Sunday, March 27, 2011

Black Penis Size Shocked

* THE WEEK IN PICTURES ... **

This week has been in the news ...

* MONDAY 21 MARCH

-A nanoparticle uses light and heat to destroy tumors
  • addition, non-toxic, biodegradable and safe.
  • is a tiny water balloon that can be filled with drugs.
  • could change the way they are treated tumors.
-Djokovic won in Indian Wells final to Nadal
  • Djokovic rallied from a set down to clinch the American tournament.
  • Nadal squandered their chances in the second set and I just paid. Djokovic
  • undefeated this year, has 18 victories in 2011

-The accumulation of efforts and hit play makes CR rests with the worst time of year.

-Maria Jose Rienda will retire after the championships in Spain's Sierra Nevada.
  • It will end his 17 seasons in the elite international ski at home.
  • The Granada played this tournament from 13 to 15 April.
  • Garmisch-Partenkirchen
  • disputed his seventh World Cup downhill skiing.

Google France fined for collecting private data with its Street View program

comes to the Basque Parliament, a legislative initiative to pay off the mortgage only the floor

* TUESDAY, MARCH 22

"Almost a third of English employees ensures that your job is stressful
  • The fear of losing their jobs and join the unemployment rolls causes about 30% of the English suffer stress and anxiety in their work.
  • Parallel to this increased stress is also generates a process known as 'presenteeism', ie greater presence in the workplace although not translated into increased productivity.


-milk shortages, blackouts and lower business numb Tokyo. The multinationals are forced to close its factories for lack of materials.

-Congress ratifies the decision that Spain is in military intervention in Libya.
  • Zapatero has won the backing of 336 deputies. There have been only three votes against (IU and BNG) and one abstention (ICV).
  • President defends the legality and legitimacy of 'Dawn of the Odyssey. "
  • The mission will last between one and three months.
  • The CP gives his support, but remember this is a ratification of a decision.
  • The PNV approves the mission, but said his support "is not a blank check."
  • Cries of "no war" in the public gallery.
* WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23

-Vegetables, bread and cereals, overlooked by the Mediterranean diet.


-bye to Elizabeth Taylor, the violet eyes of Hollywood


-Spain is at the bottom of Europe in terms of command of English.
  • Netherlands, Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland are the countries with the highest level of English.
  • Only Russia and Turkey do worse than Spain in the placement tests conducted by Education First, which produced the study.
* THURSDAY, 24 MARCH


-Navarre was the autonomous region with the highest growth in the economy in 2010
  • Thanks mainly to the contribution of the automotive industry.
  • All communities grew last year below the European average.
  • Andalusia and Castilla-La Mancha recorded the worst results.
  • The English economy as a whole shrank by 0.1% last year.
"Companies do not bet on women's leadership
  • One study found that there is a gap in organizations for effective strategies to promote and develop leadership in women.
  • 71% of companies do not have a defined strategy or philosophy designed to achieve this goal.

* FRIDAY MARCH 25

-Exercise reduces the effect of salt on blood pressure

-Redknapp: "Anyone who says that Mourinho is not a good coach, or are jealous or delusional"

-
would like to be doctors, nurses or teachers
  • Medicine, Master of Child and Nursing are preferred by college students in our country.
  • These degrees each year refuse access to thousands of students.
  • However, at the pole as other races do not total more than 20 students.
In general, our country is an important mismatch between supply and demand university, both in excess of places, for lack of them. Although the total balance is not very noticeable, the lack of balance in public universities in our country is leading in some branches of knowledge, as in the case of Health Sciences, where demand outstrips supply in all studies and percentage reaches up to 497% in medicine. At the opposite pole lies the branch of experimental sciences, where the occupation of places offered just over 80%.


respect to other university branches, that of Arts and Humanities has the highest balance On the supply and demand. The latter exceeded the number of seats available only in 102%. Nevertheless, the registration data were lower, as it only covered 89% of the bid. Social Sciences and Law, the situation is similar. In this field there is much disparity between its various degrees. While titles such as Master or Science in Early Childhood Physical Activity have an excess of demand exceeding 200% of the seats, other studies such as Tourism Management and Public Administration or fail to meet all of their seats. Moreover, the branch of architecture and engineering, despite being one of the highest volume of students (After Law and Social Sciences), present similar data, about 80% of the places covered. Demand

Medicine degrees and nine degrees more make up a large percentage of the current university demand The contrast could not be higher. Last year over 37,000 students fought for one of the 6,229 seats English universities for studying medicine. However, Engineering Geology has received requests to cover only 41% of places offered, 90 students for 217 seats. And is that medical and nine degrees more comprise a high percentage of current university demand. Over 50% of the nearly 350,000 posts applied in public universities in the 2009-2010 academic year were destined for one of the following ten titles: Medicine, Master of Child Nursing, Primary Master, Business Administration, Law , Psychology, Physiotherapy, Architecture and Industrial Engineering.

