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Canarian Weekly Issue 666
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WHERE do all the bestBeatles go for a holi-day? Why Tenerife, ofcourse!
Well, three of them did, atleast, way back in 1963, justas they were launching theMersey Invasion, featuringBilly J Kramer, Gerry and thePacemakers and theMerseybeats, plus a host ofother groups.
And just as they popularisedtheir home town Liverpoolwith their dazzling brand ofpop music for many years, soLiverpool is about to spreadthe Tenerife gospel in theshape of a rare photographexhibition featuring the FabFour in their early days.
The collection, whichincludes snapshots of George,Paul and Ringo during theirstay in Tenerife - John Lennon
and manager Brian Epsteindecided on mainland Spain -will be on view in Liverpoolfrom next Wednesday (25thAugust) until the end of nextJanuary.
The exhibition of AstridKircherr’s work will be dis-played in the University ofLiverpool’s Victoria Gallery &Museum, for all to see.
The collection featuresmore than 70 pictures, previ-
ously unseen, taken by theGerman photographer, whomet the band in 1960 whilethey were playing in Hamburgnightclubs.
Astrid was engaged toStuart Sutcliffe, the Beatlesoriginal bass player who diedfrom a brain haemorrhage in1962. She was the first per-son to take studio shots ofthe group.
Her work also includes 1964images of the Fab Four takenin Liverpool during the makingof the film, A Hard Day’sNight, and shots of the city asit appeared in the Sixties.
She said: “I am delighted tocome back to Liverpool toshow my photographs at the
Victoria Gallery and Museum,having enjoyed seeingStuart’s work in the samevenue in 2009.”
Matthew Clough, museumdirector, said: “The primaryfocus of this exhibition is todemonstrate Astrid’s work asa significant 20th Centuryphotographer.
“Astrid is known for herphotographs of the Beatles inHamburg, but her images ofLiverpool in the early 60s pro-vide a unique snapshot of aparticular moment in its his-tory.”
The three Beatles spentnearly a fortnight chilling outin La Montañeta, near LosRealejos, Puerto de la Cruz,
and their stay has been indocumented in a recent bookby local historian Nicolás GLemus.
They had just recordedtheir first album, Please,Please me, which had gonestraight to No1, and wereobviously on their way tointernational fame and a hugefortune.
Beatlemania was taking offrapidly, and the following yearthey became the first Britishband to conquer America.
The Fab Four actuallyreturned to Spain in 1965 asglobal superstars, when theyplayed in front of packedvenues in Madrid andBarcelona,
T E N E R I F E ’ S O N L Y W E E K L Y N E W S P A P E R
Issue 666 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 www.canarianweekly.com FREE
F R E E
Opp. Paloma Beach Apts, CC Costamar, Los Cristianos and Las Chafiras
Come & See our *NEW LOOK* Store,in Los Cristianos - now Bigger & better!
The home of good shopping
Liverpool to spreadTenerife gospel withrare Beatle pictures
Here comesthe sun!
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 03
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THE SECOND Vice-President and Ministerof Economy andFinance, ElenaSalgado, Minister ofDevelopment andJose Blanco, met todiscuss the budget ofthis department forthe year 2011.
The arrival of additionalfunds is going to benefit,according to the Minister,more than 50 areas.
In his appearance aftermeeting with the Minister of
Public Works, José Blanco,the Second Deputy PrimeMinister and Minister ofEconomy, Elena Salgado, saidthat “the stability of marketsand some small domesticadjustment on initial fore-casts allow in 2011an addi-tional margin for the figuresof at least 500 millioneuros.“
The Vice President pointedout that this figure is includ-ed in the spending limitapproved by Parliament,which exceeds 122,000 mil-lion euros, and will notaffect the goal of cuttingthe deficit to 6%, as the
compromise reached withthe European Union.
As he explained, indicatingthe first budget figureswere sent to ministries weremade in a time of increasedvolatility in financial markets.In the words of the Minister,now has established stability,particularly after the publi-cation of stress tests.
The Minister of PublicWorks has indicated that upto 50 works will benefit nextyear with additional funds.
They recalled that, as inParliament, the adjustmentin relation to public invest-ment is severe and must
seek greater efficiency. Inthis regard, attention was tobe addressed “a reflectionon how to finance invest-ment.”
However, he noted that thedecline in revenue driven bythe decline in housing activi-ty was detected in 2008, sothat “last year in the budgetwe made the tax changeswhich we believe were nec-essary to meet our objec-tives deficit. “ From this per-spective, we’re assured that“the tax structure we havenow is sufficient, so thatreforms are envisaged in thisregard.”
Spain sets aside500m euros forits 2011 budget
In two monthsCunard‘s new liner,Queen Elizabeth willbe unveiled, but theart deco-inspired shipis quickly taking shape.
A total of 2,092 passen-gers are booked on hermaiden voyage, all the struc-tural work is now done andit’s possible to see what shewill look like when she iscompleted.
Her first trip is around Spainand out to the Canary Islands.
The 90,400-ton cruise shipis the latest offering from
the historic Cunard cruisecompany and her launch hasbeen anticipated among loyalCunard cruisers since the lux-urious Queen Victoria set sailthree years ago.
Such is the anticipation sur-rounding Queen Elizabeth’slaunch, the 13-night maidenvoyage in October sold outwithin just half an hour ofbecoming available.
Emerging from Fincantieri’sMonfalcone shipyard in Italy inOctober, her first world tripwill start from Southamptonon January 5, 2011 - a 103-night sailing which includes 38stops in 23 countries.
Ship ahoy
A WORD FROMOUR EDITOREmail: [email protected]
News www.canarianweekly.com
Page 04 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
The Canarian Weeklythis week reaches edi-tion 666. As soon asyou mention this topeople they say –“The Devil”. The num-ber – 666 – is oftenreferred to as thenumber of the Beast,which is a conceptfrom the Book ofRevelation of the NewTestament of theChristian Bible, relat-ing to the figure of“The Beast”.
The number 666 is in mostmanuscripts of the NewTestament, and in moderntranslations and critical edi-tions of the Greek text.Although Irenaeus (2nd cen-tury AD) affirmed the num-ber to be 666 and reportedseveral scribal errors of thenumber, there is still doubt bysome theologians about theoriginal reading, as somerecently-discovered 3rd cen-tury early manuscripts ofRevelation read 616.
This topic is a source of con-tention for many churchgroups and theologians. Mostscholars contend that thenumber 666 is a code for theRoman Emperor Nero,
according to Wikipedia.In the U.S. Route 491 (US
491) is a north–south U.S.Highway serving the FourCorners region of the UnitedStates. One of the newestdesignations in the U.S.Highway system, it was creat-ed in 2003 as a renumberingof U.S. Route 666.
With the 666 designation,this road was nicknamedDevil’s Highway because ofthe common Christian beliefthat 666 is the Number ofthe Beast. This satanic conno-tation, combined with a highfatality rate along the NewMexico portion, convincedsome people the highway wascursed. The problem wascompounded with chronicsign theft.
These factors led to twoefforts to renumber thehighway, first by officials inArizona, later in New Mexico.Since the renumbering, as aresult of safety improvementprojects, fatality rates havedecreased.Did you know?
666 is the magic sum, orsum of the magic constantsof a six by six magic square,any row or column of whichadds up to 111.
It’s also the sum of all thenumbers on a roulette wheel.
666 was the original nameof the Macintosh SevenDustcomputer virus that was dis-covered in 1998.
Devil edition
Spanish TrafficAuthority startsto target theirforeign drivers
SPEED TRAPS in Spainare being adapted toread foreign numberplates.
The DGT Spanish trafficauthority has announced anew system to fine foreigndrivers who exceed the speedlimit. Previously many driversin foreign number-plated carsescaped punishment.
The new system has been
installed on four speed trapswhere there is a high numberof foreign drivers – the AP-7in Castellón, the A7 in Murcia,the A-31 in Alicante and theA-52 in Zamora.
It’s understood that specialadaptors on these speedtraps are designed to catchforeign motorists, that somehave been operational sincethe start of the summer, andthe rest will be so this week.
When the speed trapdetects a foreign numberplate breaking the speed limita photograph is taken andthen related to the DGT cen-tre in León where such finesare processed. At the sametime local Trafico agents inthe area receive an automat-ed message with details ofthe infraction so that theycan personally inform thedriver of the vehicle.
According to the DeputyDirector of the DGT, FedericoFernández, it has been shownthat between 30% and 40%of the speeding drivers in thesummer have foreign numberplates.
The news comes amid adebate in the media in Spainas to whether traffic finesare effective in saving lives,or a just another way for theGovernment to raise funds.
ADEJE, TENERIFE SouthIndian Association and theHindu Cultural Centre, in col-laboration with the ConsulateGeneral of India in Tenerifeand Yogosastra, are holdingthis Sunday, August 22nd,the first Yoga Festival deCanarias, which expects fourthousand people.
This festival will be held inthe sports hall of El Galleon,from 9:00 to 18:30, and on thebeach at La Enramada, fromseven-thirty in the evening.
According to the organis-ers, the festival’s mainobjective is to bring the
practice of yoga to the gen-eral public and raise aware-ness of the benefits thatthis discipline has to healthfrom the standpoint of pre-vention and also useful inimproving the welfare physi-cal, mental and emotional.
Yoga courses, with specificsessions for children, youthand adults and older, will becoordinated by teachers ofvarious schools of yoga on theisland and will be supervised bythe guest of honor of theevent Saraswatiji SwamiChidananda, who is the spiritu-al leader of Rishikesh, India.
Yoga Festival - Adeje
www.canarianweekly.com News
Friday 20th August – Sunday 22nd AugustLas GalletasThis weekend sees the culmination of the fiesta in Las Galletas.Friday night party with the great ‘Orquesta Revelación’. OnSaturday there are events throughout the day and the end ofthe fiesta - Sunday sees a big firework display and music pro-vided by ‘Orquesta Diamente’ - “Fin de Fiesta”.
Friday 20th and Saturday 21st AugustNoche de Boleros – Los CristianosFriday and Saturday see a musical extravaganza in the portarea of Los Cristianos. From 9.30pm on Friday, performersinclude:- José Manuel Ramos, Chago Melián, Sergio Núñez,Nauzet, Alba, Pepe Barrios, Beatriz Alonso, Alexis Miranda,María José Cámara y Alma de Bolero.If you like Cuban rhythms on Saturday 21st from 15.30 enjoymusic from ‘Clave de Son’. Then at 21.00pm watch Olga Cerpaand Mestisay ‘Pequeño Fado’.
Santa CruzUntil Sunday 22nd AugustTEA Tenerife Espacio de las ArtesNearly 10,000 people have seen the Picasso exhibition whichdraws to a close this weekend at the Tenerife Espacio de lasArtes in the island’s capital. You have until Sunday to view ‘Lasseñoritas de Avignon’
San Cristóbal Castle, Santa Cruz 1st Aug 2010 - 30th Sep 2010Monday to Sunday Time: 11:00 - 19:00The Castillo San Cristóbal visitor’s centre has reopened itsdoors to the public in the Plaza de España, Santa Cruz.It was closed following the heavy rains that devastated theisland on February 1st.The ‘Castillo de San Cristóbal’ Visitor’s Centre features an exhi-bition of Tenerife’s old defence system. It offers informationfrom its construction in 1575 to its demolition in 1928. Sincethe 25th of July 2009, the ‘Castillo de San Cristóbal’ Visitor’sCentre has had an added attraction to delight both local andforeign visitors: the legendary ‘El Tigre’ cannon. Although it cannot be demonstrated historically, popular beliefsays that the famous British admiral Horacio Nelson was injuredand lost his arm thanks to this ‘El Tigre’ cannon.
Compañía Nacional de Danza Tickets are on sale during August for performances by theCompañía Nacional de Danza 2, which takes place in theSymphonic Hall in Tenerife’s Auditorium on the 6th and 7th ofNovember.Tickets can be purchased by calling 902 317 327 (between10:00 and 19:00 Mondays to Fridays), in the Auditorium’s ticketoffice (between 10:00 and 15:00 Mondays to Fridays and 10:00to 14:00 on Saturdays), in CajaCanarias multiservice terminals,or online at www.auditoriodetenerife.com. The history of the Compañía Nacional de Danza is firmly linkedto Spain’s most recent past. The main objective of the company is to train and preparedancers for professional dancing and serve as a link between,dance schools and professional dance companies such as theCompañia Nacional de Danza. Its repertoire is principally madeup of works by Nacho Duato, although works by young chore-ographers have gradually been incorporated, allowing dancersto keep up to date with new trends and incorporate them intotheir performances. The aim of this project is to inspire youngdancers, to arouse interest in contemporary dance amongstyoung audiences and add to the range of cultural activities onoffer in Spain.
WHATS ON
THE SECOND LozScott Memorial GolfDay will be takingplace on Saturday 4thSeptember, at AdejeGolf Course (A/B)Anyone wishing totake part can contactChaz on 672 583 081.
If you wish to raise a bottleof Heineken to Los thenafterwards you can meet usfrom 2pm onwards atGoodfellas Pool Bar, Dinastia.
Loz ScottMemorialGolf Day
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 05
ICELAND is continuingto defy the EuropeanUnion and Norwayover its controversialmackerel quota withtwo of its main fishingcompanies announc-ing maximum effort.
In fact one of them,Samherji, has brought the7,800 ton Kristina EA, thelargest ship in the Icelandicfishing fleet up from theCanary islands to hunt formackerel and herring inIcelandic waters.
Kristina (previously theEngey RE) came in to theownership of Samherji threeyears ago and has been on
hire since then, fishing offthe shores of Africa. TheCaptain of Kristina EA isArngrímur Brynjólfsson andhis crew counts 35. The ship isequipped with powerful andhighly technical processingand freezing machinery andthe catch will all be processedon board.
Meanwhile, HB Grandi’spelagic fleet is back in the huntfor mackerel and herring aftera short break. All three vesselsstopped fishing recently to fitin with the Vopnafjördur fac-tory’s break in production and
are back at sea now to haveraw material for production toresume next week. So far thisseason HB Grandi’s pelagic ves-sels have landed 7300 tonnesof Atlanto-Scandian herring,with 23,000 tonnes remainingof their quota. The companysays that catches of mackerelhave been heavier, with 11,150tonnes landed so far, leaving4,400 tonnes of the quota tobe caught.
Up to last weekend the totalcatch by Icelandic vessels was75,000 metric tons, 58 percent of its self declared quota
of 130,000 tons. The FaroeIslands have also given them-selves a quota of 85,000 tons,much to the anger of the EU.Yesterday the ScottishFishermen’s Federation urgedthe Faroese to give up thequota.
The Icelandic Fishing VesselOwners Association has saidthat its country has “everyright to fish for mackerel with-in the Icelandic jurisdiction”just as Norway and the EUhave the right to fish formackerel in their respectivejurisdictions.
A fishy tale
IT WAS quite a wake-up call for about 135passengers on anovernight train head-ed to Milan, Italy. Theywoke up inSwitzerland instead.
The traveller’s had boardedthe Salvador Dali train inBarcelona, headed for Italy’sfashion capital. But some timein the middle of the night, sig-nallers in Lyon, France, sentthe train more than 150 miles
off course to Zurich, theTelegraph newspaper reports.
Apparently the mishapoccurred when several cars ofthe train were split andFrench workers were unsurewhich cars were going where.
The train company – runjointly by Spanish train opera-tor Renfe and French SNCF –figured out the mistake asthe train neared Geneva,Switzerland and redirectedthe coach to Zurich, wherepassengers awoke to the sky-scrapers of Switzerland’s
financial city – not exactly theview they were expecting.
They transferred to anothertrain and actually got to Milan
four hours behind schedule.Still, the embarrassed trainoperator offered everyone afull refund.
Wake up in a different city…
Page 06 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
News www.canarianweekly.com
TOUR companiesThomson and FirstChoice have set up afabulous, fund-raisingraffle for Live Aricoand the Family HolidayAssociation, featuringspectacular prizes.
The raffle has been organ-ised by the firms’ Flight SeatSales department, and localresidents are especiallyencouraged to come into theThomson flights office in CCEl Duque (opposite theTorviscas market) in theCentro Comercial to buy theraffle tickets, which cost justone euro each.
There are several temptingprizes to be won, including:
One-week stay for two(half-board) at the four-starHotel Los Gigantes
One-week for two at thethree-star Hotel Paraiso Floral
Three nights half-board fortwo at the four-star Hotel Sol,Puerto de la Cruz
Weekend for two half-boardat four-star Hotel El Tope
Weekend for two half-boardat either Hotel Arona Gran,Vulcano or Vitacora
The tickets will be on saleuntil Friday, 10th September,when the grand draw will bemade, and all winners will becontacted by telephone.
Further details can also beobtained from the Thomsonoffice. The unusual raffle is allin aid of two worthy causes,so don’t be shy, give it a try!
Luxury breaks arejust the ticket...
THE CABILDO ofTenerife hasannounced the firstedition of the “Isla deTenerife” LandscapingPrize
The goal of this initiative isto raise awareness of andreward those actions beingcarried out by differentsocial organisations on theisland to preserve and/orimprove the landscape ofTenerife, and through thepositive example set bythese actions to highlightthe importance of protect-ing our landscape andencouraging its care andappreciation.
Three different categories,designed to award differentinitiatives and groups, havebeen named:
Category 1: ‘Improved inte-gration of business premisesinto the landscape’, aimed atsmall and medium businesses(less than 250 employees) inTenerife whose premises arevisible from any of the roadsin the island’s transport net-work and which have beenimproved in order to enhancetheir integration into the nat-ural environment and land-scape.
Category 2: ‘Good publiclandscaping practice’, aimedat non-profit organisations(residents’ associations, cul-tural groups, ecologicalgroups, etc.) on the island ofTenerife which have carriedout renovation, integration orawareness-raising projectsthat have resulted in animprovement to the land-scape of Tenerife.
Category 3: ‘Using shortfilms to raise awarenessamong the young populationabout the protection of theisland’s landscape’, open toshort films of between 1 and15 minutes in duration andmade by people between theages of 18 and 30, the sub-ject matter of which shouldbe the promotion of theappreciation of Tenerife’s
landscapes, the contributionof ideas for the improvementof the landscape, and therespect and involvement ofthe young people of theisland in its conservation.
Although the most impor-tant thing for those partici-pating in this contest will bethe social and institutionalrecognition that it affords,along with the public recogni-tion of their efforts and theadditional publicity for theprizewinners’ activities, afinancial reward for the first-and second-place prizewin-ners in each category has alsobeen arranged.
This edition has beenorganised in collaborationwith the European Networkof Local and RegionalAuthorities for theImplementation of theEuropean LandscapeConvention (RECEP-ENELC),of which this organisation isa member.
The deadline for present-ing entries is the 17th ofSeptember and the condi-tions and their appendixescan be consulted in OfficialProvincial Bulletin (BOP) no.160, of the 12th of August2010. For more information,call 922 843 472 or 922 239719.
Isla de Tenerife
THE ANGLICAN Chaplaincy OfSaint Francis will resume its6pm Sunday service at theSan Blas Church, Golf del Sur,on 19th September.Other servicesHoly Eucharist in English(from 6th Sept): SanEugenio, Playa de LasAmericas - Sunday, 10.15am;Wednesday, 10.15am.Espiritu Santo: Los GigantesSunday, 6pm; Thursday,10.30am.For baptisms, confessions,funerals, wedding blessings,pastoral care or counselling,call Fr Keith Gordon on 679660 277 or 922 742 045, or go to www.tenerifechurch.com
www.canarianweekly.com News
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 07
NIKKI ATTREE, digitalartist and photogra-pher, runs a websitefor unfortunatepooches here in thesouth of the Island.
And she is keen to includeeven more missing dogs, andthose who have been foundroaming the streets
If you can send Nikki somedetails (ideally with a photo)via [email protected] will upload them on the ‘Lost and Found’ page of her website:www.TenerifeDogs.com
You never know, perhapsyour beloved dog will bereunited with you, or thatnervous stray, who has beenhanging around, is recognisedby someone.
This website aims to
encourage more people toadopt abandoned dogs andhelp them find their perfectpooch.
It has a ‘Find-a-Dog’ listwith a selection who arelooking for a home, alongwith some success stories(Happy Tails), and pages ofuseful information in theform of FAQs, articles, andlinks.
So please visit and book-mark TenerifeDogs.com ...but be warned: once youtake a look at the cute dog-gies on the website, you maywell find one that leaps offthe screen and tugs at yourheart-strings.
Nikki, whose digitally-enhanced photographs arebecoming extremely popu-lar, says: “Before you knowit, you might have a newfriend sharing your home.”
Nikki puts straysin the picture
A BRITISH woman,who abandoned her11-year-old daughteron a Salou beach fortwo hours to go booz-ing, was given a six-month prison sen-tence in Tarragona onTuesday.
But as she has no previousrecord, and because the termwas less than two years,
under Spanish law, she wasgiven a suspended sentence.
The alarm was raised bythe parents of another child,who was playing with thegirl. They took the child backto her hotel, and staff theredecided to call the police.The mother was later founddrunk by police in a nearbybar. The girl was taken to thepolice station and Child Protection servicesthen took her to a specialistcentre.
Mum dumps childfor bar booze-up
Anglicans back at San Blas
FACEBOOK hasunveiled a new fea-ture that lets mem-bers share theirwhereabouts withfriends while on themove.
Facebook Places is the socialnetworking site’s first stepinto location-based servicesfor people who own smart-phones equipped with satel-lite position tracking capabili-ties.
Members can “check-in” atrestaurants, bars, or othersocial venues and let theirfriends at the social networkinstantly know where theyare and with whom.
The launch includes an appli-cation for iPhone handsets,and members with smart-phones featuring web brows-er software supporting geo-location and HTML5 can use itat the mobile websitetouch.facebook.com.
The feature is initially onlyavailable in the US and whilethe company will eventuallyroll it out worldwide to its 500million users, a spokesman forFacebook UK said its releasehere was some months away.
“If you are not in the US youcan still see if friends areusing it here but you will notbe able to check-in,” Facebookfounder Mark Zuckerberg saidat the launch event at thefirm’s headquarters inCalifornia.
Facebook says privacy is akey feature of Places andusers could control who theyshare location informationwith.
The site has previously beencriticised for failing to safe-guard the information mem-bers post on their profiles.
The commercial potentialwith Places is with users beingable to declare wherever theyare whenever they want,opening themselves up tooffers, suggestions or adver-tisements about nearby busi-nesses.
Facebook said it had noimmediate plans to pursuethis, but the advertising mar-ket driven by small businessessuch as restaurants andstores is estimated in the tens
of billions of dollars a year inthe United States alone andhas attracted online compa-nies like Google and Yelp.
The feature has been intro-duced as improved GPS tech-nology in handheld phoneshas seen location-based socialnetworking services likeGowalla and Foursquarebecome increasingly popular
Their members let friendssee where they are and auto-matically update Facebookprofiles with the information.
“This validates that we areonto something,” Foursquarevice-president of partner-ships Holger Luedorf said atthe Places launch.
“We definitely want to helppeople connect their onlineand offline worlds.”
Facebook putsplaces on themap for users
Wildlife experts havesaid reports of acolony of giant ratsneed to be investigat-ed after a hugerodent was shot deadon a West Yorkshirehousing estate.
The culled super rat meas-ured 30in (2.5ft) - making it asbig as a bulldog - and twicethe size of a normal rat.
Experts believe it could be adescendent of the coypuspecies, a large SouthAmerican rodent not seen inBritain for two decades.
Brandon Goddard, 31, whoshot the rat, said voluminousvermin have been invadinghomes on the Ravenscliffeestate in Bradford.
He saw four others of thesame size as he fired on thegroup with an air rifle.
Mr Goddard told The Sun:“They were more like Ratzillasthan rats. “I got out of there
as fast as I could. Who knowshow many there will be ifthey’ve been breeding?”
Brandon, a manager at acleaning firm, said: “The firstwent right past, but we gotthe second one. Then threemore got away.
“I’ve seen thousands of ratsduring the course of my workand go shooting a couple oftimes a week. But I’ve neverseen any as big as this.
“The one I shot wasabsolutely terrifying. I wasshaking. Goodness knowswhere the others went. I’mglad I don’t live there.”
People living on theRavenscliffe estate said largerats often invade their homesand council officials havebeen called out to eradicatethe problem.
Ratzilla
Page 08 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
News www.canarianweekly.com
Holiday raffle bonanzaDetails of a fantastic, fund-
raising raffle run by ThomsonHolidays and First Choice inaid of Live Arico and theFamily Holiday Association canbe found on Page 6.
Please, please, read thestory, buy some tickets andhelp our dogs (and the FHA) inthe process.Tired of boot sales?
Sell your unwanted items ina more tranquil environmentevery Sunday at the TerraceBar, Amarilla Golf, from 11-3pm. At just five euros pertable and proceeds comingdirectly to Live Arico, we areexpecting these events to bea huge success. Call Ruth toreserve your table on 636306 397Upcoming events
Next Sunday (29th Aug)there will be a benefit night atLegends Bar, near LosCristianos Market, from 9pm.It will be hosted by Suzy Q,with guests includingMichaela as Tina Turner andmore to be confirmed nextweek. Come and join us
On Sunday,19th September,we be holding a benefit at LaGuagua, Fañabe Beach front.Details to be confirmed nextweek.
The following Wednesday(22nd Sept), we will be stag-ing a fund-raiser at the OceanView Bar, Hotel Comodoro,Los Cristianos. Tickets are justsix euros and include liveentertainment, plus a deli-cious pie-and-pea supper. Call
Suzy on 629 388 102 to getyour tickets, or call into thebar.Revised adoption procedures
A minimum 50-euro dona-tion for an adopted male dog,and 75 euros for a female, isnow required by Live Arico.This is paid direct to HospivetSur on collection of your newpet, which will be chipped,neutered, vaccinated andwormed.South Tenerife RescueCentre
We have sold 509 squaremetres of land up to now,making a total of 2,545 euros.
The plan to buy our ownplot of land remains, possiblyeven where we are now rent-ing, so are you prepared tobuy a square metre of landfor Live Arico?
