s ECHO front page by Yoko Ono.

The image, signed “love Yoko” by John Lennon’s 79- year-old widow, features a shaft of light stretching up from the ground into the sky and the message “Imagine Peace” translated in 24 different languages.

It marks the 50th anniversary this weekend of The Beatles playing their first shows as their final line-up – John, Paul, George and Ringo – as well as celebrating the city today.

Yoko said: “The cover represents Liverpool now and in the future.

Read More, and view the artwork here :
http://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/liverpool-news/local-news/2012/08/17/yoko-ono-celebrates-liverpool-s-past-present-and-future-in-artwork-for-the-echo-100252-31640934/

Tuesday 14 August 2012


I'm not going to bankrupt the club! Liverpool boss Rodgers explains his eye for value....




Brendan Rodgers has insisted he will not bankrupt Liverpool as he warned his pursuit of success will not come at any cost.

Though Rodgers has spent £26million bringing in Fabio Borini and Joe Allen, Liverpool have been streamlining their budget and offloaded a number of high earners, such as Alberto Aquilani.

But Rodgers has also shown he is not afraid to walk away from a deal if he believes the economics are not right, as was the case when he ended his interest in Gylfi Sigurdsson, who joined Tottenham after Liverpool refused to meet his personal terms.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2188362/Brendan-Rodgers-says-bankrupt-Liverpool.html#ixzz23ZTnr0Ze



Liverpool Football Club sponsors reach agreement...

Standard Chartered agrees settlement with New York regulator

Standard Chartered has agreed a $340m (£217m) settlement with New York regulators that accused it of hiding $250bn of transactions with Iran.


The hearing that had been scheduled for Wednesday has now been adjourned.

The bank's chief executive Peter Sands has been in New York negotiating with the regulators.

The bank had admitted that some of its transactions did break US sanctions, but said that the amount totalled just $14m.

"The New York State Department of Financial Services (DFS) and Standard Chartered Bank have reached an agreement to settle the matter raised in the DFS order dated August 6, 2012," a statement from the regulator's superintendent said.

"The parties have agreed that the conduct at issue involved transactions of at least $250bn."

READ MORE:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19253666


Monday 13 August 2012


Joe Allen completes £15m move to Liverpool from Swansea City..
Things looking pretty at Liverpool....

Joe Allen completes £15m move to Liverpool from Swansea City• 'You'd think he was a Spanish player,' Brendan Rodgers says



  Brendan Rodgers has likened Joe Allen to a Spanish footballer, and admitted he would have paid more than £15m for the Wales international, after Liverpool completed his transfer from Swansea City.



The 22-year-old signed a long-term contract at Anfield on Friday night that will treble his Swansea wages of £15,000 a week. He had travelled to Merseyside to see Liverpool beat Gomel in the Europa League on Thursday, setting up an all-British play-off with Hearts, after the Anfield club met the £15m release clause in his contract.



"You'd think he was a Spanish player, a real European player. I would have paid many more millions for this kid," said Rodgers, who managed Allen at Swansea. "He is a unique player in that he's a British player who doesn't give the ball away. When he comes into this team you'll see the difference he can make.



Read more at: http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2012/aug/10/joe-allen-liverpool-swansea   Email Andy Hunter
guardian.co.uk, Friday 10 August 2012 21.29 BST