The less popular in the plane opposite to the qualifications mentioned are situated a long list of titles, the classrooms are empty each year. These include different studies branch Humanities. Some philology, as the Portuguese and Hebrew, recorded only two applications throughout the country during the past year, arrived in Romance Philology and Slavic Philology seven, eight.


"The dead and missing in the earthquake and tsunami in Japan, already exceeding the 27,000

-Bruges, a delight for all senses

On foot, horse carriage , boating, biking and even hot air ballooning, Bruges is a city built to be enjoyed from any angle. Its narrow streets and canals are hidden centuries of history, bridges, gardens and places full of charm, which have seen a prosperous city, full of merchants and bankers, fall into decay, but also a city that was able to recover and utilize its more stately past to a present innovative styling.

's statement old town as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 2000 and the subsequent election Bruges Cultural Capital of Europe 2002 became the turning point he needed to break the impasse in which it was .


For Burgundy and medieval Bruges

The sight and hearing have an appointment with the old town with canals. You have to go with its alleys and squares, as the square Markt and the Burg square , probably the two most important city. The first is surrounded by walls of great beauty. Stands out above all the Gothic bell tower with its carillon, consisting of 47 bells weighing 27 tons.

Beside her, Burg Square, which not only received the City, one of the oldest in the Netherlands , but also the Basilica of Holy Blood, where it is kept and venerated a relic of the Blood of Christ. Every year locals and visitors have an appointment on Ascension Day, when a procession in his honor. On this occasion, the event, declared World Cultural Heritage by UNESCO and it gets to gather between 30,000 and 45,000 people, will take place on 2 June.

The view is we go up again with two new towers. measures 122 meters to the church of Our Lady , which houses the mausoleums of Mary of Burgundy and his father Charles "Fearless." Made of brick, is considered the highest in Europe and demonstrates the tremendous skill of the craftsmen Bruges'. The second, the cathedral of San Salvador.


If you want to relax and enjoy the simple act of sitting to hear the sound of the city, there are several options. On the one hand, a stroll through the lively channels to discover some of the most curious of the city . On the other, the quiet Beaterio, next to Minnewater or Lake of Love Another possibility is to breathe the calm of the so-called Casas de la Caridad, residential areas with picturesque medieval gardens and Kruisvest zone, where you can still four mills.

A separate visit

When you get to any destination, hopes to meet great museums housing paintings, archaeological, sculptural ... If it is true that Bruges lovingly keeps a collection of Flemish Primitives unique and world famous (in Groeninge Museum, which after renovation reopen soon ), also offers visitors something more, something unique for many different makes, and returns to sharpen the senses.


When one is lost in the streets in every corner find a chocolate shop or roadside stands that have this product in its most delicious "temptation." Over fifty "boutique" chocolate is offered with the most varied shapes, sizes and flavors. To complete such a "tasty" offer, the Choco-Story Museum shows the history of cocoa and chocolate, from the Maya to this day. Addition to know how to produce the most delicious chocolates, it is also possible to test them.

Although it may seem odd, the fact is that another of the "delicacies" of Bruges are chips, which also have their own museum . One of the most beautiful buildings of Bruges, of Saaihalle, Frietas houses the Museum, which describes itself as the first and unique in the world on this product. Offers a tour of its history and also reserves a special place for children.



No visit that price if no one stops to enjoy the customs, tastes and smells gives us the local gastronomy . One of the classics is the Halve Maan Brewery, which opened in 1546 and the last one that still produces beer in the city. Also, the national cuisine of Bruges has been recognized, and up to eight restaurants feature the famous Michelin star (five star, two star and one two three).


