Thursday 29 March 2012

BEYONCE HAS TO FIND HER OWN WAY AS A MOTHER-SISTER,SOLANGE


Solange Knowles is obviously taking her new responsibility as aunt to sister Beyoncé's daughter very seriously - by leading by fashion example.

On a night out in New York the younger Knowles sister made sure she stunned with her spring fashion choice, sporting a bang-on season yellow and white silk dress and some gorgeous mint-green toe-tap heels.

And it was a night of sisterly bonding for the pair as they met in New York with baby Blue Ivy in tow.


Spring in her step: Solange Knowles stuns in a silk dress as she meets her sister and niece in NYC
Spring in her step: Solange Knowles stuns in a silk dress as she meets her sister and niece in NYC
Spring in her step: Solange Knowles stuns in a silk dress as she meets her sister and niece in NYC

Singer and songwriter Solange, 25, is obviously ready for spring with her bright outfit while her older sister kept the comfortable but chic new mother look in tight leather trousers and comfortable grey hooded top.

Beyoncé, 30, also kept up her new mum style of wearing something blue, this time nail polish for the evening but adding a dash of glamour with some tough-looking shoes.

And her younger sister, who herself is mother to seven-year-old son Julez, must have been keen to see her niece as she has previously described her bond with three-month-old Blue Ivy as 'magnetic'.
Family time: Solange, herself a singer and songwriter, showed off her legs to die for as she went to meet her older sister
Family time: Solange, herself a singer and songwriter, showed off her legs to die for as she went to meet her older sister
Family time: Solange, herself a singer and songwriter, showed off her legs to die for as she went to meet her older sister (right) who kepy Blue Ivy under wraps
She has said her niece is 'beautiful' but always drawn the line at offering advice, citing the importance of new mother's finding their own way.
'I think it's really important for every mother to find their own way' she said. 'I think it's actually the most annoying thing when you're a new mum and you're getting so much advice from other mothers. You really just have to feel it out for yourself.'

Don't mess with Knowles' sisters! As Solange went for steel-capped shoes, her older sibling kept it rock chic with leather lace up high boots
Don't mess with Knowles' sisters! As Solange went for steel-capped shoes, her older sibling kept it rock chic with leather lace up high boots
Don't mess with Knowles' sisters! As Solange went for steel-capped shoes, her older sibling kept it rock chic with leather lace up high boots
Protective: As Beyoncé swaddles Blue Ivy and herself, her sister steps out in spring colours armed with a smile
Protective: As Beyoncé swaddles Blue Ivy and herself, her sister steps out in spring colours armed with a smile
Protective: As Beyoncé swaddles Blue Ivy and herself, her sister steps out in spring colours armed with a smile

Both sisters seem to share a love of unusual footwear with Beyoncé ditching her flats for lace-up high boots and Solange taking the protective aunt step of some steel cap tops, unless she was planning on entertaining Blue Ivy with a tap dance.

Perhaps Solange was stepping out in her spring outfit to show off her toned gorgeous legs as she has revealed as she gets older she is having better physical relationships.


Keeping her close: Blue Ivy was dressed in a light pink baby-gro for her evening out
Family time: Solange, herself a singer and songwriter, showed off her legs to die for as she went to meet her older sister
Keeping her close: Blue Ivy was dressed in a light pink baby-gro for her evening out

 
Come prepared! Mother-of-one Solange takes her sunglasses out to dinner... perhaps to match her sister
Come prepared! Mother-of-one Solange takes her sunglasses out to dinner... perhaps to match her sister

And the singer has already revealed her new album is certainly more sexual than her other work.

She said: 'There’s a lot of sexual vibes on it. I think I just finally started having good sex'

Perhaps this was the subject of a bit of sisterly gossip last night?
source:mail online


















Elton John was bullied as an adult

Sir Elton John has opened up about the bullying he endured after shooting to fame, alleging he was tormented by three "very important people" in his professional life.
The singer refuses to name those involved, but he claims to have suffered nasty abuse at the hands of unscrupulous characters who took advantage of the superstar's shyness.
He tells E! News, "It was about control and them being able to keep me under their thumb. And I was the perfect candidate for it. Even though I was famous and a big deal, it doesn't matter, it's who you are underneath that, and I was always kind of shy and intimidated...
"One was violent and the other two were mentally violent. They were very important people in my life. They were important people in my career and and in my personal life."
The Rocket Man kept his suffering hidden for a long time, but he goes on to urge anyone in a similar situation to speak out, because bullying does not just happen in the schoolyard - it also affects adults.
He adds, "Speak out, speak out. Snitch on them. Try to defend yourself, not like me, who hid it and thought it was OK to just go on like it."
 
source:yahoo

Muamba Twitter Student Could Be Free Tomorrow








A student jailed for mocking footballer Fabrice Muamba on Twitter after he suffered a cardiac arrest could be released in the next 24 hours.