At just five euros, you willreceive a certificate fromLive Arico for now, and yourname and number of squaremetres purchased will be ona Roll of Honour at the newrefuge.Live Arico Shop news (in asso-ciation with Tenerife Nursingand Care)
As you probably know bynow, the shop is now on thefrontline of Coral Mar, atground level, next door to theCoral Bar.
This makes life far easier foreveryone: cars unloading canpark right outside, and ourelderly and disabled cus-tomers no longer have tonegotiate the stairs.
We now have a fantastic
range of hand-made cardsfor all occasions. They aredecorated beautifully andcost from two euros.
We are also grateful foritems of furniture as we areworking in conjunction withFish for Furniture, at LosAbrigos and Idea, in Adeje. CallRick to arrange pick-ups.
We are also grateful toreceive any donations of catand dog food at the shop.
Through popular demand,the shop is now open at thefollowing times: Mon-Fri: 10-4pm. Sat: 10-2. Sunday:Closed. The shop will also beopen when there’s an eventon in Coral Mar Square, Live Arico hot lines
For any questions about theshop, the dogs or Live Arico,or if you would like to make adonation and need somebodyto pick it up, call Debbie onthe number below. Important telephone num-bers
Eugenio: 649 001 907 (call ifyou find an animal abandonedor in distress)
Suzy Q: 629 388 102 (fund-raising, press releases, prizedonations, etc.)
Pete Holland: 661 099 365(Poochies Pet Hotel forboarding your dog)
Rick: 639 207 064 (shopdonations and collections)
Debbie Gibson: 637 918 158You can also read about us
at www.livearico.orghttp://twitter.com/tenerife-dogs or http://tenerife-dogs.blogspot.com
Update onLive Arico
SINGER Alejandro Sanzreleased his album‘Paraíso Express’ in2009 after threeyears of silence and isnow to visit the islandwith new songs abouthis favourite topics.
His tour of 26 Spanish andtwelve American citiesbegan on the 1st of May inthe Los Califas bullring inCordoba. He is scheduled toperform one of these con-certs next week in Adejebefore performing again inLatin America from October
to December. This is thefirst time that a concert ofthis type has been organisedin Europe: the stage hasthree led lamp screens, ‘likea grid’, explains Sanz, posi-tioned above him to give a3D effect, ‘to simulatemovements, or in case it
rains’. During the concert hewill be performing some ofhis new tracks, such as ‘Yohice llorar hasta a los ánge-les’, ‘Nuestro amor seráleyenda’, ‘Looking forParadise’ and ‘Mi Peter Punk’,as well as a selection of hisall-time-favourites, including‘Corazón partío’, ‘Cuandonadie me ve’ and ‘Viviendodeprisa’, which was one ofhis first hits.
Alejando Sanz the concerttakes place on Saturday the28th of August from 20:00at the Adeje football field.Tickets are now on sale.More information 922 280564.
‘Paraíso Express’stops off in Adeje
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 09
www.canarianweekly.com News
ASTURIAS, the CanaryIslands and Murcia,the communitiesmost in demand offoreign professionals.
Doctors, engineers andtechnicians in various sectorsare the employment sectorsthat need to be filled mostlyin Asturias, the Canary Islandsand Murcia, these are offeredto non-EU foreign profession-als who want to come toSpain.
According to the latest listof open occupations, pub-lished by the PublicEmployment Service eachquarter, doctors from differ-ent specialisms, continue to
lead these vacancies in theabsence of doctors inAsturias, Baleares, Canarias,Castilla y León, Cataluña ,Murcia, Ceuta and Melilla.
Murcia has been in greatdemand for doctors for sev-eral years, and in this casejobs advertised are for theseprofessionals in general medi-cine, rehabilitation, orthope-dics, anesthesiology, cardio-vascular surgery, pediatrics,digestive, psychiatry andoccupational medicine.
Jobs are for electrical tech-nicians, plant managers, doc-tors, engineers, techniciansand pharmacists, amongother professionals are avail-able.
Desperatelyseeking…
THE PRESIDENT of theFederation of MunicipalitiesCanaria (FECAM), Lázaro BritoHernández, called on all themunicipalities of the CanaryIslands to convene a minuteof silence today (Friday), inthe municipalities, in memoryof the victims of the Spanair
plane crash that happened inBarajas airport the same dayin 2008 that killed 154 peo-ple.
With this simple gesture,FECAM added its solidarityand support to the affectedfamilies of this terrible aircrash.
A two Yearanniversary
THOMAS COOK staff from theHoliday Division office in theZentral Center, Playa de LasAmerica, are staging a 12kmcharity walk in aid of thecompany’s Children’s Charityon Monday (23rd Aug).
They are starting in frontof the Arona Gran Hotel in
Los Cristianos and walking allalong the front to the CostaAdeje Palace, in La Caleta.
The walk starts at 5pmand, hopefully, will finisharound 7.30pm. Interested intaking part? Then get your-self along to the Arona GranHotel.
Striding outfor charity
THREE PEOPLE, includ-ing a 10-year-old boy,remained in hospitalyesterday (Thursday)with injuries sufferedwhen a bull chargedinto a crowd of terri-fied spectators at abullring in Spain.
Spanish television showeddramatic images of scream-ing spectators, including chil-dren, frantically trying toavoid the rampaging animalafter it leapt several metresover a security barrier andthen clambered over a fenceand into the crowded standsWednesday evening.
The animal stumbled aroundthe stands before fallingdown several steps, crushingmore people, at the bullring inthe town of Tafalla, in thenorthern Navarra region.
Several employees of thebullring finally managed to geta rope around the bull afterabout 15 minutes, and it waskilled and removed by a crane.
The Navarra regional gov-ernment said 32 people weretreated at hospitals and clin-ics. Most suffered minorinjuries such as bruising andwere released, but threeremained hospitalisedThursday.
A 10-year-old boy was inserious but stable conditionwith “abdominal trauma”after the bull fell on him, itsaid in a statement.
A 23-year-old woman wasbeing treated for a crushedvertebrae, and a 47-year-oldman for wounds sufferedwhen he was gored in thelower back. Both were in sta-ble condition.
In addition to the 32, “sever-al more” suffered shock orminor scratches and bruises,the statement said.
The incident did not takeplace during a traditional bull-
fight but during a contest of“recortadores”, in which par-ticipants try to dodge the bullwhile staying as close to it aspossible.
The bull, named Quesero,had already twice tried tojump the barrier during theevent, breaking one of itshorns, and was about to beremoved from the arenawhen it launched itself intothe crowd.
“I was terrified. I ran out ofthe stadium, crying,” oneyoung woman told the televi-sion of the neighbouringBasque region.
Another young woman said,“people started to fall overeach other... Then I couldn’tfind my friends, what hap-pened was awful.”
“I have never felt so afraid.I’m still shaking,” one of thoseinjured told the ABC newspa-per.
“The bull had already made afew attempts, but I was rela-tively calm. And suddenly, Isaw that the animal hadjumped and, after stayingstuck on the fence for a fewseconds, it came over. Thenthere was chaos... There wasstomping, pushing, shrieks,blows.“
The Navarra governmentsaid most of the spectatorswere young people who wereable to react in time to avoidthe bull, or the number ofcasualties could have been farhigher.
Such incidents are veryunusual at bullfights.Although the animals occa-sionally manage to leap thesecurity barrier they veryrarely get into the stands.
Wednesday’s incident cameamid intense debate in Spainover the centuries-old tradi-tion of bullfighting.
The northeastern region ofCatalonia last month becamethe first part of mainlandSpain to ban the practice,which animal activists con-demn as a form of tortureand others see as part ofthe country’s cultural her-itage.
In a recent opinion poll, 60percent of Spaniards saidthey do not approve of thespectacle, which ends withthe death of the bull from awell-placed sword.
Navarra, where Tafalla islocated, is famous for the tra-ditional “running of the bulls”in the regional capital ofPamplona.
Dozens of people areinjured each year when therunners try to outrace bullswhich charge through the oldtown’s narrow streets to abullring where a bullfight isstaged.
Raging bull
LIVE ARICO havedialled up a communi-
cation company whoplan to spread theword - and raisemoney for the popu-lar animal refuge.
Peace Communication SL,who launch in Tenerife laterthis year, plan to join forceswith Live Arico and otherselect charities, donating upto 50% of its profits to thesecharities
With this in mind, a teamfrom the company haveentered this year’s 12-dayLanka Challenge, to raisefunds for their selected char-ities (Live Arico in Tenerife,Cancer Research UK, and SOSChildren in Sri Lanka).
The Challenge, which startsnext Saturday (28th August)consists of a race around SriLanka in a tuk-tuk (themotorised rickshaws common
in the Far East) coupled withchallenges which take inadventurous, cultural andecological activities, all involv-ing the local community.
Peace Communication arelooking for team sponsorsand any donations, big orsmall. All monies raised inTenerife will be split equallybetween Live Arico and SOSChildren in Sri Lanka (anorphanage project which theteam will be visiting whilethey are in Sri Lanka).
Donations can be madedirect to Live Arico by callingDebbie on 637 918 158 or Suzion 629 338 102, or by visitingcommunity4peace.co.uk andclicking on the donation but-ton.
You will be able to follow theteam’s progress through thetowns and jungles of Sri Lankaon the company’s blog site
www.communication4peace.co.uk/lankablog which will beupdated with daily videos andblogs.
The Peace team - Frank andJake Livingstone, plus KevinDorland - have decided thatdriving a tuk-tuk through atotal wilderness may not beentertaining enough.
So they are convertingtheirs into a mobile disco andplan to entertain the otherteams and local communitiesalong the way.
The team are being followedby Kevin Lee and SheilaCockwell, who will film asmuch of the challenge as pos-sible for the blog.
For further details of PeaceCommunication and theirChallenge, [email protected] or www.tradecommuni-cation.co.uk
Page 10 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
News www.canarianweekly.com
GOOGLE’S “StreetView” mapping fea-ture, in the news thisweek after a little girlwas filmed pretendingto be dead at the sideof a Worcester road,is being investigatedin Spain.
It is the latest country totangle with the Internetsearch giant over concernsthat it violates people’s priva-cy while taking shots ofstreets.
Madrid Judge RaquelFernandino has issued a sub-poena for a 4th Octoberappearance by a Google rep-resentative. Google Spainspokeswoman Marisa Torosaid the company would co-operate fully.
A complaint about Googlewas filed in June by APEDANI-CA, a private Internet watch-dog and technology consul-tancy.
The judge is inquiring intowhether Google committed a“computer crime”, saysAPEDANICA lawyer ValentinPlaya.
The Spanish probe is the lat-est since Google acknowl-edged that the technologyused by its “Street View” carshad inadvertently recordedfragments of people’s onlineactivities, broadcast overpublic Wi-Fi networks for thepast four years.
The Californian companysaid it collected such datafrom public Wi-Fi networks inmore than 30 countries. Butit is adamant that it neveruses the data and hasn’t bro-ken any laws.
Spain joinsanti-Googlecampaigns
PAUL LEE, who is atribute to the singerMeatloaf, is one of aneight-man team ofswimmers tackling anunusual, 16.8km taskfor charity tomorrow(Saturday).
The group plan to snorkel allthe way from Alcala to PuertoColon, in relay style, to raisefunds for Cancer Research hereand in the UK. Robert Lowe,whose cousin Tommy was diag-nosed and, thankfully, beat thedisease, is organising theAtlantic Relay event “to help inthe research and in supporting
other families who get diag-nosed”. The online pledges(www.justgiving.com/Robert-Lowe) have been pouring inalready, and all funds raised willgo to the cancer unit atCandelaria Hospital in the North.The big splash-off takes place at10am, and the team should fin-ish at around 3.30-4pm.
Snorkel team’smarathon task
Charity challenge has amusical touch about it
“It’s time to show ourtrue commitment tosociety” that’s themessage from thebusiness associationsof Adeje and Arona.
The presidents of thebusiness associations ofAdeje and Arona haverecently come together toaddress various issuesrelated to the business ofboth municipalities.
This meeting reaffirmedtheir determination to con-tinue working together forthe businesses of Adeje andArona, but also intends toplan actions in which they
seek the cooperation andparticipation of other busi-ness associations in thesouth.
Both presidents aredeeply concerned aboutthe general economic situa-tion and say “it seems thattourism is recovering slow-ly, we must not lower ourguard, as we wait yearswhere international compe-tition is fierce, and it there-fore require to change theway we work and plan. “
In this sense, they say, it’sfundamental to search forareas of collaborationbetween all sectors, tofacilitate the achievementof decisive actions that
affect an effective way toeradicate the main prob-lems in the area.
They believe that at thistime it would be useful toconvene a business summitin the whole region, to sit,around a desk, with all thebusiness groups in the area,so they have already beguna round of contacts forplanning.
The meeting also dis-cussed, among otherthings, the possible intro-duction of shopping malls inthe south and the negativeimpact this will have onlocal businesses, the possi-ble joint development ofExposaldo “Opportunity
Fair”, or joint planning ofmarketing trade campaigns.
They believe also that it istime for employers to stepforward and say “it’s timeto show our true commit-ment to society and to theland that has given usalmost everything we have.
With an unemploymentrate close to thirty percent,it is not permissible to con-tinue with a passive atti-tude as at present. Wemust fulfill our corporatesocial responsibility “in thissense and ask the entireindustry to change to facethe future with more assur-ance.
South businessesin need of change
www.canarianweekly.com World News
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 11
THOUSANDS of Britishholiday-makers werescrambling to salvagetheir trips followingthe collapse of twotravel companies inthe past week.
Hundreds were stranded inSpain when Birmingham firmSun4u folded last Thursday.But there was good news formany more, who were able toget away after London-basedKiss Flights went out of busi-ness on Tuesday.
The Civil Aviation Authority(CAA) said around 1,500 KissFlights customers were takingflights to the Mediterranean,mainly from Gatwick andManchester - but only until6pm on Tuesday, when theentire operation shut down.
It left around 60,000 peoplewith forward bookings tryingto arrange alternative flightsthrough other travel agents,including those on two flightsto Tenerife from EastMidlands airport today
(Friday). The CAA reassuredthe tens of thousands ofBritish holiday-makers alreadyabroad on trips arranged byKiss Flights that they wouldbe able to continue their holi-days.
Kiss Flights, which operatedflights to Greece, Egypt,Turkey and the Canary Islands,folded after its owner, FlightOptions, ceased trading.
The company’s operationswere financially protected bythe CAA-run Atol (Air TravelOperators Licensing) scheme,but whether all 70,000 pas-sengers booked to travel inSeptember will be coveredremains to be seen.
“People who missed flightsthis week can either seekcompensation or go to travelagents to see if they can getan alternative flight,” said aCAA spokesman.
The same information waspassed on to Sun4u passen-gers, who should be able toget home with help fromABTA.
But one woman was left
bewildered when, after book-ing with Sun4You, and missingout, she then made new flightarrangements with KissFlights. “You couldn’t make itup,” she said dejectedly.
A message was posted onthe website of Kiss ownerFlight Options, saying thegroup had ceased trading asof 5pm on 17th August, andthat the CAA had beeninformed. But the websiteappears to have crashed withthe demand.It is understood that KissFlights picked up a large num-ber of bookings following thecollapse of another travelcompany, Goldtrail Holidays,on 17th July.
Reports indicate that Sun4uand Kiss Flights had fallen vic-tim of the Icelandic ash-cloudproblems earlier this year.
Leading travel companiessuch as Thomson and FirstChoice were able to absorbthe millions of pounds lostduring the catastrophe,which grounded aircraft allover Europe in April.
The bigKiss-off!Double blow for trippers as travel companies go under
THE BBC has beenforced to apologise toviewers after one itsweathermen wascaught giving the fin-ger live on air.
Tomasz Schafermaker madethe gesture at presentersSimon McCoy and FionaArmstrong on the BBC Newschannel. They said his fore-cast would be “100% accurateand provide all the detail youcould possibly want”.
The flustered weather pre-senter then realised he hadbeen caught on camera andtried to cover up what he wasdoing by scratching his chin.
A BBC spokesman said:“Tomasz was not aware thathe was on air, and whilst the
gesture was only shown for asecond, it was not acceptable.
“The News Channel presen-ter live in the studio acknowl-edged a mistake had beenmade, and we apologise for
any offence caused.” ThePolish-born weathermanbegan presenting on BBCSoutheast Today in 2001before joining the main BBCchannels in 2006.
BBC Weathermanapologises after ‘giving the finger’
World News www.canarianweekly.com
THE SUGGESTION thatyoung people couldchange their names inadulthood to shrugoff their online trail isnot a practical solu-tion, UK recruitershave said.
Google boss Eric Schmidtsparked controversy whenhe said he expected today’schildren would seek a newidentity when the timecame to disown the rebel-lious activities of their teenyears, as documented onsocial networks.
In an interview with theWall Street Journal, thechief executive of the tech-nology giant said: “I don’tbelieve society understandswhat happens when every-thing is available, knowableand recorded by everyoneall the time.”
He added that one dayyoungsters would be enti-tled to change their names- and said it was an issuesociety must consider asfirms such his own collectever more informationabout their users.
Because of the dataGoogle collects, “we knowroughly who you are,roughly what you careabout, roughly who yourfriends are”, he said
However, recruitmentfirms point out that any
attempt to wipe out anonline trail would likely raisemore doubts than it cov-ered up.
“In theory, changing yourname could work,” said PhillLane, head of planning atPennaBarkers.
“But it would also openyou up to a huge gap inyour career history, in muchthe same way as leaving agap on your CV would - andthat’s something that willalways be investigated fur-ther at interview.
“The question for candi-dates would be: ‘What kindof information are you hid-ing?’
“If it’s simply pictures ofyou drunk on a night out,that’s information thatrecruiters would not typi-cally factor into a hiringdecision - they certainlyshouldn’t be.
“If, however, you are try-ing to cover up behaviourthat would reasonably jeop-ardise your chances of get-ting the job, that will likely
come out in the interviewprocess, so there’s going tobe little benefit as a candi-date in doing that.”
Once you are at employ-ment age you do have tostart to actively manageyour online persona andtake control of what youwant people outside yoursocial set to see.
Dr Gill Whiteman of gradu-ate recruiter TargetJobsadded it was not just youngpeople who might wish towithdraw information post-ed online.
“We are all guilty of beingnaive about how and whereour personal information isbeing stored, or the rulesand regulations of datausage and data protectionin different countries andhow these change overtime,” she said.
Dr Whiteman added thatanyone in employmentought to actively managetheir online persona, andregularly Google them-selves to check what an
outsider could discoverthrough a web search.
The recruiters said inmany cases, having a fulland active online presencecould actually help a youngperson in their futurecareer.
“It would be reasonable,for example, for an adver-tising agency to respondfavourably to a candidatethat had manipulated theirdigital footprint to adver-
tise themselves - it shows agrasp of the communica-tions channels and market-ing techniques,” said MrLane.
“But it’s questionable asto whether the same tac-tics would help you land ajob in, for example, a lawfirm where such an osten-tatious online presencemight actually be seen as athreat to client confiden-tiality and a lack of discre-
tion.” Based on MrSchmidt’s comments, suchawareness of the impact ofa social media profile is notlikely to be a fleeting con-sideration.
The Google headdescribed social networkingsite Facebook as a “compa-ny of consequence” andpredicted one or two othermajor players would comeon the scene in the nearfuture.
Name change can’terase online past
Page 12 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
A LITTLE girl couldlose her eye becauseof an infection con-tracted from dogmess left in a play-ground.
Toddler Amiee Langdon,who will be two years old nextweek, put her hand in faeceswhen she fell over in a park.
Before her mother Suzannecould react, the little girlwiped her left eye with thesame hand.
Ms Langdon, a 29-year-oldnurse from Fallowfield,Manchester, rushed to cleanthe eye and rinsed it withwarm water once theyreturned home.
Amiee's condition is the con-sequence of some thought-
less dog owner. But it was toolate to stop Amiee contract-ing an infection called toxo-cariasis, which is caused byparasitic worms in dog mess.
The toddler's eye subse-quently swelled up, becomingpurple and inflamed.
Amiee was admitted to hos-pital where she was immedi-ately put on antibiotics.
But, if they do not work, shewill need surgery to removethe eye so the infection doesnot spread to her brain, which- in extreme cases - could leadto death.
I hope this makes irresponsi-ble dog owners understandthe very real consequencesof failing to pick up aftertheir dogs.
Amiee was playing in a gatedchildren's area of Platt Fields
Park, Fallowfield, when shefell over.
Ms Langdon said: "Amiee'scondition is the consequenceof some thoughtless dogowner.
"It's awful. There is a signsaying 'No dogs' near theentrance to the play area, butit seems people are ignoringit. Councils must get tough."
Paul Andrews, of neigh-bourhood services atManchester City Council, said:"I hope this extremely upset-ting incident makes irrespon-sible dog owners understandthe very real consequencesof failing to pick up aftertheir dogs.
"We are thinking about thislittle girl and her family andwe hope she makes a speedyrecovery."
Girl could lose eye
www.canarianweekly.com World News
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 13
THE LAST US combattroops in Iraq haveleft the country sevenyears after theAmerican-led invasion.
Soldiers from the 4thStryker Brigade crossed theturbulent country’s borderwith Kuwait earlier.
There are now 56,000 USsoldiers in Iraq, down fromabout 140,000 when USPresident Barack Obama tookoffice in January 2009.
His administration is on tar-get to reduce troop levels to50,000 by August 31, endingthe combat mission and leav-ing those who remain to trainIraqi armed forces and policeunits.
Meeting the deadline willmean Mr Obama is also onschedule to keep his promiseto pull out all US service mem-
bers from the country byJanuary 1, 2012.
There are still dark forces inIraq trying to pull the countryapart.
The President is facing a
war-weary American public, ashis fellow Democrats aim tohold on to their control of theUS Congress in elections inNovember.
Former Republican presi-
dent George Bush launchedthe American-led invasion in2003 that ousted Iraqi dicta-tor Saddam Hussein.
But the war becameunpopular among Americansas US deaths mounted.
As of Wednesday,America’s DefenceDepartment said there hadbeen 4,419 US militarydeaths since the invasion.
Mr Obama wants all USservice members out of Iraqby 2012. While violence hasdipped sharply since theheight of sectarian warfare,from 2006 to 2007, Iraq isstill extremely fragile.
Its leaders have notresolved a number of politi-cally explosive issues thatcould easily trigger renewedfighting.
The war in Iraq has gone onlonger than the US Civil War,World War I and World War II.
Final Americancombat troopsleave Iraq at last
TWO POLICE groups haveteamed up to try to identify20 people whose bodies werefound near the rail and Tubenetwork over the past 35years.
The National PolicingImprovement Agency andBritish Transport Police com-missioned an artist to compilesketches of 20 people - 18males and two females -whose remains were foundbut who were never identified.
There were no suspiciouscircumstances surroundingany of the deaths.
“All these fatalities werefully investigated at the timeand all clues followed up totry to establish an identity,but without success,” saidBTP’s Detective ChiefSuperintendent Miles Flood.
“We are now taking anotherlook to see if there is anymore we can do, in somecases to see if advances inforensic techniques can help,and to appeal to the public tosee if anyone recognisesthem.
“Most of these cases arefrom the greater Londonarea, where people can oftenbe quite isolated and tran-sient, but one is fromCoventry and another - aquite recent death - in
Cornwall.“Some of these people may
have had an itinerantlifestyle, but it is likely thatthere are still relatives orfriends who may recognisethem and thought they hadsimply moved away.”
The drawings have beenmade by Leeds-based policefacial imaging specialistSharon McDonagh. She is oneof only a handful of accredit-ed police artists on the NPIA’sspecialist database.
She said: “What I try to do isto recreate what the personwould have looked like alive,to breathe life back into themif you like.
“The source material is amortuary photograph, butthe drawing is not just areproduction. Rather theseare interpretations that high-light certain characteristics,which people who knew theperson will hopefully instantlyrecognise.
“Although I only have a pic-ture of a face to work from, Iuse all the information aboutthat person. If you know theyare of slim build for instancethat will affect the way youdraw their face; if you knowsomething about their back-ground, you can get a feel forthe person.”
Fresh bid to identifyunknown rail bodies
Page 14 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
World News www.canarianweekly.com
TWO BRITONS strand-ed on Europe’s high-est mountain havebeen rescued, afterthey rose the alarmvia SMS to a friend1,000 miles away.
The climbers, who have notbeen named, were forced tospend the night at 11,000ftin sub-zero temperatures onMont Blanc.
A storm had stopped themreturning to their base.
Rescue officials said theyraised the alarm by sending atext message from themountain’s Italian side to afriend in London, who thenalerted authorities.
Bad weather hampered anearly search and prevented arescue helicopter from tak-ing off.
The Brits were eventuallypicked up at the AiguilleNoire de Peuterey crest andflown to nearbyCourmayeur, at the foot ofthe mountain.
They are well-equippedbut no one wants to spend
the night at 3,700 metresunless you really have to. AnItalian rescue spokesmansaid: “From the bare mini-mum we have, we know thatthey were supposed toclimb to the top of MontBlanc but were taken by sur-
prise by the weather.August is the peak time forclimbing the 4,810m(15,782ft) Mt Blanc.
More than 20,000 peoplearrive every year, with res-cue missions at a peak in thesummer.
Mobile savesstranded Britson Mont Blanc
THE BBC is fighting toprevent Top Gear’smystery driver TheStig from revealing hisidentity.
The corporation is locked ina legal dispute to halt theanonymous petrol-head fromwriting his autobiography.
BBC lawyers say the bookbreaches “agreed contractualand confidentiality obliga-tions” relating to the pro-gramme.
It also claims unmasking hisidentity would spoil viewers’enjoyment of the BBC2motoring show.
The Stig famously takes tothe track in an assortment ofcars, as well as trainingcelebrities to set lap times in
Top Gear’s popular Star In AReasonably Priced Car seg-ment.
Clad in white race overallsand a helmet with a blackenedvisor, The Stig has nevershown his face
Only a handful of the show’sexecutives and Top Gear pre-senters Jeremy Clarkson,Richard Hammond and JamesMay are said to know his trueidentity.
