Twitter Directory and Search, Find Twitter Followers. 1,500 new UK jobs at Toyota factory. Amritsar- India 28/11/2011 - Amritsar, India Travel Blog. 28th November 2011 – Amritsar, India WHOOOOOHOOOOOOOOOOOOO we did it – Wales to India nearly 5 months.
It's been a few weeks since we had a chance to write a blog, a lot has happened and we had very little access to Wi-Fi and we have had such crazy days that we just never got the opportunity, so here is a few details of what we have been up to….. We never did get to do a hot air balloon in Cappadocia, the weather and local holidays were against us but we did manage to get up at 6am to watch them all taking off, it was such a beautiful sight, there must have been at least 30 balloons From there we put in a few long driving days to get east, we stopped off and wild camped in a restaurant car park half way to Van and then continued on to a hotel in Van City itself. Van turned out to be way more then we bargained for. .
So off to the Iran Border in Kapikoy, as I said the roads were shocking, we had money stuffed everywhere in case we had to bribe anyone. . ! .
Pippa cashes in on her new friends in high places - News - People. The book, a guide to party planning, is due out next Christmas.
It is thought that the author was advised to wait until after the Queen's Diamond Jubilee celebrations, so that nobody could accuse her of exploiting her royal connections, although it's hard to imagine any reason other than her royal connections that would justify a publisher spending so much on a party guide. Even if Ms Middleton promised to come round in person to blow up each purchaser's novelty balloons, the likely book sales still wouldn't justify an outlay of nearly half a million quid. The party tome is a classic Sudden Fame Cash-In Book, a low-brow genre even less dignified than the celebrity memoir. Whereas the latter tends to appear towards the end of a lengthy entertainment career, the former tends to be rushed out in haste soon after the author's first exposure to the public's gaze, for fear that their appeal may not survive the year.
Heroic sportsmen are routinely snapped up for autobiographies. Underinsured drivers 'paying £73m' - Title1. Drivers are finding they have to pay out for damage not covered by their policy, a survey says Motorists collectively pay an extra £73 million a year above their car premiums because they are underinsured, a survey has revealed.
Drivers have forked out more than £368 million over the last five years as their insurance polices did not cover them for a range of common claims, the poll by Sainsbury's car insurance found. In this five-year period, 2.4 million drivers had to foot the bill for replacement car keys and child car seats, transport to get to their destination after an accident, or for post-accident courtesy cars. The average paid out for courtesy cars was £170.67, with the survey showing that 61% of standard car insurance products do not offer a courtesy car as standard. Alternative transport after an accident set drivers back an average of £123, with 60% of policies not covering this.
Dr. Ozzy: 'I'm More Likely To Bite The Head Off A Lettuce These Days' (INTERVIEW) What becomes of our rock and roll heroes?
Some die young and remain as we remember them forever, others grow old and end up selling us car insurance - but only one so far has found a new career as a doctor (well, sort of...). Step forward Black Sabbath legend Ozzy Osbourne, who as well as starring in a reality TV show and releasing a brilliant autobiography (2010's I Am Ozzy) has used his rock retirement to reinvent himself as a medical adviser, culminating in this Christmas' must-have celebrity book Trust Me, I'm Dr Ozzy. He might not have the exact qualifications, but after surviving 40 years of relentless rock n roll debauchery we figured Dr Ozzy must have a thing or two to teach us about growing old in good health... (WARNING: Contains bad language. Naturally). Ozzy - we all know about the bat incident - but is there any animal you definitely would not consider eating?
Moisturizers... waxing kits... how much male grooming is 'too much' in your experience? How to shop online. This hair? Groupon.co.uk. The shoes? Topshop.com, ta very much. Same goes for this outfit (eBay.co.uk), the bra (M&S online), lipstick (Debenhams.com) and the cool song (Friends' "I'm His Girl"; iTunes) playing on a loop in my head. For almost a decade I have bought virtually everything I own online. It's not an addiction: I can stop, I just don't want to.