Liam Stacey, 21, was jailed for 56 days on Tuesday after he admitting inciting racial hatred.


He is to appeal against his sentence tomorrow (Friday), and if successful could be freed straight away.

The Swansea University biology undergraduate triggered widespread anger when he tweeted: "LOL (laugh out loud). F*** Muamba. He's dead!!! #haha."

He posted the tweet soon after the Bolton midfielder's collapse during an FA Cup quarter-final tie against Tottenham Hotspur.

Fans at the game and watching on television looked on in horror as medical staff fought to save Muamba's life.

The incident touched hearts around the world but Stacey, who had been drinking, went on line to mock it.


A series of highly critical replies by appalled Twitter users resulted in Stacey launching a racist tirade.

On Tuesday he was led away sobbing from Swansea Magistrates' Court after receiving a jail sentence.

Many supported the punishment, which was widely debated on Twitter , but there were some who felt it was politically motivated.

The appeal, which is expected to last at least one hour, will be heard at Swansea Crown Court by Mr Justice Wyn Williams.

Muamba, 23, was taken to the London Chest Hospital where he is said to be making a steady recovery, although he remains in intensive care.

The FA Cup tie was abandoned after 41 minutes with the score at 1-1. Tottenham won the re-arranged game 3-1 and Muamba was said to be getting updates throughout from his hospital bed.
..


source:yahoo

University Degrees are worthless-Simon Dolan






A British entrepreneur worth more than £100m has said that degrees are “worthless” and that many university courses available across the UK are “ridiculous”.

Self-made multimillionaire Simon Dolan left school at the age of 16 and went on to form a business empire which now turns over close to £100m a year, putting him 703rd on the Sunday Times Rich List.



Simon Dolan at home in his multi-million pound Buckinghamshire pad (Copyright: Rex)

Known for taking risky business ventures, Dolan became recognised as the world’s first “Twitter Dragon” after investing more than £5m of his own money on business pitches composed of no more than 140 characters.

Managing a staff of more than 200 people, he told Yahoo! Finance that “younger, brighter candidates are much more employable” than university graduates.

“No matter what the government say we know that the current system doesn’t work,” he said. “As an employer myself I know a degree is worthless, every other employer I speak to says the same in the main part. University is not the issue of whether you had a good time or not it is the whether you will be employable at the end of it.

“Graduates come out with a self-right to not have to flip burgers even if it is the only job they can get.

"Schools need to educate children to become fully rounded human beings and not make them just pass exams so they can get to university.

"I think a far larger part needs to be taken with how to be useful in an office or work environment."



Dolan’s autobiographical guide book ‘How to make millions without a degree’ has divided opinion but with more than 1.04m young people out of work and thousands more being priced out of university it touches on one of the burning issues of the day. Amid huge opposition to the increase of tuition fees this summer he said that the rise is a “really good idea” as it will overhaul “ridiculous” degrees on offer.

“Formerly university was the place for talented people to go to get higher education for later life,” Mr Dolan said. “It typically wasn’t the place where everyone went…everyone can’t be the most intelligent in society."

A Department for Business, Innovation and Skills spokesperson said: "A degree remains a good investment in the long term and is one of the best pathways to achieving a good job and rewarding career.

“Demand for more highly skilled employees continues to increase. Graduates like everybody else are facing tough times, but the evidence shows they fare better than non-graduates, and their prospects tend to pick up quicker during the recovery”.



culled:yahoo

Racist Tweets About Fabrice Muamba Get Student In Jail














When Bolton's Fabrice Muamba collapsed and his heart stopped for more than an hour, onlookers could only pray. The professionals could do more, defibrillating his heart back into action and saving his life. Meanwhile, a 21-year-old Welsh asshole was merrily Tweeting away that he hoped Muamba was dead, and hurling racial slurs at anyone who called him on it.

Liam Stacey, already suspended from Swansea University and ordered to avoid social networking sites, was sentenced today to 56 days in jail for a "racially aggravated public order offense." He told the court he had been drinking since lunchtime that day when he wrote "LOL Fuck Muamba he's dead !!! #Haha" Later on, after numerous users reported him to police, he claimed his account had been hacked, and later, deleted it altogether. He was arrested at his home early the next morning.