Several racing drivers havebeen linked to the role,including former Formula Oneworld champions Damon Hilland Michael Schumacher.
The current Stig is theshow’s second.
The original, PerryMcCarthy, was dropped afterhis identity was discovered.
BBC launches legalbid over the Stig Id
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 15
www.canarianweekly.com World News
THE BODIES of ayoung boy and a manhave been foundinside a house inPoole, Dorset. Policehave cordoned offthe home, in Queen'sRoad.
Detectives say no one isbeing sought in connectionwith the incident, but thecause of the deaths is yet tobe determined.
Post mortem examinationsare to be carried out on thetwo bodies, which werefound on Wednesday
evening. Local reports saidthe dead boy was about fiveyears old.
Neighbour Amanda Dobson,33, said the man had seemedfriendly.
"I used to see him locally andI knew him to say hello to,"she said.
"I didn't sleep last nightafter this happened. It's notnice, especially when youhave children yourself."
A neighbour, who declinedto be named, told the DailyEcho: "I spoke to the nextdoor neighbours when thepolice arrived and they saidthe man killed the son andhimself."
Bodies found ina Dorset house
WYCLEF JEAN says hewill continue to fightto stand in Haiti’spresidential electiondespite receivingdeath threats.Speaking from a hideout in hishometown of Lassere, thehip-hop star said he hadmoved to a place where hefelt “secure” and “comfort-able” after receiving phonecalls threatening to kill himunless he left Haiti.“We know that the situationthat we have embarked on,you know, death threatscomes with the territory,” hesaid.Haiti’s provisional electoralcouncil had been due tofinalise the list of candidateson Tuesday but has post-poned it until Friday.I think my candidacy is a wildcard for the entire Haiti,every candidate, senator,deputy. I even think it’s a wildcard for the internationalcommunity in general.Jean said he and his legalteam had made sure all therequirements had been met.
“Every piece of paper thatthe electoral council haveasked for, we have delivered -everything.“So this delay of announcingthe candidacy is not on ourpart because we have giveneverything possible.”But there are questions overwhether the former Fugeesstar is eligible to stand for the
presidency.Haiti’s electoral law requirescandidates to have lived in thecountry for five consecutiveyears.Jean left his homeland agednine to go to the US where helaunched and developed hisinternational music career.But he believes his appoint-ment as a roving ambassador
by President Rene Preval in2007 exempts him from theresidency requirement.“The issue of residency, wehave proof, five years,” Jeansaid.Despite being admired bymany Haitians who see him asa celebrity who never forgothis roots, Jean knows he isnot the frontrunner.
Wyclef Jean vows tofight for Presidency
THOUSANDS of teenswho have receivedrecord-breaking A-Level results havebeen warned theirgrades may not beenough to guaranteethem a universityplace.
One in 12 of all exams wasawarded the new A* topgrade while more than onein four entries (27%) wereawarded an A grade - upfrom 26.7% last year.
Overall, the pass rate rosefor the 28th year in a row,with 97.6% of entries get-ting a grade E or higher.
But despite their success-es, students have beenwarned that getting intotheir first choice university- or finding a course at all -will be harder than ever.
More than 660,000 stu-dents have applied for a uni-versity place this year.
Ucas, the organisationresponsible for managingapplications to higher edu-cation courses, said accept-ances across the UK wereup by 2.3%.
It said this year, a record379,411 applicants wereaccepted into university orcollege - compared to371,016 on results day lastyear.
But experts predictbetween 170,000 and200,000 students will be
left without a course due touniversity budget cuts and
increasing competition forplaces.
Many top universities havesaid they are already full.
Carl Gilleard, chief execu-tive of the Association ofGraduate Recruiters, saidthe clearing process wouldbe “more stressful thanever” and students shouldconsider taking a year out.
Last year, more 47,000
students found a universityplace through clearing.
Ucas advice lines are nowopen - but with fewerplaces available, the organi-sation will have its work cutout to accommodate every-one.
“My advice for schoolleavers that feel universityis the right route for them,but miss out on a place this
year, is to consider gettingsome broader experience,”Mr Gilleard said.
“Either in the workplace orby volunteering - which willhelp strengthen their appli-cation to university nexttime around.”
Chris Keates, general sec-retary of the NASUWTteaching union, said theGovernment had “betrayed”students who had achievedhigh grades but were unableto secure a university place.
“It would be economicallydisastrous to squander thepotential of highly talentedand hard-working youngpeople,” he said.
“Economic recoverydepends on investment inhigh-level education andskills training. If this fails tohappen, the hard work ofstudents will have beenbetrayed.”
Christine Blower, generalsecretary of the NationalUnion of Teachers, said ahigher pass rate did notmean A-levels had beendumbed down.
“There is no evidence thatthis has happened,” shesaid.
“Denigrating the achieve-ment of students seems tobe a national sport and doesnothing to reflect theimmense achievement ofyoung people and theirteachers.”
Page 16 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
World News www.canarianweekly.com
Record results comeamid Uni heartbreak
NIGHT SALES of vodkaand other types ofstrong alcohol are tobe banned in Moscowin a bid to tackle thecapital’s growing alco-hol problem.
A new minimum price forspirits is also to be introducedto stop the sale of cut-priceblack market booze.
Mayor Yuri Luzhkov is stop-ping shops selling drink con-taining more than 15% alcoholbetween 10pm and 10am.
It will mean Muscovites can-not buy spirits but it will notaffect sales of beer and wine.
Sceptics are not sure howthe ban, to come into effecton September 1, will be imple-mented.
A previous ban had prevent-
ed the sale of spirits between11pm and 8am in Moscow.
But it contained a loopholeallowing shops to sell alcohol24 hours a day in agreementwith the local authorities.
Earlier this summer Russiaimplemented a zero toleranceban on drink-driving afterPresident Dmitry Medvedevsaid Russians could still not betrusted with drink.
Alcohol abuse kills 500,000Russians annually andimpacts on male lifeexpectancy, which is lowerthan in impoverished coun-tries such as Bangladesh orHonduras.
“People are not able to lookafter their health. This needsto be learned,” Medvedevsaid in a television interviewin 2009.
Night vodka sales tobe banned in Moscow
www.canarianweekly.com World News
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 17
A CASE of rare whiskythat has been trappedin the Antarctic formore than 100 yearshas finally beenopened - but it isunlikely anyone willget to taste a drop.
Instead the spirit will be pre-served for its historic signifi-cance and examined byexperts as the original recipeno longer exists.
The crate was recoveredfrom the Antarctic hut ofrenowned explorer Sir ErnestShackleton earlier this yearafter being found in 2006.
It contained 11 bottles ofMackinlay’s Scotch whiskydating from 1896 to 1907,wrapped in paper and strawto protect them from theharsh conditions ofShackleton’s 1907 Nimrodexpedition.
Even though the crate wasfrozen solid, the whisky insidecould be heard sloshingaround in the bottles asAntarctica’s -30C tempera-ture was not enough tofreeze it.
The whisky has been thawedvery slowly in recent weeks atthe Canterbury Museum inChristchurch on New
Zealand’s South Island.Once samples have been
extracted they will be sent toScottish distiller Whyte andMackay, which took overMackinlay’s distillery manyyears ago.
The bottles will then bereturned to their home -
under the floorboards ofShackleton’s hut at CapeRoyds on Ross Island, nearAntarctica’s McMurdoSound.
Richard Paterson, the mas-ter blender for Whyte andMackay, said: “This isimmensely exciting and a
great find for the Scottishwhisky industry.
“We hope to take possiblytwo of the bottles back toScotland and replicate therecipe. “The ice should havepreserved the whisky but wewon’t know until we examineit.”
Rare whisky 100 years on ice A ZIMBABWEAN manwho tried to smugglerare eggs worth£70,000 out of thecountry has beenjailed for 30 months.
Jeffrey Lendrum, 48, fromTowcester, Northampton-shire, was caught with 14peregrine falcon eggs placedin socks taped to his torso.
He has a history of eggtrafficking in his home coun-try along with Canada,where he was filmed abseil-ing from a helicopter to stealrare eggs from the top of atree.
Lendrum, who also holds anIrish passport, was foundguilty of taking 14 eggs froma nest in South Wales andattempting to export therare bounty without a per-mit.
He was arrested by officersas he sat in the Emiratesdeparture lounge atBirmingham InternationalAirport on May 3.
Officers from the WestMidlands Counter TerrorismUnit found the eggs tied in
to socks and bandaged to hisabdomen.
He told the officials he wastaking them abroad as apractical joke on his father,adding they were good forback pain.
Bred in captivity, the eggscan be bought for around£1,500 each but gain a farhigher value once hatched.
Lendrum, who has homesin both Zimbabwe and SouthAfrica, pleaded guilty atWarwick Crown Court onWednesday.
Eleven of the 14 eggs havebeen successfully incubatedand eight chicks have alreadybeen reintegrated to nestingsites around the UK.
The remaining chicks arecurrently in a wild releaseprogramme.
Smuggling eggs
www.canarianweekly.com World News
The Apolo CentreLOS CRISTIANOS
Car park NOW OPEN
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 19
A BRIDE has brokenher back in threeplaces after fallingfrom a hotel balconywhile on honeymoonin Corfu.
Carrie-Anne Freeland brokeher spine in three places afterlosing her footing and plung-ing 20ft after a romanticmeal with new husbandMichael Dudbridge.
Disaster struck just daysafter the couple were mar-ried and embarked on adream honeymoon, a surprisegift from wedding guests.
Now friends and family havelaunched a campaign to bringCarrie-Anne home after beingtold they will have to fork out£16,000 for a speciallyequipped air ambulance.
An appeal has also beenplaced on the Millwall FC web-site, as the couple are fans.
Mr Dudbridge, 29, fromLewisham, south London, saidhe and his bride were strand-ed on the Greek island with no
money after making the tripwithout any travel insurance.
They wrongly believed theywere covered by theEuropean Health InsuranceCard (EHIC), known as theE111.
But while the card guaran-tees Carrie-Anne will “receivethe same level of medicalhealth care as a local resi-dent” it does not cover anytravel costs.
Mr Dudbridge, a builder, saidthe accident happened afterhis wife, a primary school sec-retary, went out to get somefresh air after the meal.
“We had literally just gotmarried and only had anotherday of our honeymoonbefore coming home,” he saidfrom her bedside.
“We went out for dinner andwhen we got back Carrie-Anne was feeling a bit dizzy asit’s just so hot out here.
“I was lying on the bed andmy wife went out onto thebalcony to get some air.
“The next thing I heard wasa big thud and I dashed out
and saw my wife lying on theground.
“I ran down and she was try-ing to get up but I just said‘don’t you dare until we getyou some help’. I just lay nextto her.”
Mr Dudbridge added: “I’vebeen sitting in the hospital,sleeping in a chair and we’redesperate to get her home.
“Carrie-Anne is mainly sleep-ing but she has spoken to meand she’s scared to death.She’s desperate to get hometo have an operation and seeher family.”
Doctors in Corfu will con-duct further tests this weekto establish how serious theinjuries are.
It is understood at least oneof the fractures is “serious”,though it is expected thatCarrie-Anne will not be leftparalysed.
The government warns theEHIC is “not a substitute forprivate travel insurance” andstates that “it will not coverthe costs of being broughtback to the UK”.
Bride breaks backon honeymoonafter balcony fall
A SUSPECTED burglarhad to be rescued byfirefighters after get-ting stuck for six hourswith his legs hangingout of a window.
The unidentified man hadbeen attempting to enter ahouse in Bow, east London.
The homeowner discov-ered him dangling through
his window and called police.The would-be housebreak-
er had reportedly becomestuck between 2am and3am on Tuesday.
Amused spectatorswatched as the man wasfreed at around 8.30am.
A Scotland Yardspokesman said: "It appearsthe resident had comedown and found the man.He was stuck half-in, half-
out. "The man was eventual-ly freed by London Fire Brigade who appa-rently removed the windowframe.
"The man, aged 36, wasunhurt and has been arrest-ed on suspicion of burglary."
The burglar apparentlyemerged unscathed, wear-ing only tracksuit bottoms,and was taken off to a localpolice station.
Window traps burglar
Page 20 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
Feature www.canarianweekly.com
Tales From Travels Of Years Gone By
DAVID PENNYEmail: [email protected]
THE HISTORY ofProtestant worship inthe Canaries goesback as long asAnglican merchantsand their families havebeen living in theIslands, with Church ofEngland SundayMorning Prayer servic-es being held in pri-vate houses or busi-ness premises.
The Anglican presence firstbecame formalised inTenerife with the opening ofthe English Cemetery - LaCherche, in Puerto Oratava(later to become Puerto de laCruz).
Following special tradingagreements with Holland inthe 17th century (theNetherlands, at this time,falling under the realm of theSpanish Crown) the Dutch hadbeen granted freedom of reli-gious expression within theislands.
This privilege was notextended to cover mainlandSpain and this factor, alongwith the growth of the north-ern European trading com-munity, led to the need for anon-Roman Catholic ceme-tery. Any non-Catholics, up tothis point, were buried out-side the city walls in non-con-secrated ground.
Land was ceded to trusteesfor a site in Puerto Oratavaand this cemetery, which isopen to all faiths, is stilladministered by All SaintsChurch in Puerto de la Cruz.
There is also a disusedBritish Cemetery in SantaCruz which is to be foundnext to the now-abandoned,cementerio de San Rafael ySan Roque, located on CalleJose Murphy.
The land was purchased in
1837 by British residents ofthe city and used for protes-tant burials until 1954. Thecemetery should be main-tained by the Ayuntamiento(town hall) of the city, and it islamentable that this is not thecase.
The beginnings of thechurch of All Saints can betraced back to 1887, when acommittee met under thechairmanship of His Grace Dr.Ingham, the Bishop of SierraLeone.
Steps were taken to erect achurch, and a suite of roomswere hired, known as “TheEnglish Church KennedyRooms,” to serve during theinterim period of construc-tion.
They also decided to open aChaplaincy Fund for subscrip-tions and agreed to pay thechaplain one pound tenshillings a week, (£1.50), withany surplus funds being givento charity.
In 1890, a grant of aboutthree acres of land, (approx12,000 m2) situated in TaoroPark, was made by the GrandBritish Hotel, which was thenthe largest hotel in Spain, andsufficient funds had been col-lected for work to com-
mence. Much of the donationcame from a Mrs MaryBoreham, who helped enor-mously with fund-raising andwho actually paid wholly forthe construction of theParsonage.
The church held its firstservice on 14th June 1891,but a smallpox outbreak pre-vented the formal opening.This was celebrated on 1stNovember of that year, AllSaint’s Day, with the actualconsecration subsequentlytaking place on 15th Januaryof 1893.
The two world wars tooktheir toll on the British com-munity, but the church wastreated with respect and con-sideration, as were the otherBritish institutions of the day.
And although the numberof British families on theisland, during World War IIdwindled to just nine, theymanaged to maintain thechurch and other societies,with the help and patronageof our Canarian hosts andfriends.
Santa Cruz also boasted itsvery own Anglican place ofworship in the form of StGeorges, (now San Jorge).This “typical English” church
was completed on landbought for the sum of £135in 1897.
It can be found on the cor-ner of Calle Viera Clavijo andLa Plaza de 25 de Julio, knownlocally as Plaza de los Patos,(Square of the Ducks).
Prior to this, PrayerMeetings were held in thehouse of Mr Hugo Hamilton,an illustrious family in the
Anglo Canarian community inthis city.
But because of falling con-gregation numbers over theyears, the building was hand-ed over, in recent times, tothe Roman Catholic authori-ties and is in regular use tothis day.
The story in Las Palmas is asimilar one with the BritishCemetery, dating back to1835, sited on land donatedby the Corporation of LasPalmas. The Cemeteryreceived other donations andthe land was prepared.
On 14th December of thatyear, the first burial tookplace - and it has been usedever since as the final restingplace for sailors, soldiers, cler-gy, missionaries, doctors(many of whom had stoppedoff on their way back fromAfrica for convalescence) andthose connected with theport, city and internationaltrade.
The city also has its ownAnglican Church, The HolyTrinity, which is on Calle RafaelRamiriz in the Cuidad Jardin
(Garden City) area of LasPalmas.
This church was also initi-ated following the visit ofBishop Ingham to the islandon 16th November 1887.The site was purchased andthe foundation stone laid in1891. The following yearthe Christmas serviceattracted a full congrega-tion in the newly-completedchurch.
With the decline of theEmpire, the Anglican church-es on the islands no longer fallunder the bishopric ofFreetown (Sierra Leone) butare administered as part ofthe “Chaplaincy in Europe”,which forms part of theChurch of England. An annualreport is submitted to theArchdeaconry of GibraltarSynod.
All of the above sites arewell worth a visit, if only toappreciate the architecturalbeauty and the Victoriancraftsmanship - and also toexperience a little bit of histo-ry left behind by our ex-patpredecessors.
All things brightand beautiful...In forthcoming editions of the Canarian Weekly, DAVID PENNY will be looking at the Anglo Canarian community, its history andinfluences on Canarian society, and its economy. In this first report, he covers the pastoral needs of our Victorian forbearer:
Bendición de las obras del Puerto de la Luz, 26 de febrero de 1883
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 23
Television GuideFULL LISTINGS FOR 10 CHANNELS INCLUDING BBC, ITV, CHANNEL 4,
CHANNEL FIVE SKY & SPORTS CHANNELS.
FRID
AY
EastEnders 8:00pm - 8:30pm, BBC1Ah, there’s nuffink more important than yer famerlee,though Peggy’s having trouble finding a single personamong her extensive brood who’s still talking to her. EvenPhil, who could be relied on to grunt something at hismum occasionally, gets in such a rage tonight he throwsher out of his flat and his life in preference to spendingtime with his new best friend Charlie Cocaine. “I’ve pushedall my family away,” she tearfully tells Pat before decidingto sort out her relationship with Sam. Sadly, the Mitchellmatriarch gets a less than enthusiastic welcome when shevisits her daughter in prison. And she gets a big surpriseas well.
SATU
RDAY
Mastermind 8:00pm - 8:30pm, BBC2We’ve had the Mastermind Champion ofChampions, with record-breaking contest-ant Jesse Honey and his 23 correctanswers on national flags, and now we areback to good old plain vanilla Mastermind,the original and forever-popular BBC2 quizhosted by grand inquisitor John Humphrys.Most of us tune in to try our luck in thegeneral knowledge sections, don’t we?
SUN
DAY
Martin Clunes - Horsepower 9:00pm - 10:00pm, ITV1The Doc Martin star explores the huge part horses haveplayed in human history all over the globe, in warfare,farming, sport and transport, and why they still mean somuch to us today. His journey takes him to Mongoliawhere he meets the only remaining horse breed not to betamed, the Przewalski, and Dubai where jockey FrankieDettori and trainer Luca Cumani provide an insight intohow horse psychology has allowed us to harness theirinstincts. However, a 14,000-year-old cave painting in thePyrenees reveals that before we rode horses, we atethem!
MON
DAY
Coronation Street7:30pm - 8:00pm, ITV1Becky sneaks off for a cigarette whileshe and Steve await the adoption panel’sverdict, unaware that she is beingwatched. Natasha quizzes Fiz for infor-mation about her pregnancy in a bid tostring Nick along as the couple move intoDev’s flat, and Sally dashes Sophie’s plansto meet Sian. Elsewhere, Owen asksEileen out on a date.
TUES
DAY Holby City
8:00pm - 9:00pm, BBC1Michael’s one-night stand is rushed into AAUafter overdosing on cocaine, and Ric realisespursuing his relationship with Annalese will onlyintensify his colleague’s erratic behaviour.Meanwhile, Frieda jeopardises her professionalreputation to take revenge on a racist patient,and Oliver worries he might have blown hischance to impress Greg when he makes a baderror of judgement.
WED
NES
DAY Hollyoaks
6:30pm - 7:00pm, Channel 4Brendan sets his sights on the contents ofthe safe at Chez Chez after Cheryl agrees tosafeguard the proceeds from Steph’s charitywalk. Meanwhile, Jacqui is attracted to amystery man on a dating website, unawarethe profile actually belongs to Rhys, andIndia’s financial woes leave her with nochoice but to appeal to her grandfather in ameeting at Il Gnosh.
THUR
SDAY
E Numbers: An EdibleAdventure8:00pm - 9:00pm, BBC2Blighted with a notorious reputation, Enumbers are often considered to be oneof the demons of modern food produc-tion. In this three-part series food writerStefan Gates sets out to separate thefacts about these food additives fromthe fiction, beginning with colours.
www.canarianweekly.com Television Guide
The X Factor Saturday 21 August, 7:30pm - 9:00pm, ITV1 New series. Dermot O'Leary presents the opening round of auditions as solo singers and groups compete to win a lucrative record-ing contract with Simon Cowell's label. Simon, Cheryl Cole and Louis Walsh are joined on the panel by guests, beginning with GeriHalliwell, in the early parts of the competition, before new mum Dannii Minogue returns for the judges' houses stage. Once againeach of the four categories - Boys, Girls, Groups and Overs, which this year is 28 plus, will be mentored throughout the competi-tion, with Cheryl no doubt hoping to secure a hat-trick as the winning judge after previously taking Joe McElderry and AlexandraBurke to victory. The Xtra Factor follows on ITV2.
Television Guide www.canarianweekly.com
6:00am Breakfast 9:15am Heir
Hunters 10:00am BBC News;
Weather 10:00am Homes Under
the Hammer 11:00am Living
Dangerously 11:30am BBC News;
Weather 11:30am Cash in the Attic
12:15pm Bargain Hunt 1:00pm
BBC News; Weather 1:30pm
Regional News and Weather
1:45pm Doctors 2:15pm Murder,
She Wrote 3:00pm BBC News;
Weather; Regional News 3:05pm
Green Balloon Scrapbook 3:30pm
Funky Fables 3:40pm Mortified
4:05pm Trapped 4:35pm Hounded
5:00pm Newsround 5:15pm
Weakest Link 6:00pm Weather
6:00pm BBC News
6:30pm Weather
6:30pm BBC London News
7:00pm The One Show
7:30pm BBC News: Regional
News
7:30pm A Question of Sport
8:00pm EastEnders
8:30pm QI
9:00pm Celebrity
MasterChef -
The Final
10:00pm BBC News
10:25pm Regional News and
Weather
10:35pm Would I Lie to You?
11:05pm The National Lottery
Draws
6:00am Wibbly Pig 6:10am Bob the
Builder: Ready, Steady, Build! 6:20am
Postman Pat: SDS 6:35am Guess
with Jess 6:50am Yoko! Jakamoko!
Toto! 6:50am Pingu 7:00am
Everything’s Rosie 7:10am Bob the
Builder 7:10am Dirtgirlworld 7:25am
Jollywobbles 7:35am Buzz and Tell
7:40am Timmy Time 7:50am Charlie
and Lola 8:00am Barney’s Latin
America 8:30am Ed and Oucho’s
Excellent Inventions 9:00am Roar
9:30am Leon 9:30am Gimme a
Break 10:00am Copycats 10:30am
Deadly 60 11:00am D2: the Mighty
Ducks 12:40pm The Fast Lady
2:15pm Instant Restaurant 3:00pm
Diagnosis Murder 3:45pm Flog It!
4:30pm Cash in the Celebrity Attic
5:15pm Escape to the Country
6:00pm Eggheads
6:30pm Restoration
Roadshow
7:00pm Who Do You Think
You Are?