* SATURDAY, MARCH 26

"The body needs up to four days to adjust to daylight saving time change
  • The effects are transient and mild in the healthy population.
  • But after 50 years costs a bit more fit.
  • In children, there is an increased irritability and changes in their diet.
-Javier Cámara, Gonzalo de Castro brothers become film environmentalists
  • Both feature 'What is a bear? " in the English Film Festival in Malaga.
  • The film is about climate change from the side "crafty."
  • The film will hit the charts this April 1.
  • Many already enjoyed their Gambero 'Seven Lives' on television.

the fourteenth Festival Málaga English Film opens its doors with the introduction of the first of the eleven films in competition, What is a bear? of Tom Fernandez, a comedy that is intended primarily to entertain, but also invites reflection on the conservation of the planet. Guillermo
(Javier Cámara ) is a biologist who, after years of research in Antarctica, throw in the towel and returned to Asturias, where his brother Alejandro ( Gonzalo de Castro), a zoologist who lives in the forest insists on finding a bear to save the natural environment of the complex. Both actors have to their credit a long list of gags and comic Scaean side by side in the TV series Seven lives.


"It's an old-style film, understood this as a visual spectacle, and entertaining for all audiences, which can be seen with parents, with siblings, with the bride or children" , said at a press conference Fernandez, who made his directorial debut feature film with Suso's Tower. The story arose from his "concern" about the "difficult time living planet", but without intent "to make a pamphlet or a documentary on climate change," but only to give a "point of view funny or sarcastic on the subject. "

" The green label must be overcome, simply common sense and half a brain. Being green is not like being in a cult or carry a sticker or sheet, environmentalism is citizenship, "added the director, who hit the charts with his second film on 1 April. For Javier Cámara, work in this project involved "a reunion with lots of friends", and decided to participate for "incentives" as having in the cast to Emma Smith, Geraldine Chaplin and her daughter Oona Chaplin.


shooting, highlights the experience of filming "in a spectacular glacier in Iceland, where so much beauty overwhelmed, or scenes with a bear, he was surprised that" did not like honey "and is, in his view, had lost his "animal instincts." Chamber stresses the importance of the Festival of Malaga, which is important for the film, and very necessary for English cinema ", assuming" the starting gun of the festivals of the year "after the Goya have been awarded the films last year.

Meanwhile, Gonzalo de Castro, who met with a dash "bold, bright and well polished, has discovered this work "another Asturias and other landscape" and believes that the play contains "a warning that this is the planet we have and we must preserve it, each with its grain of sand."


* SUNDAY, MARCH 27

-Petrov leaves Alonso podium of a Grand Prix Vettel dominated Australia.
    The Spaniard property
  • many places after a poor start.
  • starred after an incredible comeback.
  • Vettel Hamilton wins in Australia and is second on the car broken.


-evacuated workers Fukushima reactor 2 1 by the high level of radioactivity.
  • Radiation is 10 million times higher than normal.
  • The radioactivity in the sea more than 1850 times the legal limit.
  • The increased level of radiation could indicate a continuous filtration of radioactive material, and work to find the source of the leak.
-Time Change in March 2011.

call time change to the advancement and delay of an hour we do every spring and autumn respectively. This is a measure undertaken by a 70 countries worldwide, with Japan the only country industrialized has not yet adjusted to this standard.

The time change is intended to reduce overall energy consumption , matching the beginning of the workday with the daylight hours. According to the Institute for Energy Diversification and Saving of Energy (IDEA), household savings in lighting since the time change from March to October can be 5%.

The time change was a move that was first adopted in the First World War, when some of the countries involved have adopted this measure in order to save fuel. This situation was repeated in 1973 during the oil crisis during which most industrialized countries adopt the same measure to deal with the complicated situation.

In Spain, this measure is being taken since 1974, although the latter regulation to which we have adapted the hand has reached the European directive 2000/84, which among other things unifies the days that occur time changes in all European Union countries, these being the last Sunday in March and October, respectively. This directive is meant for an indefinite period, but every 5 years the European Commission publishes the calendar of specific dates on which the change will occur during the 5 hour years.

The time change experts say affects the biological clock and can result in sleep disorders especially in children and the elderly. However it is something temporary that is usually overcome in 2 or 3 days.



Happy
cute and cuddly

Sunday! Besos
infinite ...


0 comments:

Post a Comment