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Thursday, 20 November 2014
SPAIN DUCHESS ALBA IS DEAD
She died at home on Thursday after a short illness.
The duchess is survived by her husband of three years, Alfonso Diez, who is 25 years her junior.
The Duchess of Alba was the head of one of Spain's oldest noble families.
The frizzy-haired eccentric aristocrat was one of Spain's most-loved figures whose antics filled the nation's gossip magazines and gripped the audiences of TV chat shows even during the final months of her long life.
Described as the "rebel noble", she spurned convention to forge her own path in life, following her passion for flamenco and, as a patron of the arts, amassing a private collection of masterpieces said to rival any in Europe.
Her exuberant character, complete with squeaky voice and flamboyant dress-sense, enraptured Spaniards who followed the vicissitudes of her 88 years.
The Duchess of Alba, seen here in 1947, had bequeathed her inheritance to her six children
Once a famed beauty who turned down a request to be Picasso's
muse, she shocked the establishment when she married her confessor, a
defrocked Jesuit priest, in 1978, six years after the death of her first
husband with whom she had six children. But it was her third marriage to a civil servant 25 years her junior in 2011 that provoked an even bigger scandal, a union that was opposed by her children as well as King Juan Carlos of Spain, but that was welcomed by Spaniards as a colourful drama.
Wednesday, 19 November 2014
Jule Bianchi F1 Driver out of coma
The Frenchman has been flown from hospital in Yokkaichi to intensive care in Nice, where he arrived earlier.
However his condition is still "critical" and he remains unconscious.
"Almost seven weeks after Jules' accident at Suzuka Circuit, and following a challenging period of neurological intensive care, we are able to announce Jules has made an important step," his parents Philippe and Christine Bianchi said in the statement.
"His treatment now enters a new phase concerned with the improvement of his brain function.
"Although the situation continues to be serious, and may remain so, it was decided that Jules was sufficiently stable to be repatriated to his native France."
Bianchi suffered a diffuse axonal injury when he crashed into a tractor vehicle at Suzuka that was recovering Adrian Sutil's Sauber
The Marussia team ran with one car at the Russian Grand Prix in Sochi the following week, where Lewis Hamilton dedicated his win to Bianchi.
His parents praised the "outstanding care" Bianchi received following the accident from doctors at the Mie General Medical Centre in Yokkaichi, adding they owed "an enormous debt of gratitude".
"We are thankful the next phase of Jules' treatment can continue close to home, where he can be surrounded and supported by his wider family and friends," they said.
Since the crash, Formula 1's governing body the FIA has begun working on a plan for a 'virtual safety car' to force drivers to slow for warning flags in an accident zone.
Drivers tested such a car
Tuesday, 18 November 2014
Ivory coast_Abijan
Soldiers blocked roads in the main city Abidjan and the second city Bouake to demand unpaid allowances.
Mr Koffi promised that he would address their grievances.
It is the biggest protest involving the Ivorian military since President Alassane Ouattara took office in 2011, ending a civil war.
Bouake is a stronghold of the president, and the protest there suggests he is losing the confidence of some loyalists, correspondents say.
Soldiers sealed off roads around the offices of the national radio and television station in the city, said a witness, who spoke to the BBC on condition of anonymity.
Health care demand The protest forced shops and banks in the city to close, the witness added.
President Ouattara's rise to power ended conflict in Ivory Coast
In Abidjan, soldiers demonstrated near an army base in the neighbourhood of Abobo.
"The soldiers are on the streets," Reuters news agency quoted a witness as saying.
"They used tyres, old cars, everything they could find to block the road. You can't get in. All the shops are closed," the witness said.
There were also protests in three other cities, including Daloa, a hub of Ivory Coast's cocoa industry, according to Reuters.
Speaking on state television, Mr Koffi said he would hold talks with the soldiers to find "a definitive solution" to their demands for back-pay.
Reuters said Mr Koffi acknowledged that the government had agreed to pay them housing allowances, overdue travel stipends and to allocate money for soldiers' health care.
Mr Ouattara took power in 2011 after his then rebel forces, backed by UN and French troops, captured his predecessor Laurent Gbagbo.
Mr Gbagbo had refused to step down despite the UN declaring Mr Ouattara the winner of presidential elections the previous year.
About 3,000 people were killed in the conflict between the two sides.
Mr Gbagbo is in the custody of the International Criminal Court. He is due to go on trial next year on charges of crimes against humanity, which he denies.
Mr Koffi promised that he would address their grievances.
It is the biggest protest involving the Ivorian military since President Alassane Ouattara took office in 2011, ending a civil war.
Bouake is a stronghold of the president, and the protest there suggests he is losing the confidence of some loyalists, correspondents say.
Soldiers sealed off roads around the offices of the national radio and television station in the city, said a witness, who spoke to the BBC on condition of anonymity.
Health care demand The protest forced shops and banks in the city to close, the witness added.
"The soldiers are on the streets," Reuters news agency quoted a witness as saying.
"They used tyres, old cars, everything they could find to block the road. You can't get in. All the shops are closed," the witness said.
There were also protests in three other cities, including Daloa, a hub of Ivory Coast's cocoa industry, according to Reuters.
Speaking on state television, Mr Koffi said he would hold talks with the soldiers to find "a definitive solution" to their demands for back-pay.
Reuters said Mr Koffi acknowledged that the government had agreed to pay them housing allowances, overdue travel stipends and to allocate money for soldiers' health care.
Mr Ouattara took power in 2011 after his then rebel forces, backed by UN and French troops, captured his predecessor Laurent Gbagbo.
Mr Gbagbo had refused to step down despite the UN declaring Mr Ouattara the winner of presidential elections the previous year.
About 3,000 people were killed in the conflict between the two sides.
Mr Gbagbo is in the custody of the International Criminal Court. He is due to go on trial next year on charges of crimes against humanity, which he denies.
Saturday, 15 November 2014
Thursday, 13 November 2014
Princess Diana Funeral - Elton John - Candle In The Wind (Goodbye Englan...
"Candle in the Wind 1997" is a re-written and re-recorded version of
Elton John's 1973 hit song "Candle in the Wind". It was released on 13
September 1997 as a tribute single to the late Diana, Princess of Wales.
In many countries it was pressed a double A-side with "Something About
the Way You Look Tonight". It was produced by Sir George Martin.
Elton John's 1973 hit song "Candle in the Wind". It was released on 13
September 1997 as a tribute single to the late Diana, Princess of Wales.
In many countries it was pressed a double A-side with "Something About
the Way You Look Tonight". It was produced by Sir George Martin.
Philae(spacececraft)
The lander is named after Philae Island in the Nile, where an obelisk was found and used, along with the Rosetta Stone, to decipher Egyptian hieroglyphics.Philae 's mission is to land successfully on the surface of a comet, attach itself, and transmit data from the surface about the comet's composition. Unlike the Deep Impact probe, which by design struck comet Tempel 1's nucleus on 4 July 2005, Philae is not an impactor. Some of the instruments and the lander were used for the first time as autonomous systems during the Mars flyby on 25 February 2009. ÇIVA, the camera system, returned some images while the Rosetta instruments were powered down; ROMAP took measurements of the Martian magnetosphere. Most of the other instruments need contact with the surface for analysis and stayed offline during the flyby. An optimistic estimate of mission length is "four to five months".
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