8:00pm Mastermind
8:30pm Gardeners’ World
9:00pm Home Movie
Roadshow
10:00pm Roger and Val Have
Just Got In
10:30pm Newsnight
11:00pm Weather
11:00pm The Review Show at
the Edinburgh Festival
6:00am GMTV 9:25am The
Jeremy Kyle Show 10:30am This
Morning 12:30pm Dinner Date
1:30pm ITV News and Weather
1:55pm London News and
Weather 2:00pm Dickinson’s Real
Deal 3:00pm The Michael Ball
Show 3:59pm London Weather
4:00pm Inspector Morse 5:00pm
Britain’s Best Dish 6:00pm
Weather
6:00pm London Tonight
6:30pm ITV News and
Weather
7:00pm Emmerdale
7:30pm Coronation Street
8:00pm Dickinson’s Real
Deal
8:30pm Coronation Street
9:00pm Doc Martin
10:00pm ITV News at Ten and
Weather
10:30pm London News and
Weather
10:35pm Daylight
6:05am The Hoobs 6:30am The
Hoobs 6:55am Big Brother’s Little
Brother 7:20am Big Brother
8:30am Frasier 8:55am Smallville
9:50am Privileged 10:45am
Friends 11:15am Friends 11:45am
Pocket TV 12:00pm Channel 4
News Summary 12:05pm Brothers
& Sisters 1:00pm The TV Book
Club 1:30pm Channel 4 Racing
3:40pm Celebrity Come Dine with
Me Extra Portions 4:10pm Deal or
No Deal: Hall of Fame 5:00pm A
Place in the Sun: Home or Away
6:00pm The Simpsons
6:30pm Hollyoaks
7:00pm Channel 4 News
7:25pm 4thought.tv
7:30pm Teen Undertaker
8:00pm A Place in the Sun:
Home or Away
9:00pm Big Brother
10:00pm Pete Versus Life
10:35pm Big Brother
11:25pm Stand Up for the
Week Best Bits
6:00am Children’s TV 9:00am
Little Princess 9:15am The Wright
Stuff 10:45am Lorraine Kelly’s Big
Fat Challenge 11:45am CSI: NY
12:40pm Five News 12:45pm
Build a New Life in the Country
1:40pm Don’t Stop Believers
1:45pm Neighbours 2:15pm CSI:
NY 3:05pm Flower Girl 5:00pm
Weather 5:00pm Five News
5:30pm Neighbours
6:00pm The Boss Is Coming
to Dinner
6:25pm Don’t Stop Believers
6:30pm Live from Studio Five
7:00pm Five News at 7
7:15pm Cricket on Five
8:00pm Police Interceptors
9:00pm The Mentalist
10:00pm Law & Order: Special
Victims Unit
10:55pm Don’t Stop Believers
11:00pm CSI: NY
6:00am Good Morning Sports Fans
9:00am Premier League World
9:30am Transworld Sport 10:30am
Live Test Cricket
7:00pm Premier League
Preview
7:30pm Live Super League
10:00pm Take It Like a Fan
10:30pm Premier League
Preview
11:00pm Football League
Weekend
6:00am A Town Called Eureka
7:00am Brainiac’s Test Tube Baby
8:00am Brainiac: Science Abuse
9:00am Oops TV 9:30am Oops TV
10:00am Grease: The School
Musical 11:00am Don’t Forget the
Lyrics 12:00pm Sell Me the Answer
1:00pm Malcolm in the Middle
1:30pm Malcolm in the Middle
2:00pm A Town Called Eureka
3:00pm Stargate SG-1 4:00pm
Stargate SG-1 5:00pm WWE
Superstars
6:00pm Oops TV
6:30pm The Simpsons
7:00pm The Simpsons
7:30pm The Simpsons
8:00pm Must Be the Music
9:00pm Must Be the Music
10:00pm Bones
11:00pm Lie to Me
7:00am Radical Highs 7:10am Top
Gear 8:00am Top Gear 9:00am
Robot Wars Extreme 10:00am The
Gadget Show 10:30am Fifth Gear
11:00am Dragons’ Den: On Tour
12:00pm Top Gear 1:00pm Top
Gear 2:00pm Robot Wars Extreme
3:00pm The Gadget Show 3:30pm
Fifth Gear 4:00pm Top Gear
5:00pm Top Gear
6:00pm Robot Wars Extreme
7:00pm The Gadget Show
7:30pm Crash
8:00pm Dragons’ Den: On
Tour
9:00pm QI
9:40pm QI
10:20pm Men Behaving Badly
11:00pm Men Behaving Badly
11:40pm QI
6:00am Home Shopping 7:00am
The Jerry Springer Show 7:25am
The Jerry Springer Show 7:50am
Celebs 24/7 8:00am Maury 8:55am
Celebs 24/7 9:00am America’s
Next Top Model 10:00am Ghost
Whisperer 11:00am Nothing to
Declare 11:30am Nothing to
Declare 12:00pm Passport Patrol
12:30pm Passport Patrol 1:00pm
Four Weddings 2:00pm Bulging
Brides 2:30pm Bulging Brides
3:00pm CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation 4:00pm Charmed
6:00pm America’s Next Top
Model
7:00pm Celebrity Four
Weddings
8:00pm Passport Patrol
9:00pm Medium
10:00pm CSI: Miami
6:20am Total Wipeout USA 7:05am
Animal Park: Wild in Africa 8:00am
Casualty 9:00am The Bill 10:00am
The Bill 11:00am Casualty
12:00pm Fantasy Homes by the
Sea 1:00pm Total Wipeout USA
2:00pm Outtake TV 2:40pm My
Family 3:20pm My Family 4:00pm
Animal Park: Wild in Africa 5:00pm
Total Wipeout USA
6:00pm Outtake TV
6:40pm My Family
7:20pm My Family
8:00pm Fantasy Homes by
the Sea
9:00pm Look Who’s Talking
Too
10:35pm The Catherine Tate
Show
11:10pm The Catherine Tate
Show
Friday 20 August
Page 24 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
www.canarianweekly.com Television Guide
6:00am Breakfast 10:00am
Saturday Kitchen Best Bites
11:30am What to Eat Now
12:00pm BBC News; Regional
News and Weather 12:15pm
Football Focus 1:00pm Sailing
1:50pm The Youth Olympics
2:20pm Seabiscuit 4:30pm Final
Score 5:20pm Hole in the Wall
5:50pm BBC News; Regional
News and Weather
6:10pm 101 Ways to Leave a
Gameshow
7:10pm Tonight’s the Night
8:00pm The National Lottery:
Saturday Draws
8:10pm Casualty
9:00pm John Bishop’s Britain
9:30pm Live at the Apollo
10:15pm BBC News; Weather
10:30pm National Lottery
Update
10:30pm Match of the Day
11:50pm Weatherview
11:50pm The Football League
Show
1:15am BBC News 1:30am Our
World 2:00am BBC News 2:30am
HARDtalk 3:00am BBC News
3:30am Our World 4:00am BBC
News 4:30am Click 5:00am BBC
News 5:30am Our World
6:00am Wibbly Pig 6:10am Bob the
Builder: Ready, Steady, Build!
6:20am Postman Pat: SDS 6:35am
Guess with Jess 6:50am Yoko!
Jakamoko! Toto! 6:50am Pingu
7:00am Everything’s Rosie 7:10am
Bob the Builder 7:10am Dirtgirlworld
7:25am Sportsround 7:40am
Wolverine and the X-Men 8:00am
Escape from Scorpion Island
9:00am Paradise Cafe 9:30am The
Owl 9:30am Animals at Work
10:00am Horrible Histories 10:30am
Deadly 60 11:00am Richard
Hammond’s Blast Lab 11:30am
Evacuation to the Manor House
12:00pm Degrassi: The Next
Generation 12:25pm Scene
Stealers 12:55pm The 5:19 Show
1:20pm The 5:19 Show 1:30pm The
Almost Perfect Guide to Life 1:55pm
Revealed 2:10pm Revealed 2:25pm
Advise and Consent 4:40pm The
Great British Bake Off 5:40pm
Caravans: A British Love Affair
6:40pm BBC Proms 2010
8:30pm Dad’s Army
9:00pm Have I Got a Bit
More News for You
9:40pm Vexed
10:40pm Grandma’s House
11:10pm Russell Howard’s
Good News
11:40pm The Life Aquatic with
Steve Zissou
6:00am The Fluffy Club 7:25am
Toonattik 9:25am The Crocodile
Hunter Diaries 10:25am Children’s
Hospital 10:55am Monk 11:55am
News and Weather 11:59am
London Weather 12:00pm This
Morning: Saturday 1:00pm The
Man with the Golden Gun 3:20pm
Midsomer Murders 5:20pm
Weather 5:20pm London Tonight
5:30pm ITV News and Weather
5:45pm You’ve Been Framed!
6:45pm Odd One In
7:30pm The X Factor
9:00pm Magic Numbers
10:00pm The Bourne Identity
11:15pm ITV News and
Weather
11:29pm London Weather
11:30pm The Bourne Identity
12:30am ITV News Headlines
12:30am The Zone 2:30am
October Road 3:20am Raines
4:05am ITV Nightscreen 5:30am
ITV Morning News
6:10am The Hoobs 6:35am World
Sport 7:00am The Grid 7:30am
British Formula 3 Championship
8:00am The Morning Line 8:55am
Friends 9:25am Friends 9:55am
Ugly Betty 10:55am Big Brother
11:55am Big Brother 12:40pm The
Hollyoaks Music Show 1:10pm
Countdown to V Festival 2010
2:00pm Channel 4 Racing 4:00pm
Come Dine with Me Extra Portions
4:30pm Come Dine with Me Extra
Portions 5:00pm V Festival 2010:
Live 5:30pm Come Dine with Me
Extra Portions
6:00pm Come Dine with Me
Extra Portions
6:30pm Channel 4 News
6:55pm 4thought.tv
7:00pm Elizabeth
8:00pm The Queen
9:00pm Big Brother
10:00pm 8 Out of 10 Cats:
Best Bits
10:50pm Rude Tube
11:25pm V Festival 2010:
Saturday Highlights
12:55am Big Brother: Live 3:05am
The Real Housewives of New
Jersey 3:50am What About Brian
4:30am Wreck Detectives 5:25am
Beauty and the Geek
6:00am Children’s TV 9:00am
Olivia 9:15am The Mr Men Show
9:30am Gerald McBoing Boing
10:00am Don’t Stop Believers
10:05am How Do They Do It?
10:35am The Gadget Show
11:35am Great Railway
Adventures with Dan Cruickshank
12:35pm Going the Distance
Movie Special 1:10pm Don’t Stop
Believers 1:15pm Murder She
Said 2:55pm Bear Island 5:00pm
Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger
7:10pm Five News
7:15pm Cricket on Five
8:05pm NCIS
9:00pm CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation
10:00pm CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation
10:55pm CSI: Miami
11:55pm Don’t Stop Believers
12:05am SuperCasino 4:05am
Wildlife SOS 4:30am Wildlife SOS
4:55am The Family Recipe
5:00am Hana’s Helpline 5:10am
The Milkshake! Show 5:35am
Thomas & Friends 5:45am Roary
the Racing Car
6:00am Aerobics Oz Style 6:25am
Live ITM Cup Rugby Union 8:30am
Live ITM Cup Rugby Union
10:30am Live Test Cricket
7:00pm Live Super League
9:30pm Test Cricket
11:30pm FIFA Futbol Mundial
12:00am Live Masters Tennis
2:00am Tri-Nations International
Rugby Union 3:30am Test Cricket
5:30am FIFA Futbol Mundial
6:00am Brainiac: Science Abuse
7:00am Guinness World Records
Smashed! 8:00am Oops TV
8:30am Oops TV 9:00am Football’s
Next Star 10:00am Soccer AM
12:00pm Fat Families 1:00pm Fat
Families 2:00pm Pineapple Dance
Studios 3:00pm Project Runway
4:00pm Bill Bailey’s Birdwatching
Bonanza 5:00pm Liza and Huey’s
Pet Nation
6:00pm My Pet Shame
7:00pm The Simpsons
7:30pm Glenn Martin, DDS
8:00pm Oops TV
9:00pm Unbreakable
11:05pm Classic Albums
12:25am UK Border Force 1:25am
Crash ‘n’ Burn 3:05am Road Wars
3:30am Unsolved Crimes USA
7:00am Radical Highs 7:10am
TOTP2 7:35am TOTP2 8:00am
Cooking in the Danger Zone 8:30am
Cooking in the Danger Zone 9:00am
World Rally 10:00am Oz and
James’s Big Wine Adventure
10:30am Oz and James’s Big Wine
Adventure 11:00am Ray Mears’
Extreme Survival 11:40am Have I
Got News for You 12:20pm QI
1:00pm Top Gear 2:00pm World
Rally 3:00pm Top Gear
6:00pm World Rally
7:00pm Ray Mears’ Extreme
Survival
7:40pm Have I Got News for
You
8:20pm QI
9:00pm Billy Connolly’s World
Tour of New Zealand
6:00am Home Shopping 6:30am
Home Shopping 7:00am The Jerry
Springer Show 7:25am The Jerry
Springer Show 7:50am Celebs 24/7
8:00am Maury 8:55am Celebs 24/7
9:00am Four Weddings 10:00am
Dating in the Dark 11:00am
Australia’s Next Top Model
12:00pm Britain’s Next Top Model
1:00pm Britain’s Next Top Model
2:00pm Britain’s Next Top Model
3:00pm Britain’s Next Top Model
4:00pm The Curse of the Pink
Panther
6:00pm 16 and Pregnant
7:00pm Nothing to Declare
7:30pm Nothing to Declare
9:00pm Mini Me: Kids Who
Have It All
10:00pm Britain’s Worst Home
11:00pm Criminal Minds
6:20am Bargain Hunt 7:05am A
Life of Grime 7:30am A Life of
Grime 8:00am Heir Hunters
9:00am Animal Park: Wild in Africa
10:00am A Life of Grime 10:30am A
Life of Grime 11:00am Bargain
Hunt 12:00pm Who Do You Think
You Are? 1:00pm Who Do You
Think You Are? 2:00pm Who Do
You Think You Are? 3:00pm Who
Do You Think You Are? 4:00pm
Who Do You Think You Are?
5:00pm Robin Hood
6:00pm Outtake TV
6:30pm Look Who’s Talking
Too
8:00pm Doctor Who
9:00pm The Catherine Tate
Show
9:30pm The Catherine Tate
Show
Saturday 21 August
Return of the X FactorTHE search begins tofind the new star ofthis year’s X Factor -and there will be somenew faces on thejudging panel.
The seventh series of theITV show will be presented byDermot O’Leary, as usual, withKonnie Huq taking over fromHolly Willoughby as presenterof Xtra Factor, over on ITV2.With Dannii Minogue absenton maternity leave during the
first few auditions, specialguest judges Katy Perry, PixieLott, Gerri Halliwell and NicoleScherzinger will be seenalongside regulars SimonCowell, Louis Walsh and CherylCole.
Rumours suggest that 2008X Factor winner AlexandraBurke will also be a stand-injudge for Dannii.
Singer Dannii, whose baby,Ethan, was born on 5th July inMebourne, will return for thejudges’ House stage, and forthe live finals.
The Aussie really has been abusy bee because she has alsobeen a judge on this year’s
Australia’s Got Talent, along-side her reality TV show StyleQueen.
Cheryl Cole was also missingfrom the initial stages of theX Factor this year after a seri-ous bout of malaria, caughtwhile on holiday in Tanzania.
But the feisty singer is fullyfit again and raring to go,especially with some back-upfrom other female judges.“It’s lovely for me that thereare other women on thepanel,” said Cheryl.
“I couldn’t be sitting
between those miserable so-and-so’s Simon and Louis onmy own! I love having other
women with us.” Each of the four categories -
Boys, Girls, Groups and Overs(28-plus this year), will again bementored by one of the judgesthroughout the competition.
So, could we unearth anoth-er superstar, like Leona Lewis,JLS or Alexandra Burke? Orwill it be another lost LeonJackson? Tune in to ITVtomorrow night (Saturday)from 7 to 9.30 to start thesearch.By Beth Sherwin
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 25
Television Guide www.canarianweekly.com
6:00am Breakfast 7:40am Match
of the Day 9:00am BBC News
10:00am Sunday Morning Live
11:00am Country Tracks 12:00pm
BBC News 12:05pm Cash in the
Celebrity Attic 12:50pm Bargain
Hunt 1:15pm Escape to the
Country 2:15pm Diagnosis Murder
3:00pm EastEnders 5:00pm
Songs of Praise 5:35pm BBC
News; Regional News and
Weather
6:00pm Great British Railway
Journeys
6:30pm Countryfile
7:30pm Last of the Summer
Wine
8:00pm Antiques Roadshow
9:00pm Secret Britain
10:00pm BBC News; Regional
News and Weather
10:25pm Weatherview
10:25pm Sweet Home
Alabama
12:10am The Big Personality Test:
A Child of Our Time Special
1:10am Holby City 2:10am A Band
for Britain 3:10am BBC News
3:30am Reporters 4:00am BBC
News 4:30am HARDtalk 5:00am
The World Today 5:30am World
Business Report
6:00am Wibbly Pig 6:10am Bob
the Builder: Ready, Steady, Build!
6:20am Postman Pat: SDS
6:35am Guess with Jess 6:50am
Yoko! Jakamoko! Toto! 6:50am
Pingu 7:00am Everything’s Rosie
7:10am Bob the Builder 7:10am
Dirtgirlworld 7:25am Dennis and
Gnasher 7:35am Bear Behaving
Badly 8:00am Escape from
Scorpion Island 9:00am Deadly 60
9:30am Gastronuts 10:00am
Something for the Weekend
11:30am Monk 12:10pm The
Rookie 2:10pm The Alamo 4:15pm
Flog It! 5:00pm Natural World
6:00pm Home Movie
Roadshow
7:00pm Dragons’ Den
8:00pm Mountain Gorilla
9:00pm Vexed
10:00pm Match of the Day 2
10:50pm Mad Men
11:40pm Mad Men
12:25am Junebug 2:05am BBC
News 2:30am Dateline London
3:00am BBC News 3:10am The
Super League Show 3:55am
Close
6:00am The Fluffy Club 7:25am
Toonattik 9:25am Coronation
Street 11:40am This Morning:
Sunday 12:40pm Dinner Date
1:40pm News and Weather
1:44pm London Weather 1:45pm
Britain Does the Funniest Things
2:45pm The X Factor 4:15pm The
Spy Who Loved Me
6:35pm Weather
6:35pm London Tonight
6:45pm ITV News and
Weather
7:00pm Stephen
Tompkinson’s
Australian Balloon
Adventure
8:00pm Heartbeat
9:00pm Martin Clunes -
Horsepower
10:00pm ITV News and
Weather
10:14pm London Weather
10:15pm Drama Trails
11:15pm Comedy Classics:
Brass
12:10am Nightwatch with Steve
Scott: Emergency 1:00am ITV
News Headlines 1:00am The Zone
2:30am Motorsport UK 3:25am ITV
Nightscreen 5:30am ITV Morning
News
6:10am The Hoobs 6:35am The
Hoobs 7:05am Basketball 7:55am
Triathlon 8:50am Hollyoaks
11:25am Big Brother’s Little
Brother 12:30pm V Festival 2010:
T4 Highlights 1:55pm The
Simpsons 2:25pm The Simpsons
3:00pm Three in a Bed 3:30pm
Three in a Bed 4:00pm Three in a
Bed 4:30pm Ugly Betty 5:30pm V
Festival 2010: Live
6:30pm Channel 4 News
6:55pm 4thought.tv
7:00pm Sister Act
9:00pm Big Brother
10:00pm Alan Carr: Chatty
Man
10:50pm Star Stories
11:25pm V Festival 2010:
Sunday Highlights
12:55am Big Brother: Live 3:30am
The Real Housewives of New
Jersey 4:15am Bear Grylls: Born
Survivor 5:05am Hill Street Blues
6:00am Peppa Pig 6:05am Roary
the Racing Car 6:15am Fifi and the
Flowertots 6:30am Castle Farm
6:35am The Milkshake! Show
7:00am Elmo’s World 7:15am
Pocoyo 7:25am Milkshake Monkey
7:30am Harry and His Bucket Full
of Dinosaurs 7:40am Noddy in
Toyland 7:55am Milkshake! Bop
Box 8:00am Mist: Sheepdog Tales
8:10am Bert and Ernie’s Great
Adventures 8:15am Little Princess
8:30am The Adventures of Bottle
Top Bill and His Best Friend Corky
8:45am Igam Ogam 9:00am Olivia
9:15am The Mr Men Show 9:35am
Gerald McBoing Boing 10:00am
Shake! 10:35am True Jackson, VP
11:10am Don’t Stop Believing
12:10pm Great Railway
Adventures with Dan Cruickshank
1:10pm The Hotel Inspector
2:10pm What’s Up, Doc? 3:55pm
Five News 4:00pm Stuart Little 2
5:30pm Don’t Stop Believing
7:15pm Cricket on Five
8:00pm Terminator 3: Rise of
the Machines
10:05pm Universal Soldier
12:05am UFC 92: Main Event
1:05am SuperCasino 4:05am
Wildlife SOS 4:30am Wildlife SOS
4:55am The Family Recipe
5:00am Hana’s Helpline
6:00am Aerobics Oz Style 6:30am
Football First 8:00am Football First
9:30am The Sunday Supplement
11:00am Goals on Sunday 1:00pm
Live Football League 3:30pm Live
Super Sunday
6:30pm Scottish Premier
League Football
7:00pm FIFA Futbol Mundial
7:30pm Football Asia
8:00pm Test Cricket
10:00pm Football Special
11:30pm Scottish Premier
League Football
12:00am Test Cricket 2:00am
Football Special 3:30am Test
Cricket 5:30am Scottish Premier
League Football
6:00am Hour of Power 7:00am
Guinness World Records
Smashed! 8:00am Oops TV
8:30am Oops TV 9:00am Road
Wars 10:00am WWE Superstars
11:00am WWE: Experience
12:00pm Glenn Martin, DDS
12:30pm Oops TV 1:00pm Must Be
the Music 2:00pm Must Be the
Music 3:00pm UK Border Force
4:00pm Oops TV 5:00pm
Futurama 5:30pm Futurama
6:00pm The Simpsons
6:30pm The Simpsons
7:00pm Must Be the Music
8:00pm Must Be the Music
9:00pm Must Be the Music
10:00pm Martina Cole’s The
Take
11:00pm Must Be the Music
7:05am Cooking in the Danger
Zone 7:30am Cooking in the
Danger Zone 8:00am World Rally
9:00am Top Gear 10:00am Top
Gear 11:00am Crash 11:30am
Crash 12:00pm Top Gear 1:00pm
Top Gear 2:00pm Crash Addicts
2:30pm Crash 3:00pm Crash
3:30pm Top Gear 5:00pm Top Gear
6:00pm World Rally
7:00pm Seaside Rescue
7:40pm Ray Mears’ Extreme
Survival
8:20pm Have I Got News for
You
9:00pm QI XL
10:00pm Al Murray The Pub
Landlord
11:40pm QI XL
2:20am Rich Hall’s Fishing Show
7:00am The Jerry Springer Show
7:25am The Jerry Springer Show
7:50am Celebs 24/7 8:00am Maury
8:55am Celebs 24/7 9:00am Four
Weddings 9:30am Four Weddings
10:00am Four Weddings 10:30am
Four Weddings 11:00am Four
Weddings 11:30am Bulging Brides
12:00pm The Curse of the Pink
Panther 2:00pm Nothing to Declare
2:30pm Nothing to Declare 3:00pm
Passport Patrol 3:30pm Passport
Patrol 4:00pm Britain’s Next Top
Model 5:00pm 16 and Pregnant
6:00pm Dating in the Dark
7:00pm Four Weddings US
8:00pm Ghost Whisperer
9:00pm Criminal Minds
10:00pm CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation
11:00pm Criminal Minds
6:20am Bargain Hunt 7:10am Heir
Hunters 8:00am Animal Park: Wild
in Africa 9:00am Robin Hood
10:00am Who Do You Think You
Are? 11:00am Who Do You Think
You Are? 12:00pm Who Do You
Think You Are? 1:00pm Who Do
You Think You Are? 2:00pm Who
Do You Think You Are? 3:00pm
Who Do You Think You Are?
4:00pm Outtake TV 4:30pm
Outtake TV 5:00pm Funniest Pets
and People 5:30pm Funniest Pets
and People
6:00pm Doctor Who
7:00pm Outtake TV
7:30pm Outtake TV
8:00pm Total Wipeout USA
9:00pm King Arthur
11:30pm Traffic Cops
12:30am The Debt
Sunday 22 August
Page 26 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
www.canarianweekly.com Television Guide
6:00am Breakfast 9:15am Heir
Hunters 10:00am BBC News;
Weather 10:00am Homes Under
the Hammer 11:00am To Buy or Not
to Buy 11:25am BBC News;
Weather 11:25am Cash in the Attic
12:15pm Bargain Hunt 1:00pm BBC
News; Weather 1:30pm Regional
News and Weather 1:45pm Doctors
2:15pm Murder, She Wrote 3:00pm
BBC News; Weather; Regional
News 3:05pm Green Balloon Goes
on Holiday 3:30pm Funky Fables
3:40pm Mortified 4:05pm Copycats
4:35pm The Legend of Dick & Dom
5:00pm Newsround 5:15pm
Weakest Link
6:00pm BBC News
6:30pm Weather
6:30pm BBC London News
7:00pm The One Show
7:30pm BBC News: Regional
News
7:30pm Saints and
Scroungers
8:00pm EastEnders
8:30pm Panorama
9:00pm Who Do You Think
You Are?
10:00pm BBC News
10:25pm Regional News and
Weather
10:35pm Gears and Tears
11:05pm The Armstrong &
Miller Show
6:00am Wibbly Pig 6:10am Bob
the Builder: Ready, Steady, Build!
6:20am Postman Pat: SDS
6:35am Guess with Jess 6:50am
Yoko! Jakamoko! Toto! 6:50am
Pingu 7:00am Everything’s Rosie
7:10am Bob the Builder 7:10am
Garth and Bev 7:25am
Jollywobbles 7:35am Buzz and Tell
7:40am Timmy Time 7:50am
Charlie and Lola 8:00am Barney’s
Latin America 8:30am Ed and
Oucho’s Excellent Inventions
9:00am Roar 9:30am Leon
9:30am Gimme a Break 10:00am
Copycats 10:30am Deadly 60
11:00am When Zachary Beaver
Came to Town 12:20pm Track of
the Cat 2:00pm Wanted Down
Under 3:00pm Diagnosis Murder
3:45pm Flog It! 4:30pm Cash in
the Celebrity Attic 5:15pm Escape
to the Country
6:00pm Eggheads
6:30pm Restoration
Roadshow
7:00pm Dan Snow’s Norman
Walks
7:30pm Roger and Val Have
Just Got In
8:00pm University Challenge
8:30pm Antiques Master
9:00pm Dragons’ Den
10:00pm Grandma’s House
10:30pm Weather
6:00am GMTV 9:25am The
Jeremy Kyle Show 10:30am This
Morning 12:30pm Dinner Date
1:30pm ITV News and Weather
1:55pm London News and
Weather 2:00pm Dickinson’s Real
Deal 3:00pm The Michael Ball
Show 3:59pm London Weather
4:00pm Inspector Morse 5:00pm
Britain’s Best Dish 6:00pm
Weather
6:00pm London Tonight
6:30pm ITV News and
Weather
7:00pm Emmerdale
7:30pm Coronation Street
8:00pm Countrywise
8:30pm Coronation Street
9:00pm Real Crime with
Mark Austin: Murder
of a Father
10:00pm ITV News at Ten and
Weather
10:30pm London News and
Weather
10:35pm Highlander
12:45am ITV News Headlines
12:45am The Zone 2:45am The
Jeremy Kyle Show 3:40am ITV
Nightscreen 5:30am ITV Morning
News
6:00am The Hoobs 6:25am The
Hoobs 6:50am Big Brother’s Little
Brother 7:50am Big Brother
8:45am Frasier 9:15am Smallville
10:05am Privileged 11:00am
Friends 11:30am Friends 12:00pm
Channel 4 News Summary
12:05pm Brothers & Sisters
12:55pm The TV Book Club
1:25pm Come Dine with Me Extra
Portions 1:55pm Come Dine with
Me Extra Portions 2:25pm Come
Dine with Me Extra Portions
2:55pm Come Dine with Me Extra
Portions 3:25pm Countdown
4:10pm Deal or No Deal 5:00pm A
Place in the Sun: Home or Away
6:00pm The Simpsons
6:30pm Hollyoaks
7:00pm Channel 4 News
7:55pm 4thought.tv
8:00pm Dispatches: When
Cousins Marry
9:00pm The Hospital
10:00pm Big Brother
11:10pm Alan Carr: Chatty
Man
11:55pm European Poker
Tour
12:50am Big Brother: Live 4:55am
The Strange Affair of Uncle Harry
6:00am Pocoyo 6:05am Roary the
Racing Car 6:15am Thomas &
Friends 6:30am Milkshake! Music
Box 6:35am Elmo’s World 6:50am
Peppa Pig 6:55am Milkshake
Monkey 7:00am The WotWots
7:10am Rupert Bear 7:20am Bert
and Ernie’s Great Adventures
7:30am Roary the Racing Car
7:45am Make Way for Noddy
8:00am Fifi and the Flowertots
8:15am Peppa Pig 8:20am
Thomas & Friends 8:30am Mio
Mao 8:35am Olivia 8:50am The Mr
Men Show 9:00am Little Princess
9:15am The Wright Stuff 10:45am
Lorraine Kelly’s Big Fat Challenge
11:45am CSI: NY 12:40pm Five
News 12:45pm The Hotel
Inspector 1:45pm Neighbours
2:15pm CSI: NY 3:05pm Evel
5:00pm Weather 5:00pm Five
News 5:30pm Neighbours
6:00pm The Boss Is Coming
to Dinner
6:25pm Live from Studio Five
7:00pm Five News at 7
7:30pm How Do They Do It?