Stacey was near tears at his sentencing, as a judge called the comments "vile and abhorrent" and told him "there is no alternative to an immediate prison sentence." The prosecutor held up the lightning-quick investigation and sentencing as a deterrent:


"Racist language is inappropriate in any setting and through any media. We hope this case will serve as a warning to anyone who may think that comments made online are somehow beyond the law."

So, yes, racism is bad, and society probably won't miss Stacey these 56 days. But it's the sentence and not the crime (or rather, the notion that Tweeting can be a crime) that is most chilling to anyone raised under the totem of the First Amendment. There's the temptation to put this in the context of the FA's anti-racism campaign, but the fact is that the U.K. doesn't have the same concept of protected speech. Stacey isn't even the first Brit this week to be sentenced for racially abusing soccer players on Twitter.

Public-order offenses are used all the time to prosecute things like hate speech (or perhaps thoughtcrime), and there's nothing more public than Twitter. Stacey could have carried a racist placard around White Hart Lane, and fewer people would have been able to see it. I couldn't tell you if this sort of racist shit is common in the U.K., where it's prosecutable, and only the most egregious examples get singled out. But the next time a black American athlete fails or screws up in





Reuters) - A student who mocked footballer Fabrice Muamba on Twitter after the Bolton Wanderers midfielder collapsed during a match was jailed on Tuesday for inciting racial hatred.

Liam Stacey, 21, provoked revulsion with comments made while the Bolton Wanderers star still lay on the pitch.

The 23-year-old midfielder was left fighting for his life after suffering a cardiac arrest during an FA Cup tie against Tottenham Hotspur on March 17.

Fans in the stadium and those viewing on live television watched in horror as Muamba fell to the ground during the quarter-final clash that was abandoned.

Police were inundated with complaints as members of the public, former soccer player Stan Collymore among them, reported the student's comments.

Stacey, a Swansea University third-year biology undergraduate, was quickly tracked down and arrested.

Last week he admitted inciting racial hatred when he appeared at Swansea Magistrates' Court and on Tuesday he was jailed for 56 days at the same court, the Press Association reported.

The first of Stacey's messages began with "LOL (laugh out loud) and said Muamba had died.

Several people took him to task for his views and he responded with a string of offensive comments aimed at other Twitter users.

Muamba remains in intensive care in hospital where his condition is described as serious but stable.

Stacey broke down as he was taken away in handcuffs to a holding cell beneath the court.

District Judge John Charles told him: "In my view there is no alternative to an immediate prison sentence."

The court heard that, when arrested, Stacey admitted his guilt and said he had been drunk at the time.

On the day in question, he had been out watching Wales's rugby grand slam victory and had drunk up to eight pints of beer.

Gareth Jones, defending, said Stacey was completely ashamed of his behaviour.

"On the night in question his comments were vile - he admits that," Jones said.

Stacey has ambitions to become a forensic scientist.

That was now very unlikely, Jones said, and he would "pay dearly for the rest of his life" for what he had done.



MORE MUAMBA RACIST NEWS( culled deadspin.com)













Racist Tweets About Fabrice Muamba Get Student 56 Days In Jail


When Bolton's Fabrice Muamba collapsed and his heart stopped for more than an hour, onlookers could only pray. The professionals could do more, defibrillating his heart back into action and saving his life. Meanwhile, a 21-year-old Welsh asshole was merrily Tweeting away that he hoped Muamba was dead, and hurling racial slurs at anyone who called him on it.

Liam Stacey, already suspended from Swansea University and ordered to avoid social networking sites, was sentenced today to 56 days in jail for a "racially aggravated public order offense." He told the court he had been drinking since lunchtime that day when he wrote "LOL Fuck Muamba he's dead !!! #Haha" Later on, after numerous users reported him to police, he claimed his account had been hacked, and later, deleted it altogether. He was arrested at his home early the next morning.

Stacey was near tears at his sentencing, as a judge called the comments "vile and abhorrent" and told him "there is no alternative to an immediate prison sentence." The prosecutor held up the lightning-quick investigation and sentencing as a deterrent:


"Racist language is inappropriate in any setting and through any media. We hope this case will serve as a warning to anyone who may think that comments made online are somehow beyond the law."

So, yes, racism is bad, and society probably won't miss Stacey these 56 days. But it's the sentence and not the crime (or rather, the notion that Tweeting can be a crime) that is most chilling to anyone raised under the totem of the First Amendment. There's the temptation to put this in the context of the FA's anti-racism campaign, but the fact is that the U.K. doesn't have the same concept of protected speech. Stacey isn't even the first Brit this week to be sentenced for racially abusing soccer players on Twitter.