8:00pm The Gadget Show
9:00pm Lethal Weapon 4
11:35pm Thunderbolt and
Lightfoot
1:45am SuperCasino 4:05am The
Boss Is Coming to Dinner
6:00am Good Morning Sports Fans
9:00am Football Special 10:30am
Scottish Premier League Football
11:00am Test Cricket 1:00pm
Football Special 2:30pm Test
Cricket 4:30pm FIFA Futbol
Mundial 5:00pm Scottish Premier
League Football 5:30pm Soccer
AM: The Best Bits
6:30pm Netbusters
7:00pm Live Monday Night
Football
10:30pm Netbusters
11:00pm SPL Round-Up
11:30pm Soccer AM: The Best
Bits
12:30am Monday Night Football
2:30am Sports Unlimited 3:30am
Watersports World 4:30am Max
Power 5:30am FIFA Futbol Mundial
6:00am A Town Called Eureka
7:00am Brainiac’s Test Tube Baby
8:00am Brainiac: Science Abuse
9:00am Oops TV 9:30am Oops TV
10:00am Grease: The School
Musical 11:00am Wedding SOS
11:30am The Secret Guide to
Women’s Health 12:00pm The
Real A&E 1:00pm Oops TV 2:00pm
A Town Called Eureka 3:00pm
Stargate SG-1 4:00pm Stargate
SG-1 5:00pm Malcolm in the
Middle
6:00pm Oops TV
6:30pm The Simpsons
7:00pm The Simpsons
7:30pm The Simpsons
8:00pm The Biggest Loser
US
10:00pm Law & Order
11:00pm Bones
7:05am Trawlermen 7:30am
Trawlermen 8:00am Top Gear
9:00am Robot Wars Extreme
10:00am The Gadget Show
10:30am Fifth Gear 11:00am
Seaside Rescue 11:30am Top
Gear 1:00pm Top Gear 2:00pm
Robot Wars Extreme 3:00pm The
Gadget Show 3:30pm Fifth Gear
4:00pm Top Gear 5:00pm Top Gear
6:00pm Robot Wars Extreme
7:00pm World Rally
8:00pm Trawlermen
8:30pm Trawlermen
9:00pm Have I Got News for
You
10:20pm Mock the Week
11:00pm Mock the Week
11:40pm Have I Got News for
You
7:00am The Jerry Springer Show
7:25am The Jerry Springer Show
7:50am Celebs 24/7 8:00am Maury
8:55am Celebs 24/7 9:00am
America’s Next Top Model
10:00am Ghost Whisperer
11:00am Nothing to Declare
12:00pm Four Weddings 1:00pm
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation
2:00pm CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation 3:00pm Shortland
Street 3:30pm Shortland Street
4:00pm Charmed
6:00pm America’s Next Top
Model
7:00pm Four Weddings
8:00pm Dating in the Dark
9:00pm Britain’s Next Top
Model
10:00pm Four Weddings US
11:00pm Criminal Minds
6:20am Scream if You Know the
Answer! 6:45am Scream if You Know
the Answer! 7:10amAnimal Park: Wild
in Africa 8:00am Casualty 9:00am The
Bill 10:00am The Bill 11:00am
Casualty 12:00pm Fantasy Homes by
the Sea 1:00pm Scream if You Know
the Answer! 1:30pm Scream if You
Know the Answer! 2:00pm Outtake
TV 2:40pm My Family 3:20pm My
Family 4:00pm Animal Park: Wild in
Africa 5:00pm Scream if You Know
the Answer! 5:30pm Scream if You
Know the Answer!
6:00pm Outtake TV
6:40pm My Family
7:20pm My Family
8:00pm Fantasy Homes by
the Sea
9:00pm Traffic Cops
10:00pm Traffic Cops
Monday 23 August
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 27
Television Guide www.canarianweekly.com
6:00am Breakfast 9:15am Heir
Hunters 10:00am BBC News;
Weather 10:00am Homes Under
the Hammer 11:00am To Buy or
Not to Buy 11:30am BBC News;
Weather 11:30am Cash in the Attic
12:15pm Bargain Hunt 1:00pm
BBC News; Weather 1:30pm
Regional News and Weather
1:45pm Doctors 2:15pm Murder,
She Wrote 3:00pm BBC News;
Weather; Regional News 3:05pm
Green Balloon Goes on Holiday
3:30pm Funky Fables 3:40pm
Mortified 4:05pm Copycats
4:35pm Horrible Histories 5:00pm
Newsround 5:15pm Weakest Link
6:00pm Weather
6:00pm BBC News
6:30pm BBC London News
7:00pm The One Show
7:30pm EastEnders
8:00pm Holby City
9:00pm The Deep
10:00pm BBC News
10:25pm Regional News and
Weather
10:35pm Cars, Cops and
Criminals
11:35pm Weatherview
11:35pm The Drowning Pool
1:25am Hampton Court Palace
Flower Show 2010
6:00am Wibbly Pig 6:10am Bob the
Builder: Ready, Steady, Build!
6:20am Postman Pat: SDS 6:35am
Guess with Jess 6:50am Yoko!
Jakamoko! Toto! 6:50am Pingu
7:00am Everything’s Rosie 7:10am
Bob the Builder 7:10am Garth and
Bev 7:25am Jollywobbles 7:35am
Buzz and Tell 7:40am Timmy Time
7:50am Charlie and Lola 8:00am
Barney’s Latin America 8:30am Ed
and Oucho’s Excellent Inventions
9:00am Roar 9:30am Leon 9:30am
Gimme a Break 10:00am Copycats
10:30am Deadly 60 11:00am The
Pixar Story 12:25pm Father Dear
Father 2:00pm Wanted Down
Under 3:00pm Diagnosis Murder
3:45pm Flog It! 4:30pm Cash in the
Celebrity Attic 5:15pm Escape to the
Country
6:00pm Eggheads
6:30pm Restoration
Roadshow
7:00pm Coast
8:00pm The Great British
Bake Off
9:00pm Treasures of the
Anglo-Saxons
10:00pm Grumpy Old
Holidays
10:30pm Weather
10:30pm Newsnight
11:20pm How Not to Live Your
Life
6:00am GMTV 9:25am The
Jeremy Kyle Show 10:30am This
Morning 12:30pm Dinner Date
1:30pm ITV News and Weather
1:55pm London News and
Weather 2:00pm Dickinson’s Real
Deal 3:00pm The Michael Ball
Show 3:59pm London Weather
4:00pm Inspector Morse 5:00pm
Britain’s Best Dish 6:00pm
Weather
6:00pm London Tonight
6:30pm ITV News and
Weather
7:00pm Emmerdale
7:30pm Grimefighters
8:00pm New Who Wants to
Be a Millionaire?
9:00pm The Bill
10:00pm ITV News at Ten and
Weather
10:30pm London News and
Weather
10:35pm Ladette to Lady
11:35pm October Road
12:30am ITV News Headlines
12:30am The Zone 2:30am The
Jeremy Kyle Show 3:25am ITV
Nightscreen 5:30am ITV Morning
News
6:15am The Hoobs 6:40am The
Hoobs 7:05am Big Brother’s Little
Brother 7:35am Big Brother
8:45am Frasier 9:10am Smallville
10:05am Privileged 11:00am
Friends 11:30am Friends 12:00pm
Channel 4 News Summary
12:05pm Brothers & Sisters
12:55pm The TV Book Club
1:25pm Come Dine with Me Extra
Portions 1:55pm Come Dine with
Me Extra Portions 2:25pm Come
Dine with Me Extra Portions
2:55pm Come Dine with Me Extra
Portions 3:25pm Countdown
4:10pm Deal or No Deal 5:00pm A
Place in the Sun: Home or Away
6:00pm The Simpsons
6:30pm Hollyoaks
7:00pm Channel 4 News
7:55pm 4thought.tv
8:00pm Big Brother: The
Final
10:50pm Lee Evans: Wired
and Wonderful - Live
at Wembley
11:50pm The Inbetweeners
12:25am Pete Versus Life 1:00am
The Poker Lounge 1:55am
Ultimate Big Brother: Live 3:45am
KOTV Boxing Weekly 4:10am
Triathlon ITU World Championship
Series 5:00am British Formula 3
Championship 5:25am The Grid
6:00am Children’s TV 9:00am
Little Princess 9:15am The Wright
Stuff 10:45am Trisha Goddard
11:45am CSI: NY 12:40pm Five
News 12:45pm The Hotel
Inspector 1:45pm Neighbours
2:15pm CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation 3:05pm The King and
Queen of Moonlight Bay 5:00pm
Weather 5:00pm Five News
5:30pm Neighbours
6:00pm The Boss Is Coming
to Dinner
6:25pm Live from Studio Five
7:00pm Five News at 7
7:30pm Chris Barrie’s
Massive Speed
8:00pm Five News at 9
8:00pm Great Railway
Adventures with Dan
Cruickshank
9:00pm CSI Trilogy
10:00pm CSI Trilogy
10:55pm CSI Trilogy
11:55pm NCIS
12:55am SuperCasino 4:05am
The Boss Is Coming to Dinner
4:30am Wildlife SOS 4:55am
County Secrets 5:10am The New
Tomorrow 5:35am Michaela’s Wild
Challenge
6:00am Good Morning Sports Fans
9:00am Netbusters 9:30am
Monday Night Football 11:30am
Netbusters 12:00pm Soccer AM:
The Best Bits 1:00pm Monday
Night Football 3:00pm Netbusters
3:30pm Soccer AM: The Best Bits
4:30pm SPL Round-Up 5:00pm
Netbusters 5:30pm Ladies
European Tour Golf
6:30pm Football Asia
7:00pm Sky Sports News
7:30pm Live ECB 40 League
Cricket
10:30pm Football Asia
11:00pm Women’s Rugby
Union World Cup
1:00am UEFA Champions League
Goals 1:30am A-League 2:00am
Women’s Rugby Union World Cup
6:00am A Town Called Eureka
7:00am Brainiac’s Test Tube Baby
8:00am Brainiac: Science Abuse
9:00am Oops TV 9:30am Oops TV
10:00am Grease: The School
Musical 11:00am Wedding SOS
11:30am Brain Doctors 12:00pm
The Real A&E 1:00pm Malcolm in
the Middle 1:30pm Malcolm in the
Middle 2:00pm Liza and Huey’s Pet
Nation 3:00pm Stargate SG-1
4:00pm Stargate SG-1 5:00pm
Malcolm in the Middle
6:00pm Oops TV
6:30pm The Simpsons
8:00pm UK Border Force
9:00pm Ross Kemp: A Kenya
Special
10:00pm Ross Kemp on
Gangs
11:00pm Must Be the Music
7:05am Top Gear 8:00am Top Gear
9:00am Robot Wars Extreme
10:00am The Gadget Show
10:30am Fifth Gear 11:00am Full
Circle with Michael Palin 12:00pm
Top Gear 1:00pm Top Gear 2:00pm
Robot Wars Extreme 3:00pm The
Gadget Show 3:30pm Fifth Gear
4:00pm Top Gear 5:00pm Top Gear
6:00pm Robot Wars Extreme
7:00pm The Gadget Show
7:30pm Seaside Rescue
8:00pm Full Circle with
Michael Palin
9:00pm QI XL
11:00pm Would I Lie to You?
11:40pm Would I Lie to You?
12:20am QI XL 1:20am Would I Lie
to You? 1:55am Rich Hall’s Fishing
Show
7:00am The Jerry Springer Show
7:50am Celebs 24/7 8:00am Maury
8:55am Celebs 24/7 9:00am
America’s Next Top Model
10:00am Shortland Street 10:30am
Shortland Street 11:00am Nothing
to Declare 11:30am Nothing to
Declare 12:00pm Celebrity Four
Weddings 1:00pm CSI: Crime
Scene Investigation 2:00pm CSI:
Crime Scene Investigation 3:00pm
Shortland Street 3:30pm Shortland
Street 4:00pm Charmed
6:00pm America’s Next Top
Model
7:00pm Celebrity Four
Weddings
8:00pm Britain’s Next Top
Model
9:00pm Dating in the Dark
10:00pm Teen Mom
6:20am Scream if You Know the
Answer 7:10am Animal Park: Wild in
Africa 8:00am Casualty 9:00am The
Bill 10:00am The Bill 11:00am
Casualty 12:00pm Fantasy Homes by
the Sea 1:00pm Scream if You Know
the Answer! 1:30pm Scream if You
Know the Answer! 2:00pm Outtake
TV 2:40pm My Family 3:20pm My
Family 4:00pm Animal Park: Wild in
Africa 5:00pm Scream if You Know
the Answer! 5:30pm Scream if You
Know the Answer!
6:00pm Outtake TV
6:40pm My Family
7:20pm My Family
8:00pm Fantasy Homes by
the Sea
9:00pm Jonathan Creek
10:10pm Who Do You Think
You Are?
Tuesday 24 August
Page 30 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 31
www.canarianweekly.com Television Guide
6:00am Breakfast 9:15am Heir
Hunters 10:00am BBC News;
Weather 10:00am Homes Under
the Hammer 11:00am To Buy or Not
to Buy 11:30am BBC News;
Weather 11:30am Cash in the Attic
12:15pm Bargain Hunt 1:00pm BBC
News; Weather 1:30pm Regional
News and Weather 1:45pm Doctors
2:15pm Murder, She Wrote 3:00pm
BBC News; Weather; Regional
News 3:05pm Green Balloon Goes
on Holiday 3:30pm Funky Fables
3:40pm Mortified 4:05pm Copycats
4:35pm Little Howard’s Big
Question 5:00pm Newsround
5:15pm Weakest Link 6:00pm
Weather
6:00pm BBC News
6:30pm Weather
6:30pm BBC London News
7:00pm The One Show
7:30pm BBC News; Regional
News
7:30pm Holby City
8:30pm Great British Waste
Menu
10:00pm BBC News
10:25pm Regional News and
Weather
10:35pm The National Lottery
Draws
10:45pm Reggie Perrin
11:15pm National Lottery
Update
6:00am Wibbly Pig 6:10am Bob
the Builder: Ready, Steady, Build!
6:20am Postman Pat: SDS
6:35am Guess with Jess 6:50am
Yoko! Jakamoko! Toto! 6:50am
Pingu 7:00am Everything’s Rosie
7:10am Bob the Builder 7:10am
Garth and Bev 7:25am
Jollywobbles 7:35am Buzz and Tell
7:40am Timmy Time 7:50am
Charlie and Lola 8:00am Barney’s
Latin America 8:30am Ed and
Oucho’s Excellent Inventions
9:00am Roar 9:30am Leon
9:30am Gimme a Break 10:00am
Copycats 10:30am Deadly 60
11:00am The Country Bears
12:25pm Road to Rio 2:00pm
Wanted Down Under 3:00pm
Diagnosis Murder 3:45pm Flog It!
4:30pm Cash in the Celebrity Attic
5:15pm Escape to the Country
6:00pm Eggheads
6:30pm Restoration
Roadshow
7:00pm Mountain Gorilla
8:00pm Coast
9:00pm The Wounded
Platoon
10:00pm Have I Got Old News
for You
10:30pm Weather
10:30pm Newsnight
11:20pm Surviving Haiti
6:00am GMTV 9:25am The
Jeremy Kyle Show 10:30am This
Morning 12:30pm Dinner Date
1:30pm ITV News and Weather
1:55pm London News and
Weather 2:00pm Dickinson’s Real
Deal 3:00pm The Michael Ball
Show 3:59pm London Weather
4:00pm Inspector Morse 5:00pm
Britain’s Best Dish 6:00pm
Weather
6:00pm London Tonight
6:30pm ITV News and
Weather
7:00pm Emmerdale
7:30pm Live UEFA
Champions League
10:00pm ITV News at Ten and
Weather
10:30pm London News and
Weather
10:35pm UEFA Champions
League: Extra Time
11:35pm Celebrity Juice
12:20am ITV News Headlines
12:20am The Zone 2:20am
Deliverance 4:10am The Jeremy
Kyle Show 5:05am ITV
Nightscreen 5:30am ITV Morning
News
6:20am The Hoobs 6:45am Big
Brother’s Little Brother 7:15am Big
Brother: The Final 10:05am
Privileged 11:00am Friends
11:30am Friends 12:00pm
Channel 4 News Summary
12:05pm Brothers & Sisters
12:55pm The TV Book Club
1:25pm Come Dine with Me Extra
Portions 1:55pm Come Dine with
Me Extra Portions 2:25pm Come
Dine with Me Extra Portions
2:55pm Come Dine with Me Extra
Portions 3:25pm Countdown
4:10pm Deal or No Deal 5:00pm A
Place in the Sun: Home or Away
6:00pm The Simpsons
6:30pm Hollyoaks
7:00pm Channel 4 News
7:55pm 4thought.tv
8:00pm How to Look Good
Naked
9:00pm My New Brain
10:00pm Ultimate Big Brother
11:10pm School of Comedy
11:40pm The Raoul Moat
Tapes: Inside the
Mind of a Killer
12:40am Boardmasters Presents
Newton Faulkner 12:55am The
Album Chart Show 1:10am
Ultimate Big Brother: Live 3:05am
Rebound 4:30am Beach Volleyball
5:25am Countdown
6:00am Children’s TV 9:00am
Little Princess 9:15am The Wright
Stuff 10:45am Trisha Goddard
11:45am CSI: NY 12:40pm Five
News 12:45pm The Hotel
Inspector 1:45pm Neighbours
2:15pm CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation 3:05pm Midwives
5:00pm Weather 5:00pm Five
News 5:30pm Neighbours
6:00pm The Boss Is Coming
to Dinner
6:25pm Live from Studio Five
7:00pm Five News at 7
7:30pm Animal Rescue
Squad
8:00pm Emergency Bikers
9:00pm NCIS
10:00pm Law & Order:
Criminal Intent
10:55pm K-Ville
11:55pm Poker
12:55am SuperCasino 4:05am
The Boss Is Coming to Dinner
4:30am Wildlife SOS 4:55am
County Secrets 5:10am The New
Tomorrow 5:35am Michaela’s Wild
Challenge
6:00am Good Morning Sports Fans
9:00am UEFA Champions League
Goals 9:30am Football Asia
10:00am Women’s Rugby Union
World Cup 12:00pm BMX Cycling
1:00pm UEFA Champions League
Goals 1:30pm A-League 2:00pm
Women’s Rugby Union World Cup
4:00pm UEFA Champions League
Goals 4:30pm Football Asia
5:00pm Total Rugby 5:30pm FIFA
Futbol Mundial
6:00pm Boots ‘n’ All
7:00pm Sky Sports News
7:30pm Live ECB 40 League
Cricket
10:30pm Boots ‘n’ All
11:30pm Total Rugby
12:00am UEFA Champions League
Goals
6:00am The Real A&E 7:00am
Brainiac’s Test Tube Baby 8:00am
Brainiac: Science Abuse 9:00am
Oops TV 9:30am Oops TV
10:00am Grease: The School
Musical 11:00am Wedding SOS
11:30am Babies at Risk 12:00pm
First Love 1:00pm Malcolm in the
Middle 1:30pm Malcolm in the
Middle 2:00pm Liza and Huey’s Pet
Nation 3:00pm Stargate SG-1
4:00pm Stargate SG-1 5:00pm
Malcolm in the Middle 5:30pm
Malcolm in the Middle
6:00pm Oops TV
6:30pm The Simpsons
8:00pm Vet Adventures
9:00pm Must Be the Music
10:00pm Must Be the Music
11:00pm Must Be the Music
7:00am Top Gear 8:00am Top Gear
9:00am Robot Wars Extreme
10:00am The Gadget Show
10:30am Fifth Gear 11:00am
Seaside Rescue 11:30am Traffic
Cops 12:00pm Top Gear 1:00pm
Top Gear 2:00pm Robot Wars
Extreme 3:00pm The Gadget Show
3:30pm Fifth Gear 4:00pm The
Best of Top Gear 5:00pm The Best
of Top Gear
6:00pm Robot Wars Extreme
7:00pm The Gadget Show
7:30pm Seaside Rescue
8:00pm Traffic Cops
8:30pm Traffic Cops
9:00pm Mock the Week
9:40pm Mock the Week
10:20pm Argumental
11:00pm Argumental
11:40pm Mock the Week
7:00am The Jerry Springer Show
7:25am The Jerry Springer Show
7:50am Celebs 24/7 8:00am Maury
8:55am Celebs 24/7 9:00am
America’s Next Top Model
10:00am Shortland Street 10:30am
Shortland Street 11:00am Nothing
to Declare 11:30am Nothing to
Declare 12:00pm Four Weddings
1:00pm CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation 2:00pm CSI: Crime
Scene Investigation 3:00pm
Shortland Street 3:30pm Shortland
Street 4:00pm Charmed
6:00pm America’s Next Top
Model
7:00pm Four Weddings
8:00pm Four Weddings US
9:00pm Ghost Whisperer
10:00pm CSI: Miami
11:00pm Criminal Minds
6:20am Scream if You Know the
Answer! 6:45am Scream if You
Know the Answer! 7:10am Animal
Park: Wild in Africa 8:00am Casualty
9:00am The Bill 10:00am The Bill
11:00am Casualty 12:00pm Fantasy
Homes by the Sea 1:00pm Scream
if You Know the Answer! 1:30pm
Scream if You Know the Answer!
2:00pm Outtake TV 2:40pm My
Family 4:00pm Animal Park: Wild in
Africa 5:00pm Scream if You Know
the Answer! 5:30pm Scream if You
Know the Answer!
6:00pm Outtake TV
6:40pm My Family
8:00pm Fantasy Homes by
the Sea
9:00pm Dawn Gets Naked
10:05pm Neighbourhood
Watched
Wednesday 25 August
Page 32 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
Television Guide www.canarianweekly.com
6:00am Breakfast 9:15am Heir
Hunters 10:00am BBC News;
Weather 10:00am Homes Under
the Hammer 11:00am To Buy or
Not to Buy 11:30am BBC News;
Weather 11:30am Cash in the Attic
12:15pm Bargain Hunt 1:00pm
BBC News; Weather 1:30pm
Regional News and Weather
1:45pm Doctors 2:15pm Murder,
She Wrote 3:00pm BBC News;
Weather; Regional News 3:05pm
Green Balloon Goes on Holiday
3:30pm Funky Fables 3:40pm
Mortified 4:05pm Animals at Work
4:35pm Deadly 60 5:00pm
Newsround 5:15pm Weakest Link
6:00pm Weather
6:00pm BBC News
6:30pm BBC London News
7:00pm The One Show
7:30pm EastEnders
8:00pm DIY SOS: The Big
Build - Brynmawr
9:00pm Mistresses
10:00pm BBC News
10:25pm Regional News and
Weather
10:35pm Holiday Weatherview
10:35pm The Mexican
10:35pm The Mexican Panorama
1:05am Countryfile 2:05am
Celebrity MasterChef 3:05am Ben
Fogle’s Escape in Time
6:00am Wibbly Pig 6:10am Bob the
Builder: Ready, Steady, Build!
6:20am Postman Pat: SDS 6:35am
Guess with Jess 6:50am Yoko!
Jakamoko! Toto! 6:50am Pingu
7:00am Everything’s Rosie 7:10am
Bob the Builder 7:10am Garth and
Bev 7:25am Jollywobbles 7:35am
Buzz and Tell 7:40am Timmy Time
7:50am Charlie and Lola 8:00am
Barney’s Latin America 8:30am Ed
and Oucho’s Excellent Inventions
9:00am Roar 9:30am Leon 9:30am
Gimme a Break 10:00am Copycats
10:30am Deadly 60 11:00am The
Story of an African Farm 12:35pm
Wagonmaster 2:00pm Wanted
Down Under 3:00pm Diagnosis
Murder 3:45pm Flog It! 4:30pm
Cash in the Celebrity Attic 5:15pm
Escape to the Country
6:00pm Eggheads
6:30pm Restoration
Roadshow
7:00pm The Culture Show at
the Edinburgh
Festival
8:00pm E Numbers: An
Edible Adventure
9:00pm Digging for Britain
10:00pm Grumpy Old Men
10:30pm Weather
10:30pm Newsnight
11:20pm Nurse Jackie
11:45pm Nurse Jackie
6:00am GMTV 9:25am The
Jeremy Kyle Show 10:30am This
Morning 12:30pm Dinner Date
1:30pm ITV News and Weather
1:55pm London News and
Weather 2:00pm Dickinson’s Real
Deal 3:00pm The Michael Ball
Show 3:59pm London Weather
4:00pm Inspector Morse 5:00pm
Britain’s Best Dish 6:00pm
Weather
6:00pm London Tonight
6:30pm ITV News and
Weather
7:00pm Emmerdale
7:30pm Nightmare Tenants:
Tonight
8:00pm Emmerdale
8:30pm Coronation Street
9:00pm Florida - Paradise
Lost
10:00pm ITV News at Ten and
Weather
10:30pm London News and
Weather
10:35pm Conan the Barbarian
12:55am ITV News Headlines
12:55am The Zone 2:55am British
Touring Car Championship
Highlights 4:15am ITV Nightscreen
5:30am ITV Morning News
6:10am Sali Mali 6:15am The
Hoobs 6:40am The Hoobs 7:05am
Big Brother’s Little Brother 7:35am
Ultimate Big Brother 8:45am
Frasier 9:10am Smallville 10:05am
Privileged 11:00am Friends
11:30am Friends 12:00pm
Channel 4 News Summary
12:05pm Brothers & Sisters
12:55pm The TV Book Club
1:25pm Come Dine with Me Extra
Portions 1:55pm Come Dine with
Me Extra Portions 2:25pm Come
Dine with Me Extra Portions
2:55pm Come Dine with Me Extra
Portions 3:25pm Countdown
4:10pm Deal or No Deal 5:00pm A
Place in the Sun: Home or Away
6:00pm The Simpsons
6:30pm Hollyoaks
7:00pm Channel 4 News
7:55pm 4thought.tv
8:00pm Location, Location,
Location
9:00pm Hurricane Katrina:
Caught on Camera
10:00pm Ultimate Big Brother
11:10pm Coming Up: Dip
11:40pm Coming Up: Eclipse
12:10am Album Chart Show: The
Klaxons 12:45am 4Play: Imelda
May 12:55am Boardmasters
Presents Seasick Steve 1:10am
The Ascent of Money
6:00am Pocoyo 6:05am Roary the
Racing Car 6:15am Thomas &
Friends 6:30am Milkshake! Music
Box 6:35am Elmo’s World 6:50am
Peppa Pig 6:55am Milkshake
Monkey 7:00am The WotWots
7:10am Rupert Bear 7:20am Bert
and Ernie’s Great Adventures
7:30am Roary the Racing Car
7:45am Make Way for Noddy
8:00am Fifi and the Flowertots
8:15am Peppa Pig 8:20am
Thomas & Friends 8:30am Mio
Mao 8:35am Olivia 8:50am The Mr
Men Show 9:00am Little Princess
9:15am The Wright Stuff 10:45am
Trisha Goddard 11:45am CSI: NY
12:40pm Five News 12:45pm The
Hotel Inspector 1:45pm
Neighbours 2:15pm CSI: NY
3:05pm Rosamunde Pilcher’s
Spring 5:00pm Weather 5:00pm
Five News 5:30pm Neighbours
6:00pm The Boss Is Coming
to Dinner
6:25pm Live from Studio Five
7:00pm Five News at 7
7:15pm Cricket on Five
8:00pm Egypt’s Lost Queen
9:00pm The Hotel Inspector
10:00pm Crimes That Shook
the World
11:00pm Britain’s Ugliest
Models
6:00am Good Morning Sports Fans
9:00am UEFA Champions League
Goals 9:30am FIFA Futbol Mundial
10:00am Total Rugby 10:30am Live
Test Cricket
7:00pm Sky Sports News
7:30pm ATP Tour Uncovered
8:00pm Test Cricket
10:00pm Time of Our Lives
11:00pm Premier League
World
11:30pm Test Cricket
1:30am Carling Cup Football
3:00am Time of Our Lives 4:00am
Premier League World 4:30am
Carling Cup Football
6:00am The Real A&E 7:00am
Brainiac’s Test Tube Baby 8:00am
Brainiac: Science Abuse 9:00am
Oops TV 9:30am Oops TV
10:00am Grease: The School
Musical 11:00am Wedding SOS
11:30am Adoption Diaries 12:00pm
The Real A&E 1:00pm Malcolm in
the Middle 1:30pm Malcolm in the
Middle 2:00pm Liza and Huey’s Pet
Nation 3:00pm Stargate SG-1
4:00pm Stargate SG-1 5:00pm
Malcolm in the Middle 5:30pm
Malcolm in the Middle
6:00pm Oops TV
6:30pm The Simpsons
8:00pm The Real A&E
8:30pm Real Filth Fighters
9:00pm Lie to Me
10:00pm NCIS: Los Angeles
11:00pm NCIS: Los Angeles
7:00am The Best of Top Gear 9:00am
Robot Wars Extreme 10:00am The
Gadget Show 10:30am Fifth Gear
11:00am Seaside Rescue 11:30am
Traffic Cops 12:00pm The Best of Top
Gear 1:00pm The Best of Top Gear
2:00pm Robot Wars Extreme 3:00pm
The Gadget Show 3:30pm Fifth Gear
4:00pm The Best of Top Gear
6:00pm Robot Wars Extreme
7:00pm The Gadget Show
7:30pm Fifth Gear
8:00pm Traffic Cops
8:30pm Seaside Rescue
9:00pm Never Mind the
Buzzcocks
10:20pm Have I Got News for
You
11:40pm Never Mind the
Buzzcocks
6:00am Home Shopping 6:30am
Home Shopping 7:00am The Jerry
Springer Show 7:25am The Jerry
Springer Show 7:50am Celebs
24/7 8:00am Maury 8:55am Celebs
24/7 9:00am America’s Next Top
Model 10:00am Shortland Street
10:30am Shortland Street 11:00am
Nothing to Declare 11:30am
Nothing to Declare 12:00pm Four
Weddings 1:00pm CSI: Crime
Scene Investigation 2:00pm CSI:
Crime Scene Investigation 3:00pm
Shortland Street 3:30pm Shortland
Street 4:00pm Charmed
6:00pm America’s Next Top
Model
7:00pm Four Weddings
8:00pm Private Practice
9:00pm Criminal Minds
10:00pm Criminal Minds
6:20am Scream if You Know the
Answer! 7:15am Animal Park: Wild
in Africa 8:00am Casualty 9:00am
The Bill 10:00am The Bill 11:00am
Casualty 12:00pm Fantasy Homes
by the Sea 1:00pm Scream if You
Know the Answer! 1:30pm Scream
if You Know the Answer! 2:00pm
Outtake TV 2:40pm My Family
3:20pm My Family 4:00pm Animal
Park: Wild in Africa 5:00pm Scream
if You Know the Answer! 5:30pm
Scream if You Know the Answer!
6:00pm Outtake TV
6:40pm My Family
7:20pm My Family
8:00pm Fantasy Homes by
the Sea
9:00pm Traffic Cops
10:00pm New Tricks
11:00pm The Real Hustle
Thursday 26 August
www.canarianweekly.com Television Guide
6:00am Breakfast 9:15am Heir
Hunters 10:00am BBC News;
Weather 10:00am Homes Under
the Hammer 11:00am To Buy or
Not to Buy 11:30am BBC News;
Weather 11:30am Cash in the Attic
12:15pm Bargain Hunt 1:00pm
BBC News; Weather 1:30pm
Regional News and Weather
1:45pm Doctors 2:15pm Murder,
She Wrote 3:00pm BBC News;
Weather; Regional News 3:05pm
Green Balloon Goes on Holiday
3:30pm World of Happy 3:30pm
Frankenstein’s Cat 3:40pm
Wingin’ It 4:05pm Trapped 4:35pm
Hounded 5:00pm Newsround
5:15pm Weakest Link
6:00pm Weather
6:00pm BBC News
6:30pm BBC London News
7:00pm The One Show
7:30pm BBC News: Regional
News
7:30pm A Question of Sport
8:00pm EastEnders
8:30pm QI
9:00pm My Family
9:30pm Outnumbered
10:00pm BBC News
10:25pm Regional News and
Weather
10:35pm Would I Lie to You?
11:05pm The National Lottery
Draws
6:00am Wibbly Pig 6:10am Bob the
Builder: Ready, Steady, Build! 6:20am
Postman Pat: SDS 6:35am Guess
with Jess 6:50am Yoko! Jakamoko!
Toto! 6:50am Pingu 7:00am
Everything’s Rosie 7:10am Bob the
Builder 7:10am Garth and Bev
7:25am Jollywobbles 7:35am Buzz
and Tell 7:40am Timmy Time 7:50am
Charlie and Lola 8:00am Barney’s
Latin America 8:30am Ed and
Oucho’s Excellent Inventions 9:00am
Roar 9:30am Leon 9:30am Gimme a
Break 10:00am Copycats 10:30am
Deadly 60 11:00am Holiday 12:30pm
His Girl Friday 2:00pm Wanted Down
Under 3:00pm Diagnosis Murder
3:45pm Flog It! 4:30pm Cash in the
Celebrity Attic 5:15pm Escape to the
Country
6:00pm Eggheads
6:30pm Restoration
Roadshow
7:00pm Who Do You Think
You Are?
8:00pm Mastermind
8:30pm Gardeners’ World
9:00pm Home Movie
Roadshow
10:00pm Roger and Val Have
Just Got In
10:30pm Newsnight
11:00pm The Review Show at
the Edinburgh
Festival
6:00am GMTV 9:25am The
Jeremy Kyle Show 10:30am This
Morning 12:30pm Dinner Date
1:30pm ITV News and Weather
1:55pm London News and
Weather 2:00pm Dickinson’s Real
Deal 3:00pm The Michael Ball
Show 3:59pm London Weather
4:00pm Inspector Morse 5:00pm
Britain’s Best Dish
6:00pm London Tonight
6:30pm ITV News and
Weather
7:00pm Emmerdale
7:30pm Coronation Street
8:00pm Dickinson’s Real
Deal
8:30pm Coronation Street
9:00pm Doc Martin
10:00pm ITV News at Ten and
Weather
10:30pm London News and
Weather
10:35pm UEFA Super Cup
Highlights
11:35pm Cops with Cameras
6:10am The Hoobs 6:35am The
Hoobs 7:00am Big Brother’s Little
Brother 7:30am Ultimate Big
Brother 8:40am Frasier 9:05am
Scissor Sisters Special: Under the
Skin 10:05am Privileged 11:00am
Friends 11:30am Friends 12:00pm
Channel 4 News Summary
12:05pm Brothers & Sisters
12:55pm Come Dine with Me
1:25pm Come Dine with Me
1:55pm Come Dine with Me
2:25pm Come Dine with Me
2:55pm Come Dine with Me
3:25pm Countdown 4:10pm Deal
or No Deal 5:00pm A Place in the
Sun: Home or Away
6:00pm The Simpsons
6:30pm Hollyoaks
7:00pm Channel 4 News
7:25pm 4thought.tv
7:30pm The Incubator
8:00pm A Place in the Sun:
Home or Away
9:00pm Ultimate Big Brother
10:00pm Pete Versus Life
10:35pm Ultimate Big Brother
11:25pm Stand Up for the
Week Best Bits
6:00am Children’s TV 9:00am
Little Princess 9:15am The Wright
Stuff 10:45am Trisha Goddard
11:45am CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation 12:40pm Five News
12:45pm The Hotel Inspector
1:45pm Neighbours 2:15pm CSI:
Crime Scene Investigation 3:05pm
A Step toward Tomorrow 5:00pm
Weather 5:00pm Five News
5:30pm Neighbours
6:00pm The Boss Is Coming
to Dinner
6:25pm Live from Studio Five
7:00pm Five News at 7
7:15pm Cricket on Five
8:00pm Police Interceptors
9:00pm The Mentalist
10:00pm Law & Order: Special
Victims Unit
11:00pm CSI: NY
11:55pm Cops in Crisis
6:00am Good Morning Sports Fans
9:00am Carling Cup Football
10:30am Live Test Cricket
7:00pm Sky Sports News
7:30pm Live UEFA Super
Cup Football
10:00pm Take It Like a Fan
10:30pm Premier League
Preview
11:00pm Football League
Weekend
6:00am The Real A&E 7:00am
Brainiac’s Test Tube Baby 8:00am
Brainiac: Science Abuse 9:00am
Oops TV 9:30am Grease: The
School Musical 10:00am Grease:
The School Musical 11:00am
Wedding SOS 11:30am New
Parent Nightmares 12:00pm The
Real A&E 1:00pm Malcolm in the
Middle 1:30pm Malcolm in the
Middle 2:00pm Liza and Huey’s Pet
Nation 3:00pm Stargate SG-1
4:00pm Stargate SG-1 5:00pm
WWE Superstars
6:00pm Oops TV
6:30pm The Simpsons
8:00pm Must Be the Music
9:00pm Must Be the Music
10:00pm Must Be the Music
11:00pm Lie to Me
7:00am Radical Highs 7:10am The
Best of Top Gear 8:00am The Best
of Top Gear 9:00am Robot Wars
Extreme 10:00am The Gadget
Show 10:30am Fifth Gear 11:00am
Dragons’ Den: On Tour 12:00pm
The Best of Top Gear 1:00pm The
Best of Top Gear 2:00pm Robot
Wars Extreme 3:00pm The Gadget
Show 3:30pm Fifth Gear 4:00pm
The Best of Top Gear 5:00pm The
Best of Top Gear
6:00pm Robot Wars Extreme
7:00pm The Gadget Show
7:30pm Seaside Rescue
8:00pm Dragons’ Den: On
Tour
9:00pm QI
9:40pm QI
10:20pm Little Britain
11:00pm ittle Britain
6:00am Home Shopping 6:30am
Home Shopping 7:00am The Jerry
Springer Show 7:25am The Jerry
Springer Show 7:50am Celebs
24/7 8:00am Maury 8:55am Celebs
24/7 9:00am America’s Next Top
Model 10:00am Shortland Street
10:30am Shortland Street 11:00am
Nothing to Declare 11:30am
Nothing to Declare 12:00pm Four
Weddings 1:00pm CSI: Crime
Scene Investigation 2:00pm CSI:
Crime Scene Investigation 3:00pm
Shortland Street 3:30pm Shortland
Street 4:00pm Charmed
6:00pm America’s Next Top
Model
7:00pm Four Weddings
8:00pm Passport Patrol
9:00pm Medium
10:00pm CSI: Miami
6:05am Scream if You Know the
Answer! 6:30am Scream if You
Know the Answer! 7:00am Animal
Park: Wild in Africa 8:00am
Casualty 9:00am The Bill 10:00am
The Bill 11:00am Casualty
12:00pm Animal Park: Wild in
Africa 1:00pm Scream if You Know
the Answer! 1:30pm Scream if You
Know the Answer! 2:00pm Outtake
TV 2:40pm My Family 3:20pm My
Family 4:00pm Animal Park: Wild in
Africa 5:00pm Scream if You Know
the Answer!
6:00pm Outtake TV
6:40pm My Family
7:20pm My Family
8:00pm Look Who’s Talking
Now!
10:00pm Die Hard with a
Vengeance
Friday 27 August
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 33
Music Matters
LIAM O’REILLYEmail: [email protected]
www.canarianweekly.com Music Matters
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 35
THIS WEEK sees therelease of IronMaiden’s 15th studioalbum, The FinalFrontier, which hasbeen leading the raceto the No1 spot withimpressive first-daysales.
Some 22,000 copies weresnapped up by the HeavyMetal band’s legion of follow-ers within hours of its UKrelease.
This latest and, some say,last album, would be theband’s first to debut at No1since 1988’s Seventh Son of aSeventh Son.
Iron Maiden are a strictlyBritish Heavy Metal outfit,and have been since theirbeginnings in the lateSeventies. Chief vocalistBruce Dickinson has giventhem their distinctive wail and
war-cries since joining in 1981. Each album has progressed
in technology through their30 years, but the grit andgrowl of guitarists DaveMurray and Adrian Smith’sriffs has characterisedMaiden’s unique style onevery album, including thisone.
It’s not unusual to get fouror five-star reviews for a rockband from a rock magazinelike Classic Rock or Kerrang!,but Maiden have achieved thisagain.
International reviewers alsosing high praises for a bandwho, let’s face it, are nolonger the cub scouts of thebusiness. At 52 and 53 yearsof age, they have proven withThe Final Frontier that like agood wine, rockers maturewith age.
With only ten songs on thislatest release, it is the longestalbum to be released fromthe London band. The running
time of 76 minutes leavesplenty of room for melodicintervals, heavy guitar-laden,two-minute assaults on thesenses, and plenty of drumsolos.
A European and NorthAmerican tour began in Dallasin June to support the CD,and will end next year inAustralia.
The first song on the album,Satellite 15 … The FinalFrontier, had led to rumoursthat it could be the finalalbum from Maiden.
But a in a recent interview,the band stated that it wouldnot necessarily be the closingchapter on one of Britain’smost prolific Heavy Metalexports.
The band have courted con-troversy over the years.Rumours of Satanic over-tones, especially for the 1982album The Number of theBeast, led to bonfires acrossthe US Christian communities
as the album was publiclyburned.
Chile even went as far asbanning The Mighty Maidenfrom performing in the coun-try, amid fears that theteenage population wouldconvert to the Dark Side.
In actual fact, the band con-form to no religious view-point, and believe the storiestold in their songs to be talesof total fantasy.
The Final Frontier may wellbeat Eminem’s albumRecovery to this week’s UKNo1 album spot.
The tour will almost certain-ly be a sell-out, and The Iron’sriffs will be learned by a newgeneration of teenage bed-room guitarists and drum-mers.
We will also see the backcatalogue re-entering thecharts as new fans find IronMaiden just as fascinating andevocative as the past threegenerations did.
Now, that’s what I callseriously heavy metal!
COLDPLAY look toincrease their lead asone of the richestBritish bands of thenew Millennium asthey sign a newrecord deal.
Universal have signed a newmega-deal with the Viva laVida hit-makers, said to beworth multi-millions. Theband will leave BMG after tenyears to strike out on the newdeal.
A new album is on its wayfor 2011, and the band saidrecently that the new albumhas Killer Tunes all over it,and may follow their clean-sweep of all four previous
albums getting the UK No1spot. But LP5 is being keptunder wraps until the NewYear, when pre-releases willbe sent to radio stationsaround the globe to gener-ate media interest.
Their 2009 Viva la Vidaalbum was a global success,rising to the top spot in 11countries, which almosttopped 2005’s X&Y. But withslightly fewer sales, it wasstill the biggest selling albumin the world for 2008/2009.
Coldplay have shifted 50million albums worldwideduring their 10-year career,and look to extend theirpopularity into a new decadeunder the wings of Universalrecords.
P DIDDY, who earned30 million dollars inthe last 12 monthsbetween June 2009and June 2010, hasbeen knocked off theForbes’ richest list ofrappers by Jay-Z.
In the same period, Jay-Zracked up 35 million dollarsthrough album sales, down-loads, tours, merchandise andhis multi-collaborations.
His record label, Roc Nation,has bumped up his earnings,no doubt, but he still has along way to go to top hiswife’s earnings. Beyonce hasreputedly clocked up 87 mil-lion dollar bills in the past 12months.
Jay-Z, who holds the recordfor the most No1 albums onthe US Billboard chart,climbed two places on theForbes Richest Rappers list,
with P Diddy falling to secondplace, Kanye West was atthird, followed by Acon, LilWayne, Eminen, PharrellWilliams and Timbaland.
Poor P Diddy’stake a tumble
Nothing cold aboutthis red-hot band
Weekly Update
JOE ‘IN MY OPINION’ FERGUSONEmail: [email protected]
Page 36 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
Entertainment www.canarianweekly.com
I HAVE no idea what isgoing on with me.Lately, I have beenlooking back on yearsgone by.
Not that I’m feeling nostal-gic, like we all can some-times. Not that I’m listeningto music that takes us backto a place where we canclearly remember what wewere doing and who we weredoing it with.
No nothing like that at all,although right now I amwishing it was, actually.
I blame Pierce Brosnan, theformer James Bond. He is allover the TV at the moment,advertising the L’Oreal rangeof men’s skincare products.It must work as he is 57,which is 12 years older thanme.
He looks great in the com-mercial, and I wouldn’t like itto me! I got a friend fromEngland to post me over thisproduct because, withpostage and packing, it wasmuch cheaper than buying itover here.
So, for three weeks, I havebeen doing exactly what itsays in the instructions.Every day I have been look-ing in the mirror, which Ihave always hated doing. Buteven psychologically, I shouldbe able to convince myselfthat it is working.
But no, I see no difference.Where once there were cutedimples, there are just linesof aging. I had quite anaction hero’s jawline. Now,with the stretching of theskin, it looks like an ill-fittingmask from MissionImpossible.
For a few years, I was ableto carry off the designerstubble look with ease.Twenty-four hours after ashave, I need to do it all overagain now as I my beard is sowhite that I look like FatherChristmas.
I don’t feel sorry formyself. I just don’t knowwhat has happened in thelast few years. I am happierthan I have ever been in mylife, so I need to know whathas gone wrong?
So, to solve this puzzle, Ihave been thinking back to afew highlights in my lifewhich make me smile. Goingto the seaside would always
be the family day out. Not a lot of money in the
Ferguson household back inthe day. So all six of us in thefamily would make our wayto the train stop (it was nota station where I wasbrought up) to head off tothat magical place calledBangor, County Down.
I remember the jealouslooks from my pals as weanswered their questions asto where we were going. Ifelt like one of the Royalfamily as we boarded thetrain, knowing it was only amatter of time before thesmell of seaweed, fish andchips and candyfloss filledmy nostrils.
Smells like that always takeme back to places and eventsthat I had forgotten about.
This week, I have had a stink-ing cold and have been relyingon throat lozenges. As soonas I opened the wrapper, thememories of the one thing Ialways hated as kid cameflooding back. “Syrup of Figs”.
No matter it was in ourhouse this product, clearlymade by the Devil, wasbrought out. As a matter offact, in the medicine cup-board there were only twoproducts to be found andnothing else: Milk of Magnesiaand the Syrup. If one didn’twork you had to take theother. Taken as a combination
you knew you were prettymuch close to death.
The stench of the syrup waswell known toy my neigh-bours. I am sure many peoplecame round and said thatthey noticed I had a sneezewhile talking to their kids …just to see me hide in the cor-ner as my mum made a rushfor the medicine box.
In my teens I was trying, asmany 13-year-olds do, to becool. I watched the JamesDean, Marlon Brando and Elvismovies. They always seemedto have a bottle of Coca Colain their hand. To this day I lovethe stuff.
The small, classic bottles inthe late 70s were always easyto come by as the plastic one-litres were years away frombeing invented.
When I had a Coke bottle inmy hand I was transported toCalifornia, ready to hop on mymotorcycle to have a greatadventure. I was a one-off
then and looked a bit ofweirdo.
But then Pepsi decided tobring out their classic “Lipsmacking Pepsi Cola” com-mercial with a Fonz lookalike,and everybody was thenwearing leather jackets over awhite T-shirt, even in the blaz-ing heat!
So I grew out of it allbecause I was pretty happythat I did it out of real andoriginal Americano, throughwatching the classic moviesof that era. Not because aguy in a sports jacket and badflares copied the Happy DaysTV show.
Then, obviously, the movieGrease came out, and all youcould see were loads of blokestrying to be John Travolta,and the ladies wanting to beOlivia!
I see old friends to this daywho still call me “Drainpipe”.When everybody was wearingflared jeans, I had to get thedrainpipe look. I was wearingthese things long before thepunk years. So in your face,Sex Pistols.
As my friends started to getinto classic Rock ‘n’ Rollbecause of the 50s nostalgia,I reverted to flares becauseof the disco music coming outof New York, and thenSaturday Night Fever.
That lasted about twomonths because the style
hated me, it seemed, but themusic was and still is just thebest.
I mentioned Coca Cola, andlittle did I know that in my lateteens, early 20s, I would beworking for that company. Itlasted five years of what Iconsider to have been thebest job in my life.
I was a helper in a lorry deliv-ering. Sun, rain and snow, mydriver, Charlie Key, and I wouldhead out to take this beauti-ful drink to pubs and shops allover Northern Ireland.
I did a lot of growing upthen. as it was a horribletime because of the “trou-bles”, and I had to wise upvery quickly. But I am aprotestant and was deliver-ing into catholic areas. Placeswhere it was known to beextremely dangerous.
So why was I always happyto be in these places?Because it simply did notmatter where you camefrom, or what you did.Forget what you seem tothink of Belfast. It was thetime that I noticed all wasnot what it seemed to be.
I was shown that themajority did not want whatwas going on in my homecountry. I smile when, as alittle protestant, I think backto the cups of tea I wasdrinking with my newcatholic friends.
Oh, the many jobs I hadafter 1988, the manymorons I worked for, includ-ing the boss of a certainchemists I would still love tomeet up with to give him apiece of my mind because hefired me That is one chip onmy shoulder I need to get ridof.
Then came the day I willnever forget, when it all fellinto place. It was 1990, onthe day of the Radio OneRoad Show.
I was always pretending tobe a Dj with the record-play-er, reading out requests formy family in the house. Theywould laugh, but I was actu-ally being so serious about it.
But this particular day,when I sat in awe of MikeRead and Philip Schofield,was like the awakening Ineeded. I wanted to have allthis.
They were being screamedat by girls, and I liked that.The excitement of all thetrucks and the equipmentlooked so cool. And I havenever looked back.
I worked alongside Philtwice and shared a cabinaboard a yacht in Canneswith Mike Read. I told themhow they influenced me tobe on radio, and they couldnot believe that this big-mouth bloke from Belfastlooked on them as an influ-ence.
And from then on, as theysay, the rest is history. Iwould be here all week writ-ing about the smiles in mynearly 20-year-career onradio. Oh my God … 20 years!I guess I just have to acceptthe fact that time really isgoing by so quickly.
So yes, it has a lot to dowith the ageing process. Nomatter how many timesJames Bond sells me a lotionto slow the hands of time, itwill creep up on me soonenough.
Those lines on my face thatwere once cute dimples? Idon’t mind at all now. I knowthat those lines mean many,many years of happiness andlaughter. So all I can hope foris that they get deeper astime comes along.
Maybe I look old, and I canaccept that. But I will neverfeel it. All thanks to mymemories.
Joe
Holding back the years
THE HIGH STREETavoided a World Cuphangover in July asretail sales volumesjumped 1.1%, figureshave showed.
The performance was near-ly three times faster thanexpected and representedthe highest month-on-monthrise since February, the Officefor National Statistics (ONS)said.
A strong rise in volumes fora broad mix of retailers,including sports equipmentand jewellery shops, offset a
flat month for departmentstores and lower householdgoods sales, the ONS said.
Analysts had forecast a riseof 0.4% on July.
On the year, sales were up1.3% against a forecast of0.6%.
Shoppers are likely to havebeen tempted by price cut-ting after inflation figuresshowed the biggest slide inclothing and footwear pricesfor eight years between Juneand July.
But sales volumes from
food stores were down 1%month on month, as theimpact of the World Cupfaded while prices also rose.
Household goods stores sawvolumes fall 0.7% month onmonth, as the pre-tourna-ment boom in flat-screen tel-evisions faded slightly.
Overall sales volumes wereup 1.3% on a year earlier,although concerns remainover the prospects for thehigh street as the ChancellorGeorge Osborne’s austeritymeasures loom.
VAT is set to be hiked to 20%in January as part of theGovernment’s deficit-bustingpackage.
Looming public sector belt-tightening and fears overunemployment are also likelyto dent consumer confi-dence.
David Tinsley, UK economistfor National Australia Bank,said: “This retail sales datadoes suggest that the econo-my still has some momentumbehind it, it’s optimistic forthe public finances as well.”
Page 38 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
Home www.canarianweekly.com
APPLE is believed tobe planning to releasea mini iPad that couldbe on shop shelves intime for Christmas.
Details of a seven-inch ver-sion of the iPad have beenreported in a Chinese news-paper that correctly predict-ed the specifications of theiPad months before anyoneelse.
The Economic Daily Newsclaims Taiwanese companieshave won several contractsto make components smallerthan those used on the cur-rent 9.7-inch iPads.
“Chimei Innolux will supplyseven-inch LCD screens,which use the same IPS (in-plane switching) technologyfound in the original iPad,which improves viewingangles and colour on LCDscreens,” the newspaperreported.
“Touchscreen technologyfor the screens will comefrom Cando Corporation.”
Apple intend to launch thesmaller iPad this December
in time for the Christmasshopping season, accordingto Economic Daily Newssources.
Geek.com blogger ChristianZibreg said, if the so-callediPad mini becomes the iPadnano of tablets, Apple mighthave a huge hit on theirhands.
The rumoured new versionis predicted to be 200glighter than the standardiPad.
That model sold three mil-lion units in the 80 days fol-lowing its release in April thisyear.
Apple iPad miniis a Christmasstocking-filler
Retail sales soaring toboost the high street
ALMOST 50 staff havelost their jobs and fiveshops closed after aleading wedding sup-plies business fell intoadministration.
An urgent search for abuyer for Manchester-basedretailer Confetti has begun,with Monday August 23 setas the early closing date foroffers.
Administrator RSM Tenonsaid it moved quickly toclose all the group’s stores -in Glasgow, Leeds,Birmingham, Reading andLondon - and retained justunder half its staff in an
attempt to save its webbusiness.
Confetti, founded in 1999,provided a range of wed-ding and party suppliesthrough its shops, mailorder division and website.
The Manchester-basedcompany had a turnover of£5.7m and nearly eight mil-lion hits online every amonth, earning it the BestWedding Website prize inthe BT Online ExcellenceAwards.
Manchester-based compa-ny was founded in 1999 andgrew turnover to £5.7m
Kenny Craig, director withRSM Tenon in Glasgow, said:“Confetti is a very high-pro-
file, market-leading onlinebrand and enjoys a largecustomer base.
“The business has greatpotential for further devel-opment and the administra-tion presents an outstand-ing opportunity for a retailbusiness or entrepreneur toacquire an immediate pres-ence in the wedding andcelebrations market.
“We would urge interestedparties to make contact inthe next day or two toensure they have a chanceto bid for the business.”
Forty-six jobs are beingretained to support theonline business and provideadministrative services.
Honeymoon over for wedding retailer
Getting to the root of your gardening problems!
DAVID HUDGELLEmail: [email protected]
www.canarianweekly.com Gardening
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 39
PATIOS here inTenerife do not haveto be awash withcolour all the time,even though hangingbaskets and plantersbrighten up the placeand put a smile onyour face.
But for those of you whoare out working most days, orsimply don’t fancy keeping aneye on your plants all thetime, palm trees are an idealsolution.
And there’s nowhere betterthan to seek out a good selec-tion of palms than right hereon the Island.
Garden centres always havegood stocks in, unsurprisingly.So, should you spot an unusu-al tree amidst all the regularWashington and Phoenix lin-ing our roads, a quick searcharound the centre will almostcertainly reveal what you arelooking for.
Palm trees and shrubsrequire little attention, andthere’s no need to worryabout the hot conditionsbecause, like us, that’s whatthey’re here for!
Of course, they love a goodsoaking now and then, but itis surprising how long theycan maintain their richnessand good looks without water,so there’s no need to worry ifyou do go away for a week orso.
Also, they are happy to sit ina decent-size tub or pot foryears, which cuts out theproblem of what to do withshrubs or trees when theystart creeping up and up.
They have a much slowergrowing rate than if theywere in the ground becausethey get root-bound eventu-ally, and will keep you compa-ny for years.
One of my pals ahead a realeye-opener a few years agowhen he found a poorWashington plant abandonedby a basura in an old bluebucket.
It was only about a foot tall,with just one leaf strivingagainst the odds to make anappearance. It looked so piti-ful that he took it home andplanted it in right in the mid-dle of his little front garden.
Miraculously, with regular
watering, it flourished andafter a year it was a healthythree feet high.
It continued to grow into amagnificent tree and beforethe fourth year was out, ithad virtually taken over thegarden, standing some 10fttall with a trunk you couldbarely put your arms around.
In the end, it was too over-powering, and my pal’s com-munity gardeners were happyto take it off his hands andreplant it on the complex.
So keep your plants/trees inpots if you do not want to beoverwhelmed by them inyears to come.
Here are some of the palmsyou will encounter at gardencentres, and remember, smallis not only cheaper but best,because you can watch thetree or shrub develop right onyour patio.Trachycarpus fortunei
This attractive, fan-typeplant with glossy leaves is per-fect for creating an exoticlook on your patio. Its toler-ance to drought, togetherwith its tough leaves andtrunk make it the perfectchoice for coastal areas.
It’s really easy to look after,
as well. Simply put it straighton the patio in its pot andleave to its own devices. Itreally is a toughie andrequires virtually no mainte-nance.
Give it a good dose of waterfor starters, and a sprinklenow and then, and it willreward you with its gloriousstructural foliage all year long. Washingtonia Palm
The Washington is one ofthe Island’s most commonpalms and you’ll see themeverywhere. They aredrought-resistant, needingwatering only now and then,and look magnificent if welltended.
As they grow bigger, the
Washington, aptly named“Robusta”, forms a reallyattractive shape and can bepruned when necessary. Butdon’t try this unless you knowwhat you are doing. Get theadvice and assistance from aregistered tree surgeon.
They don’t charge much,and the knowledge they canimpart on plant maintenancemakes it so worthwhile.Dracena Indivisa
The Dracena, a really prettypalm-type shrub, is perfectfor creating an exotic lookand lives happily on a patio.Give it a good dose of waterfor starters and it will rewardyou with its glorious foliage allyear long.
Like the others, it loves thewarm climate, but even inEngland the Dracena canwithstand mild winters in shel-tered gardens, where frostsaren’t too harsh.
It is also commonly grown asan indoor plant, in the UK orover here, and it will quicklybring the inside of your hometo life.
Water once a week at themost, and, make sure it does-n’t become waterlogged forlong periods of time.Phoenix Canariensis
Here’s another greatTenerife favourite, as thename suggests, and it’s prob-ably the one you see most ofall on your travels throughoutthe Island.
The Phoenix is a natural foryour patio and it is really easyto look after. In fact, it’s bestleft to its own devicesbecause it requires so littlemaintenance apart from adrop of water from time totime.
Again, it can flourish inEngland if protected againstthe frost, but it really is athome in sunny Tenerife. Tostart with it will have a stoutstem, but it will eventuallygrow its familiar long-scaledtrunk.
A word of warning, though.The leaves carry the sharpestof pointed ends, like needles,and can be very painful if youcome into contact with them.
Be extremely careful whenpruning the leaves as they
grow bigger because they“strike” when you’re not look-ing. Best bet is to call in a treesurgeon. He’s used to all thejabs, and knows how to avoidcontact most of the time.Chamaerops Humilis
This another attractive, fan-type plant with glossy leaves,which can only add to thesunny disposition of yourpatio.
Again, it’s another toughcookie and needs little atten-tion, apart from a splash ofwater every week or so.That’s the beauty of thesepalms, as you will find out ifyou get the bug for growingthem. Pistacia Lentiscus
Here’s an evergreen shrubwith a difference - it pro-duces clusters of tiny, bright-red flowers all year round. Itneeds watering more thanthe palms, so keep an eye onit, and will make a pretty addi-tion to your patio, breakingup that all-green look.Yucca Jewel
The crowning Jewel! Yuccasgrow just about anywhere,and this variety is no differ-ent. It has extremely attrac-tive leaves, again to add a hintof colour among the palms.
And, like them, it doesn’trequire much loving. Itthrives in coastal regions,which will suit most of usaround the south, and isextremely tolerant todrought, which is just as wellin these parts!
The charms of palms
OVER THE next monthI’ve decided to answersome of the commonquestions I get asked,as a personal trainer,on a regular basis.
Some are quite basic, whileothers are more complex andcan cover a huge area. If youare in any doubt about yourhealth and starting up anexercise plan, please consultyour doctor for a check-up. Itwill put your mind at ease andmotivate you to get started.They are quite simple andshould be done on a yearlybasis. So let’s get some com-mon areas covered.
Q: Why are my cruncheshurting my neck so much?Am I doing them wrong?
A: Yes and no. Doing abdom-inal exercises can strain theneck simply because the aver-age head weighs 8-12 lbs (3.5-5.5k). When your neck mus-cles are weak, you will reallyfeel that strain. A way toimprove this is to perfectyour form.
First of all, don’t pull on yourhead. Place your fingertipsbehind your ears, not on yourneck. You want to supportthe weight of your head with-out pulling on your neck andcreating strain. Try picking aspot on the ceiling to stare atin order to keep your chin offyour chest.
Make sure when doing thecrunch that you are pullingyour stomach muscles downtowards the spine and that
you breathe out on the wayup. Also, remember that asyou continue to work out, themuscles in your neck will getstronger and you will be bet-ter able to tolerate the dis-comfort.
Q: I really like how my quadsand hams have started tight-ening up, but my inner thighshave a long way to go. Anysuggestions for exercisesthat will help this area?
A: Sadly, this is where yourbody chooses to deposit itsfat. Genetically speaking, yourbody is predisposed to carryweight there, so that will bethe last place it’s going tocome off. The best thing youcan do is watch what you eatand keep training. This willhelp you lose weight in gener-al and, eventually, those prob-lem areas will have to give!
That said, if strengtheningthe muscles in this area is thegoal, I prefer old-school, JaneFonda leg-lifts. They targetthe muscle you want to hitwithout creating bulk. Put asoft-ball or cushion betweenyour legs and pulse your
upper legs together. Trydoing it when the adverts areon.
I know this isn’t exactly theanswer you’re looking for, butit’s the truth, and if you staythe course, your inner thighsWILL tighten up. Just keepdoing what you’re doing.
Q: I’m trying to learn to lis-ten to my body and eat onlywhen I am hungry, and some-times I just don’t really wantanything to eat. Is it okay toskip meals, or to eat fewerthan the recommended calo-ries?
A: You should NOT skipmeals because this causes somany adverse effects. Notonly does it slow your metab-olism but it can also lead toovereating, because whenyou do eat, you’re overly hun-gry.
As for cutting your caloriesbelow your recommendedallowance, remember thisgolden rule: never allow yourdaily calorie allowance to fallbelow 1,200 if you are awoman, and 1,500 if you are aman.
Falling below these dailyallowances can do real dam-age to your metabolism andresult in excessive loss of leanmuscle tissue. When youreduce your calories dramati-cally on a consistent basis, itcan slow your metabolism ortrigger a plateau. Consistentexercise, plus the occasionalhigh-calorie day, will help wardoff a plateau.
Danni’s tip: go easy on your-self! When you try to over-haul your entire lifestyleovernight, it’s easy to burnout. But when you start withone small, realistic changeand put your energy intomaking it a habit, the chancesare a lot better that it willstick. You can do it!
DANNI BYRNEKeeping you fitEmail: [email protected]
CARL PATTISON
Email: [email protected]
from Robot, answers your hair questions
Health & Beauty www.canarianweekly.com
Page 40 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
When it comesto the crunch…
IF it’s a new lookyou’re after, thereare many factors toconsider, so let’s startat the beginning.
First of all, why do you wanta change? Are you bored? Is ityour age? Or perhaps you’vegot a special date coming up,such a wedding etc?
Whatever the reason,you’ve decided on a change,so now you ask yourself:“Okay, where do I start?”
Right, you need someammunition, so get togetherphotos of what you’ve hadbefore, of what you liked anddidn’t like. Look for styles inmagazines and the internet -anything to show to your styl-ist what you do and don’twant.
Don’t think that us stylistsare bothered by you tellingus, because any professionalwill welcome the help andassistance.
The best way to approachyour stylist is to book a con-sultation prior to the appoint-ment. This can take minutesor longer, depending on howsure/unsure you are of whatis to be carried out.
During this consultation,show your stylist your ideasand then let him/her takeover. Listen to the advicegiven - and even if it’s con-trary to what you want listento, why they are telling you
this? They may be telling youthat you can’t go for a shortblonde bob when you havethick, curly, dark hair. Yes, itmay be what you want, butthe stylist wants it to suit youtotally, and not look ridiculouswhen you come to leave.
If, during your consultation,you feel that the stylist isn’tlistening or interested, thenthat’s your opportunity tothink twice about booking anappointment. Never be bulliedinto making a date if you lackconfidence in the stylist’swords or advice.
Okay, so if you’ve decided togo ahead with your chosenstyle and/or colour, then dur-ing this appointment, justcarry on asking questionsabout the procedure.
There’s no point question-ing something later when thework is finished. Be inquisitiveand ask why the stylist is
doing this, and what’s thisgoing to do to my hair, etc.
I’m often too honest andgive too many explanationsregarding my work, butrather this than an upsetclient.
Also, ask about maintenanceand upkeep of your style, andwhen you should return for acut and colour, etc, and howlong you can expect to getout of a cut and colour-
If you’re the less-is-moretype, then a cut and colourthat needs doing every fourweeks isn’t for you, is it?There are some looks toinspire and these don’t suiteveryone, but they can beadapted to most face shapes.
Remember, we as hair-dressers aren’t magicians. Wecan work only with what weare given but, with your helpand our expertise, you’re sureto find a “New You”.
Shaping the‘New You’
RESEARCHERS inFinland believe thathigh levels of the sun-shine-enhancing vita-min D may decreaseyour risk of develop-ing Parkinson’s diseaselater in life..
Their study of 3,000 people,published in Archives ofNeurology, found people withthe lowest levels of the vita-min had a threefold higherrisk.
It’s a fantastic advert for liv-ing in Tenerife, perhaps,because experts believe vita-min D, made mostly in thebody when the skin is
exposed to sunlight, could behelping to protect the nervecells gradually lost by peoplewith the disease.
Parkinson’s disease affectsseveral parts of the brain,leading to symptoms liketremor and slow movements.
The researchers, fromFinland’s National Institute forHealth and Welfare, measuredvitamin D levels from thestudy group between 1978and 1980, using blood sam-ples.
They then tracked thesepeople over 30 years to seewhether they actually devel-oped Parkinson’s disease.
They found that peoplewith the lowest levels of vita-min D were three times more
likely to develop Parkinson’sthan the group with the high-est levels. But the charityParkinson’s UK said furtherresearch was required.
Apart from sunlight, somevitamin D comes from foodssuch as oily fish, milk or cere-als. But, as people age, theirskin becomes less able to pro-duce the vitamin.
Doctors have known foryears that vitamin D helps cal-cium uptake and bone forma-tion.
But current research nowshows that it also plays a rolein regulating the immune sys-tem, as well as in the develop-ment of the nervous system.
In an editorial in US journalArchives of Neurology, Marian
Evatt, assistant professor ofneurology at EmoryUniversity School of Medicine,says that health authoritiesshould consider raising thetarget vitamin D level.
“At this point, 30 nanogramsper millilitre of blood or moreappears optimal for bonehealth in humans,” he writes.
“However, researchers don’tyet know what level is optimal
for brain health, or at whatpoint vitamin D becomes toxicfor humans, and this topicdeserves close examination.”
Dr Kieran Breen, director ofresearch at Parkinson’s UK,said: “The study provides fur-ther clues about the potentialenvironmental factors thatmay influence or protectagainst the progression ofParkinson’s.
“A balanced, healthy dietshould provide the recom-mended levels of vitamin D.But
further research is requiredto find out whether taking adietary supplement, orincreased exposure to sun-light, may have an effect onParkinson’s, and at whatstage these would be mostbeneficial.”
Keeping her finger on the pulse
VAL SAINSBURYEmail: [email protected]
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 41
www.canarianweekly.com Health & Beauty
YOU can lie out in thesun all day and everyday in search of an all-over tan. But you canforget that golden-brown glow.
Scientists (from Scotland,admittedly) believe it is mis-sion impossible. They say aconsistent tan is impossiblebecause some areas of thebody are much more resist-ant to tanning than others,so getting rid of those whitebits may never happen.
The University of Edinburghresearchers say the resultsof a study they have under-taken explain why holiday-makers find it so hard toachieve an even tan.
The findings reveal that thebuttock is much more resist-ant to sun than other areas.But, when it does get some
colour and goes red, it stilltans less well than otherparts.
The study, published in thejournal ExperimentalDermatology, also found thatpeople with no frecklestanned far more easily.
Scientists, funded by theMedical Research Council, ranthe study to determine whydifferent types of skin can-cer were found in differentparts of the body, especiallyas they were all caused bysunshine.
The team wanted to identi-fy whether this was linked tovariations in the way differ-ent areas go brown. So theyanalysed the skin of 100 vol-unteers, exposed to six dosesof UVB radiation on twoareas: back and buttock.
After seven days, skin wastested to find what colourremained after redness died
down. This colour, seen as asuntan, comes from melanin,which stops skin fromabsorbing too much UVB.
Study leader JonathanRees, Professor ofDermatology at the universi-ty, said: “One puzzle is whytumour numbers differ somuch, depending on the site.
“Our work shows that weare made up of differentunits of skin, which responddifferently to sun and mayafford different degrees ofprotection.”
Dr Jodie Moffat, of CancerResearch UK, said: “Tanning isa sign that skin has alreadybeen damaged.”
And he was hardly quotingrocket science when headded: “For people with fairskin, freckles or moles, tan-ning is difficult without burn-ing. They should take extracare against sunburn.”
Why we get so browned offwhen it comes to a great tan
How sunshine can help youprotect against Parkinson’s
APART from beingiconic entertainers,there can’t be muchthat links the lateHarry Secombe andBoy George.
It appears, however, thatboth were rather partial tothe culinary creations ofPortuguese chef JoaoMartins.
Having spent many years aschef proprietor of a popularDevon eatery, Joao and hiswife, Mandy, made the decisionto relocate to Tenerife in 2006.
Nearly five years on and thecouple’s restaurant, Carlos,continues to thrive, with resi-dents and tourists alike flock-ing to experience some of thebest international cuisine to befound in the South.
I have had the pleasure of
eating at Carlos on a numberof occasions. However, havingheard through the grapevinethat the restaurant’s spaciousoutside terrace had recentlyundergone a major refurbish-ment, I thought it only polite topay another visit.
Carlos is ideally-located underClub Atlantis, a stone’s throwfrom the popular Puerto Colónbeach.
Walking on to the terrace, Iwas amazed at the transfor-mation. A stunning Bedouin-style canopy in soft terracottatones covers the entire area.
And four huge ceiling lights,whose handsomely-styled, cut-out metalwork recalls thebeautiful hand-wrought lampsof a Moroccan marketplace,cast a warm glow over the din-ers.
Flowering shrubs and plants,and the tinkling of a fountain,
further help create theimpression of an oasis of tran-quillity.
Carlos is very much a familybusiness. Mandy Martins headsthe friendly and efficient teamof waiting staff, and eventeenage son Luke has nowbeen drafted in to help behindthe scenes.
Nibbling on some deliciousPrawn and Beetroot Crostini,and sipping a glass of chilledrosé wine, we perused themenu.
Given that Joao was born andraised in Madeira, his signaturedishes, as you would expect,include some traditionalPortuguese fare.
The menu also features aninventive medley of Italian,French and Far Eastern influ-ences, from Tagliatelle withSalmon and Prawns through toThai Green Curry.
A good selection of meats,including steaks and NewZealand lamb, should satisfythe carnivores, while fresh fishis a particular speciality of thehouse.
Vegetarians are certainly notoverlooked, with a selection ofstarters including Breaded Brie,served with Fruits of theForest Dip, and mains such asMushroom and Vegetables inBrandy and Cream Sauce,served with Rice. Daily specialscomplete this unparalleledoffering.
Accompanying this fare is agood wine list, catering for alltastes and budgets. Pricesstart from 12 euros for thehouse selection, rising to 60euros for a bottle of Moët etChandon Champagne. I canalso recommend Mandy’shome-made Sangria, but withone caveat: it packs quite apunch!
Back to our dinner, andalthough Melon with SpanishCured Ham Drizzled with OliveOil sounded tempting, I decid-ed to opt for one of Carlos’more unusual starters,
Stuffed Peaches filled withChicken. Topped off withmelted cheese these melt-in-the-mouth creations certainlydidn’t disappoint.
My partner, meanwhile, in anod to Joao’s culinary roots,went for the Prawns Piri Piri.This is apparently one of therestaurant’s most popularstarters, and it’s not hard tosee why.
The combination of tenderprawns in a sauce of tomatoes,cream, mushrooms, onions andchilli that was spicy withoutbeing overpowering, was deli-cious.
For my main course, I tookMandy’s advice and chose theEspedata de Madeira, a tradi-tional dish of succulent beefkebab, hanging on a skewerdripping with garlic butter.
The other half, meanwhile,plumped for Fish Portuguese,tender white fillets, toppedwith tomatoes, garlic, whitewine, cream, prawns andmushrooms. He was amazedat how moist the fish was - somuch so that he sought outJoao to commend him per-sonally!
Our host revealed that the
secret was in the preparation,with all the fish on the menugrilled in lemon and butterrather than on the plancha.
All main courses, unless oth-erwise stated, are served withchef’s potatoes and a selectionof vegetables, and we finishedour meal pleasantly sated.
Full as we were, it would havebeen churlish to refusedessert. While my partnerwent for some light-as-a-
feather, home-made cheese-cake, I decided to show someadmirable restraint by orderingthe fruit kebab!
By now the restaurant wasfull, both on the terrace and inthe beautifully-designed interi-or, complete with its high endbut comfortable furnishings,subtle decorations and softlighting.
There were a number offamilies enjoying both the foodand the surroundings. Childrenare well catered for at Carlos,with a range of special menusstarting from just five euros. Inaddition, many of the maindishes can be served in smallportions.
Not surprisingly, Carlos isbusy 12 months of the year,with Christmas Day lunch and aNew Year’s Gala Dinner particu-larly lively affairs, so reserva-tions are always advisable. Aswe left this charming establish-ment, we couldn’t help but feelthat Devon’s loss has been verymuch Tenerife’s gain!
Located on Av Colón, CC ClubAtlantis, San Eugenio, PuertoColón, Carlos opens fromMonday to Saturday, 6pm untillate. For reservations call 922712 257 or 634 703 133.
Food News www.canarianweekly.com
Page 42 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
Carlos Restaurant
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 43
www.canarianweekly.com Puzzle
Virgo Aug-24-Sept-23 Try not to let a newface intimidate youwith his or her differ-
ent approach to a problem you havebeen facing. Confidence is everything ifyou are to ever prove to yourself thatyou can succeed, both socially and pro-fessionally. Aries and Leos offer aninstant attraction. You’ll be able to sortout those financial issues shortly.
Libra Sept 24-Oct 23You will have to givea loved one thespace he or sheneeds if you are to
ever obtain that harmony you are seek-ing. We all have our funny ways and ourfaults, Libra, and it would be as wrongfor you to restrict them as it would forthem to confine you. Your main prob-lem is that you can’t get that ex offyour mind.
Scorpio Oct 24-Nov 2You’re likely to findyourself shying awayfrom group arrange-ments, and planning
private time to sort out what you’regoing to do about the personalquandary that has evolved. It may be inyour best interests to talk to the per-son concerned, who’s sure to be able toprovide you with any answers you’relooking for.
Sagittarius Nov 23-Dec 21It’s the abode that isgoing to be demand-ing both your atten-
tion and your cash, and manySagittarians will be preparing for excit-
ing visitors. Romance is forecast for theweekend and you must prepare your-self to hear declarations of love fromsomeone who has been acting ratherdistant recently. All in all, this couldturn out to be a very dramatic week foryou.
Capricorn Dec 22-Jan 20You must sort outwhat you can affordto spend, as a party
spirit the planets are casting will seeyou spending anything you have. Don’ttake out money from the bank whichyou know is not spare because other-wise, you will take the enjoyment out ofwhat should be an enjoyableweek. Believe it or not, it well worthputting in some “overtime” this week, athome or at work.
Aquarius Jan 21-Feb19The need to findout how good youare in your career
may see you doing something otherswill deem reckless. Make sure thatwhat you are doing is really in yourbest interests and not just to irritate aloved one, who is watching your everymove. This game-playing can do youno good, so start playing seriouslyright now.
Pisces Feb 20-Mar 2Plans will be laid thatwill make way for abetter and, indeed,more secure future.
Don’t be afraid to listen to the advice ofa younger face, who may have moreexperience than you realise. Late-nightinvitations have trouble written all over
them on Sunday, so proceed with cau-tion, if at all.
Aries Mar 21-April20There comes a timein everybody’s lifewhen he or she has
to be selfish in order to be able togive. This is your time to do what’s rightfor you, and to forget what everybodyelse wants. The decisions you make nowwill pave the way for a better future foryou and your close ones, so don’t holdback. Your hidden dreams are beckon-ing.
Taurus April 21-May21Please take a littletime to sort out theproblem which has
been building up with your finances.The way to get out of trouble is not toignore it but deal with it. A flirtatiousmood at the weekend could see youplaying with fire because a person whois spoken for decides to play games withyour emotions. Watch out, and don’t doanything rash.
Gemini May 22-June21New faces you areabout to meet willbring out a side of
you which you’d forgotten existed. Infact, the laid-back mood you will almostcertainly experience should also make itpossible for you to make up with some-one you have drifted away from in thefamily. Uranus promises important mes-sages in dreams.
Cancer June 22-July23It’s important thatyou watch out forarguments as the
planets make you see fault with themost trivial of problems. A laid-backapproach is essential if you’re to getthe most from the comingdays. Someone from your past is tryingto get back in contact with you, andmay not have your best interests atheart, so stay alert. Oh yes, you have anew admirer.
883
The rules of sudoku X are simple - just enter the numbers 1 - 9 once in each row, col-
umn and 3 x 3 square within the sudoku X puzzle grid. In addition to standard sudoku,
the numbers must only occur once in each side of the 'X' that is marked on the grid.
Use logic alone to deduce where each of these numbers must be placed in every cell
of a puzzle.
Don’t worry! We´ve kept in two original sudokus for you on the right.
Weekly Quiz 30-Second Brain Training
5 4 6
2 6 9 4 5
8 5 3
1 9 2
8 9
9 1 4
3 8 5
4 7 2 6 3
9 2 7
2 3 8 9
3 9 4
5 2
7 3 5
4 1 9 7
5 6 9
1 6
6 2 1
8 6 7 2
Puzzle Rating: Quite easy
BEGINNER
STARTER NUMBER 1 2
Drivers
1.Betty Driver played which rolein Coronation Street?
2. In which sport would you findpositions called driver, bucket,hole, and point?
3. Which fictional characterdrove a white Volvo P1800?
4. Minnie Driver was nominatedfor an Academy Award for herrole in Good Will Hunting in 1997,but who played the title role?
5. What is the surname of theonly Russian F1 driver in the 2010season?
6. In the movie Taxi Driver, whoplayed child prostitute Iris?
7. Thomas Watkins was a ficti-tious driver who appeared inwhich popular period drama ofthe mid 1970s.
8. Driver, spanker, lateen andGenoa are examples of what?
9. Who presents the reality TVshow Britain’s Worst Driver?
10. Who drove the `CannonballExpress` in a 1958 TV children’sprogramme?
Last Week’s Answers:
LeoJuly 24-August 23An offer to attend a social event should turn outto be most beneficial to your career as you areput before an array of interesting and influentialpeople. Have faith in a loved one to act in yourbest interests concerning a minor financial mat-
ter. Wear blue for luck in a work confrontation. But don’t worry - you canafford to be smiling.
Very Easy
9 2 4 7 3 6 8 5 1
6 3 8 1 4 5 7 9 2
1 5 7 2 9 8 4 3 6
8 1 2 5 7 9 6 4 3
3 4 9 6 8 1 5 2 7
7 6 5 4 2 3 1 8 9
5 9 3 8 1 7 2 6 4
4 7 6 9 5 2 3 1 8
2 8 1 3 6 4 9 7 5
8 9 6 7 2 1 3 4 5
1 2 4 9 5 3 6 8 7
5 7 3 8 4 6 1 9 2
6 3 8 2 1 5 4 7 9
4 1 2 6 9 7 8 5 3
9 5 7 4 3 8 2 1 6
3 8 9 1 7 2 5 6 4
2 4 1 5 6 9 7 3 8
7 6 5 3 8 4 9 2 1
Quiz:1. Mad Max. Beyond Thunderdome 2. New Moon 3. Highlander II. The Quickening 4. The Good, the Bad & the Ugly 5. Hannibal 6. Ace Ventura, When Nature Calls 7. Star Trek III. The Search for Spock. 8. Naked Gun 33 1/3. The Final Insult 9. Transformers. Revenge of theFallen 10. A Shot in
the Dark
Puzzle Rating: Moderate
New! Sudoku - X
Horoscopes of the weekPuzzle Rating: Easy
4 5 6 7
-158 9 ANSWER
413
BEGINNER
STARTER NUMBER 1 2
4 5 6 7
8 9 ANSWER
513
BEGINNER
STARTER NUMBER 1 2
+314 5 6 7
8 9
3/4of this
ANSWER
What better way to train your brain. Starting at the left with the num-
ber provided, work across each of these lines applying the mathe-
matical instructions to your running total. Don´t reach for the calcu-
lator - that´s cheating! Write your final answer in the last box of the
line. Aim to complete each round in about 30 seconds. Good Luck!
5/6of this
+51
-63
3/4of this
3 6 4
9 6 5 8
4 3
2 8 7 4 1
9 4 7 8
4 8 7 5 6
2 7
5 1 4 9
7 8 2
Brain Training:Beginer: 2Intermediate: 250Advanced: 94
+173
x3
Sudoku X: Very hard
8 9 6 3 4 1 2 5 7
2 7 3 8 5 9 1 4 6
1 5 4 2 7 6 3 9 8
9 8 1 5 6 2 7 3 4
6 3 5 4 9 7 8 1 2
7 4 2 1 8 3 5 6 9
4 1 8 9 2 5 6 7 3
3 6 9 7 1 8 4 2 5
5 2 7 6 3 4 9 8 1
Sudoku: Very hard
-23
+123
-52 +15
+72
÷4
÷4
13/15of this
+131x4-77
x6
-241
-26
÷7
÷4
25%of this
50%of this
Page 44 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
Travel www.canarianweekly.com
ON 12 AUGUST, thetravel company Sun 4U Limited (ABTAN121X and Y0342)ceased operations. The company also traded as: · Sun 4 U· Algarve Breakaways· AlgarveBreakawyas.com· Barcelona Breakaways· BarcelonaBreakaways.com· Bargains from Beachsun· Bargains from Sun 4 U· Beach Sun Holidays · Blubirdtransfers.com· Blue Bird Transfers· Bonus Breakaways· Bonusbreakaways.com· Caribbean Breakaways· Coach Air, CoachAir.com· Costa Brava Breakaways· CostaBravaBreakaways.com· FlyBeachSun.co.uk· Flywithusdirect.com· GoldenSun4U· GodenSun4u.com · On the Case Holidays· Onthecaseholidays.co.uk· Onthecaseholidays.com· On the Case Travel· Onthecasetravel.co.uk· Onthecasetravel.com· Single Parent Holiday Savers· Ski4udirect.com· Sun4Uflight.co.uk· Sun4Uflights.com· Sun 4 U Travel
· The Travel-Market.comIf you have been affected
by this incident, ABTA havethe following guidance infor-mation for you: For customers currentlyoverseas on a sun 4 u ltd hol-iday package
If you are on an air holidaypackage under ATOL 9251(this will be detailed on yourinvoice)
If you are on an air holidaypackage under ATOL 9251 andare abroad the CAA will makearrangements so that you areable to complete your holiday.The CAA intends to re-pro-tect existing in-bound flying,so customers should check infor their flights as normal.Hotels and accommodationagents may require cus-tomers who are abroad topay for their accommodationagain. If you are protectedunder the Sun 4 U’s ATOL youmay be able to claim thismoney back. To access a claimform, please see the CAAwebsite.If Sun 4 U Ltd acted as yourretail travel agent
Sun 4 U Ltd sold holidaysand flights as agents onbehalf of other tour opera-tors and airlines. Thesearrangements should beunaffected by the situation.
You are advised to check yourinvoice and holiday informa-tion which will detail the trav-el company your arrange-ments are being provided by.If you are in doubt, youshould contact this companyfor further advice.
It may be that your arrange-ments will not be covered bythe travel company. If you arein need of further advice,please contact the ABTAClaims Help Line number on:01202 59 66 99 If you purchased accommo-dation only through Sun 4 ULtd
Customers who purchasedonly their accommodation
arrangements through Sun 4U Ltd may be asked to pay fortheir accommodation again,directly to the accommoda-tion. If you initially paid viaCredit Card or Visa Debit Card, you may be able to claimthese monies back. Youshould contact your CreditCard or Debit Card issuer ortravel insurer for furtheradvice. If you purchased flights onlythrough Sun 4 U Ltd
Customers who purchasedflight only arrangementsthrough Sun 4 Ltd should beunaffected by this situation ifyour credit was used to makepayment direct to the airline.
If you are in doubt, youshould contact the airline youare travelling with to verifythat your seat reservation isstill valid. For customer who are due totravel in the future with sun 4u ltd
Sun 4 U Ltd acted in a vari-ety of capacites as a travelcompany. It is therefore, veryimportant that you establishwhich arrangement you weredue to be travelling under.This will be detailed on thepaperwork you have beenprovided with by Sun 4 U Ltd.This paperwork should detailexactly which company youhave entered into a contract
with and it is this companythat should be contacted withregards to establishingwhether you will be able totravel. If your contract is with Sun 4U Ltd for an air holiday pack-age under ATOL 9251
CAA are advising customersunder these arrangementsthat they should not traveland instead, should make aclaim for a refund. To access aclaim form, please see theCAA website. If you purchased accommo-dation only through Sun 4 ULtd
Customers who purchasedonly their accommodationarrangements through Sun4 U Ltd are not be coveredby ATOL. If your invoicedetails your contract beingwith an accommodationprovider and not Sun 4 ULtd, you are advised to con-tact the accommodationprovider directly to estab-lish the status of your book-ing. If the accommodationprovider has not been paidby Sun 4 U Ltd, it is unlikelythat they will honour yourbooking. In this case, youare advised to contact yourCredit Card or Visa DebitCard issuer or travel insurerfor further advice.
ABTA NOTICE - SUN 4 U LTD
HONDA have beenforced to end UK salesof their Civic Type-Rhot hatch because ofnew Euro emissionslaws set to beimposed.
Production of the Europeanmarket 2.0-litre performanceicon will end in Octoberbecause the 2.0-litre enginecannot meet Euro 5 exhaustregulations.
But it is not quite the end ofthe Civic Type-R, though,because countries such asAustralia and South Africahave lower emissions stan-
dards. That means productionat the UK Swindon plant willcontinue for those countries.
Honda will help mark theend of the famous Type-R ata special Silverstone festivalthis Sunday (22nd), which willbe attended by BTCC driversMatt Neal and GordonShedden.
It will give all Type-R driversthe chance to do a lap of hon-our around the British grandprix Formula One circuit.
More than 12,000 of thecurrent-shape Type-R havebeen sold in the UK since2007, and a few more will beadded to that number beforesales end in December.
Behind the Wheel
ON THE ROAD WITH JAVEmail: [email protected]
www.canarianweekly.com Motoring
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 45
Civic Type-R driven off the road
DIESEL-ENGINED Minishave, traditionally,always been rathernoisy and lacking thatspecial response ofpetrol power.
Fear not, Mini lovers,because salvation is at hand inthe shape of the ConvertibleCooper D, which unloads theold Peugeot-Citroën dervburner for a new 1.6-litreturbo-diesel, sourced fromparent company BMW.
It’s baffling to think whyMini didn’t just do this in thefirst place, but they have nowand the difference is out-standing.
The diesel Convertible hasthe more powerful 112hpCooper D engine option only,although a lesser 90hp One Dis also available in the Hatchand Clubman.
The arrival of these newdiesels completes an updatedrange that started earlier thisyear with upgraded petrolengines.
The new BMW-sourcedengine still sounds diesel,
obviously, and especially ifyou have the roof downaround town.
Get it up to motorwayspeeds, though, and you’lldrown the slight diesel rasp)right out with wind noise.Either way, you simply won’tcare the moment you putyour foot down!
Compared with previous
diesel Minis, this new engine isa revelation. Throttleresponse, aided by the vari-able geometry turbocharger,is much snappier - evenbefore you resort to hittingthe Sport button.
The lighter Cooper D hatchcan hit 62mph in 9.7 secondsagainst the Convertible’s10.3secs. But with more peak
torque than the turbo-petrolCooper S, either version hasplenty of poke on the move.
Without doubt, the Mini isthe most fun motor to drivein the premium small-car sec-tor. Yes, the Citroën DS3 runsit close, and there are somenon-premium hot hatchesthat may be better overall.But if you’re looking for fun
and glamour, this Convertiblehas them both.
Helped by its all-aluminiumconstruction, which keeps theweight down, it feels muchflightier, and even the ridequality has improved.
There’s still no cure for thecramped rear legroom, butalongside the exterior update- including new bumpers andupgraded lights, plus revisedgrilles and side vents, depend-ing on the model - Mini hasalso mildly modified the interi-or.
Extra black-finish trimmingsare neat, there are new tog-gle switches for the climatecontrol, and the radio con-trols have been relocated towithin the central speedo.
More interesting is the newMini Connected in-car info-tainment system. This isinspired by BMW,sConnectedDrive, but includesfeatures that even big broth-er BMW doesn’t get yet,
focused on iPhone integra-tion.
Another result for the newdiesel engine: the regular Minihatchback is down to just99g/km CO2 and up to aremarkable 74.3mpg.Standard Auto Start Stop andother “Minimalist” technologyhelps here.
That’s for both One D andCooper D versions as well. TheClubman and the Convertiblecan’t quite match thisachievement, returning103g/km and 105g/km,respectively.
But that is still equal to70.6mpg for the drop-top,which is a genuinely impres-sive result and reaffirms,Mini’s position as the leadingpremium eco contender.
The Convertible costs£17,925 (21,909 euros), whichrepresents good value formoney and should be availablefrom September, or Octoberat the latest.
Mini’s diesel dream
www.canarianweekly.com Sport
Division 2Amigos Bad Girls P-P Our Place Playgirls
Bar 180 B 2-6 The TavernBarracuda Hunters 3-5 Our Place Naturals
Marilyns 2-6 GaffersNaughty Nautas B 5-3 Woodys BNautas Nutters C 7-1 Yelas BarRood B 3-5 Barracudarts Boys
Tenerife Sun 5-3 La Caña LancersThe Knights B 6-2 Phoenix Flames
Division 1Exiles 6-2 Toscales Ensecan
Heroes Sports Bar 2-6 Tenerife SonsOur Place Flukers 2-6 Rood A
Strikers Bar 4-4 X-MenSundowners 3-5 Target Bar A
Target Bar B 0-8 Bar 180 AToscales Allsorts 4-4 Silver Surfers
Woody´s A 1-7 Bar Nauta A
Division 2
POS Pld Sing Dbles Treb 180’s PTS1 Nautas Nutters C 96 46 18 8 2 722 Barracudarts Boys 88 44 20 7 0 713 Gaffers 96 40 20 7 1 674 Bar 180 B 96 37 12 8 2 575 Tenerife Sun 96 35 17 4 1 566 Ourplace Naturals 96 33 18 3 0 547 Yelas Bar 88 33 12 8 0 538 The Tavern 88 29 15 7 0 519 Naughty Nautas B 88 33 8 4 1 4510 The Knights B 96 27 10 6 1 4311 Barracuda Hunters 88 24 9 6 0 3912 Rood B 88 21 11 7 0 3913 Woody´s B 96 18 7 8 0 3314 La Caña Lancers 80 21 5 3 0 2915 Phoenix Flames 96 20 3 5 0 2816 Amigos Bad Girls 88 18 5 5 0 2817 Marilyns 88 17 10 1 0 2818 Ourplace Playgirls 80 15 5 3 0 23
Division 1
POS Pld Sing Dbles Treb 180’s PTS1 Exiles Bar 88 44 17 9 5 702 Bar Nauta A 88 44 13 10 2 673 Tenerife Sons 96 40 17 9 5 664 Bar 180 88 39 17 9 3 655 Phoenix Bar 88 37 16 9 4 626 Target Bar A 88 32 14 7 0 537 Toscales Allsorts 88 31 11 5 1 478 Woody´s A 88 29 10 5 1 449 X-Men 88 27 9 4 1 4010 Toscales Ensecan 96 22 12 6 0 4011 Silver Surfers 88 22 13 4 2 3912 Rood A 88 22 11 5 4 3813 Sundowners 96 23 9 3 0 3514 Heroes Sports Bar 96 20 8 4 0 3215 Strikers Bar 96 23 4 3 0 3016 Target Bar B 88 15 7 2 2 2417 Ourplace Flukers 88 10 4 2 0 16
IT IS all change at thetop of Division 2 afterFriday’s Brazil-typedisplay by Dale and hisNauta Nutters team.
They took a deep breath,filled out their chestnuts andmade fellow-promotionchasers Yelas Bar look like ashell of their former selves asthey cashewed in with a fineseven points! And I’m not tak-ing the pistachio!
Great darts from Bill andTim mean that the Nuttershave set their stall out for therest of the season. Long-timeleaders Barracudarts boys slipdown to second, althoughthey earned five valuablepoints at Rood B.
Gaffers remain in third placeafter a 6-2 win at Marilyns,Neil hitting a 180 for the visi-tors. Bar 180 B were 2-0 upagainst local rivals The
Tavern, but then the wheelscame off and they crashed 6-2 - their second straight loss.
The Naturals move up oneplace after a useful 5-3 suc-cess at the Hunters, andTenerife Sun did like-wise asthey beat La Cana Lancers bythe same score.
Knights B made it threewins on the trot as they over-came the Flames 6-2, andWoodys B enjoyed a greatgame at Nauta B and had Joeltaking out 108 with a bull fin-ish. Alas, it was not enough asthe home side scraped a 5-3victory.
In Division 1, Tenerife Sunshave now burst into the topthree after a run of excel-lent results, and they hadTam and Sergio hitting maxi-mums during a 6-2 win overHeroes.
Exiles’ 6-2 win over Ensecankeeps them top, but the biglosers were the inactive
The Nutters really get cracking!
Division One
POS P W D L F A +- PTS 1 Palms Bar A 3 3 0 0 24 6 18 9 2 Summerlands Superstars 3 3 0 0 23 7 16 9 3 Tenerife Hammers A 3 3 0 0 21 9 12 9 4 Rat Pack 3 2 1 0 19 11 8 7 5 Terrace Bar A 3 2 1 0 19 11 8 7 6 Phoenix Knights 3 2 1 0 18 12 6 7 7 Bar 180 B 3 2 0 1 19 11 8 6 8 Atlantis Sharks 3 2 0 1 16 14 2 6 9 Nauta A 3 2 0 1 15 15 0 6 10 Bar 180 A 3 1 1 1 12 18 -6 4 11 Men Of Atlantis 3 1 0 2 15 15 0 3 12 Hoops Bar 3 1 0 2 14 16 -2 3 13 Summerlands Allstars 3 1 0 2 14 16 -2 3 14 Trap Door 3 1 0 2 13 17 -4 3 15 8 Ball Massive 3 1 0 2 12 18 -6 3 16 Target Bar 3 1 0 2 10 20 -10 3 17 Bar La Cana 3 0 0 3 11 19 -8 0 18 Toscales Old Boys 3 0 0 3 11 19 -8 0 19 Legends A 3 0 0 3 9 21 -12 0 20 Dreamers Bar 3 0 0 3 5 25 -20 0
Division Two
POS P W D L F A +- PTS 1 Legends B 3 3 0 0 23 7 16 9 2 Target Rangers 3 3 0 0 20 10 10 9 3 Nauta B 2 2 0 0 14 6 8 6 4 Lupain 2 2 0 0 12 8 4 65 Bar 180 C 3 2 0 1 15 15 0 6 6 Barracuda Bandits 3 1 1 1 15 15 0 4 7 Gaffers 3 1 1 1 13 17 -4 4 8 Tenerife Hammers B 2 1 0 1 13 7 6 3 9 Toscales Tangos 3 1 0 2 15 15 0 3 10 Phoenix Potters 2 1 0 1 10 10 0 3 11 Terrace Bar B 2 1 0 1 10 10 0 3 12 Inn The Pink 3 1 0 2 11 19 -8 3 13 Bar Tasca 2 0 2 0 10 10 0 2 14 Summerland Elite 2 0 2 0 10 10 0 2 15 Palms Bar B 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 16 Woodys 1 0 0 1 4 6 -2 0 17 Tenerife Hammers C 2 0 0 2 7 13 -6 0 18 Barracuda Hunters 3 0 0 3 11 19 -8 0 19 Connors 3 0 0 3 7 23 -16 0
Phoenix bar, who slippedfrom second to fifth. Movingup to second, Nauta A arequietly going about theirbusiness with great suc-cess. With young Tom and thenot-so-young Mike in fineform, they won all five singlesto run out 7-1 winners overWoodys A.
Going one better, Bar 180 Atotally overran Target B withan 8-0 whitewash, losing justthree legs in the process.Toscales Allsorts offered up afine plate of beef madras totheir visitors the SilverSurfers.
Sadly, their darts were notquite as hot during a match in
which the Surfers came backfrom 3-0 down to lead 4-3,but ended all-square.
A very local derby betweenStrikers Bar and the X-menalso produced the samescoreline, and Target A said“well done” to Sundowners asthey endured one of thosenights, although their 5-3 windoes keep them sixth.
Rood A, in 12th position,have been really struggling inrecent weeks. But havingfailed to win for sevenstraight matches, they final-ly put things right a little asthey beat bottom sideOurplace Flukers 6-2.
Geoff Huxtable
Doubles Competitions(to be played tonight (Friday20th Aug)General competitionVenue, Toscales (Bob to con-trol draw): Carlos/Manuel -Woodys. Graham/Roly -Heroes. Marco/Ronnie - RoodA. Del Boy/Karl - Exiles.Sergio/David - Tenerife Suns.Alan/Bob - Toscales.Chris/Mike - Nauta. Tom/Dan -Nauta.Venue, Tenerife Sun (Harry tocontrol draw): Ian/Mike Telf -Nauta. Big Al/London - Nauta.Scott/Martin - Bar 180A.Lynn/Mike - Knights B.Ray/Grant - Target A.Shammy/Blair - Exiles.Harry/Vincente - Heroes.
Duncan/Geoff - ToscalesVenue, Heroes sports bar(Bubbles to control draw):Mitch/Dale - Nauta A.Mick/Richard - Bar 180A.Dave/Daz - Exiles.Bubbles/Steve - Phoenix.Barney/Joel - Woodys.Paul/Phil - Nauta A. Luc/TerryBull - Rood A. Mark/Graham -Target A.Venue, Sundowners (Andy tocontrol draw): Bill/Tim - Nauta.Alan/Wayne - Bar 180.Gary/Wayne - Bar 180.Andy/Walter - Surfers.Tam/John - Tenerife Sons.Graham/Alex - X-Men.Pieter/Herve -Rood A.Mark/Mc Gyver - Rood B.Format: 501 - best of three,
with the final at each venue tobe 501 - best of five. The 32pairs at four venues will playdown to one pair, to leave fourpairs for finals night. Ladies competitionVenue, Strikers(Betty/Connie to controldraw): Karen/Lynn - Bar 180.Sue/Lauren - Naughty Nautas.Sheena/Marilyn - Amigos BadGirls. Shar/Shanny - Ourplace.Tracy/Mo - Ourplace.Conny/Betty - Rood B.
Sue/Julie - Tavern.Carole/Lillian - Phoenix.Barb/Babs - Phoenix.Joan/Maddie - Phoenix.Liz/Natalie - Phoenix.Laura/Anna -Woodys. Format: 501 - best of three.Play down to two pairs to con-test the final on finals night.Good luck to everyone. By theway, the next captains’ meet-ing will be held at Gaffers Bar,Las Americas, on Sunday, 10thOctober, at 1pm.
Pairs are shooting for Final showdown
MORE THAN 200 peo-ple visit Las Vistasbeach twice a week totake part in the earlymorning sport ses-sions run by theArona Council forthose individuals ‘of acertain age.’
Arranged by the sportsdepartment of the counciland led by Francisco ToledoHernandez the sessions part
of the adapted sports pro-gramme concentrate on thissector of the community andrun throughout the year invarious social areas.
Sport for older peopledevelops through differentexercises an improved qualityof life, the functional capaci-ty of independence, thera-peutic virtues of the sea.Also, this initiative serves topromote contact with otherpeople with the aim of pre-venting isolation and socialwithdrawal.
You’re never too old
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 47
Understanding the Law
MARIANO E ZUNINO SIRIEmail: [email protected]
Advertisement www.canarianweekly.com
Page 48 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
I HAVE been asked theabove question by anumber of clients andit really does needsorting out.
Nowadays, there are manyfines going around for differ-ent reasons, and we need toknow what our rights are. Iinclude a small general guidewhich does not replace a legaladvice.
Remember that every caseis different, and its circum-stances make the caseunique. I always recommendthat you ask for professionaladvice.
If the Inland Revenue Office(Hacienda) has fined you forany irregularity (according toHacienda’s view) the firstthing to do is to discover rea-son of the purported penaltyand its circumstances. Afteranalysing this there are twooptions:
1) Accept the penalty andpay
2) Object to the penaltybecause you do not agreewith this fine
If you consider that you areliable and your behaviour wasnot correct, the best solutionis to accept the fine and pay.There would be a benefit of25% rebate on the fine. Thereis a possibility of payments ininstalments if the InlandRevenue Office accepts it.
On the other hand, you canquery the fine. If you considerthat the Inland RevenueOffice is not right, or that thepenalty is unfair, you canpresent an “appeal”.
There are normally two kindsof appeals, and you can chooseone of them: A) “Recurso deReposición” (revision of deci-sion by the same authority),and B) “ReclamaciónEconomico Administrativa”(revision of decision by a higherauthority).
A) RECURSO: The “Recursode Reposición” is presentedbefore the same body thatfined you in order to recon-sider the decision. Normally,this “recurso” does not have a
happy outcome because thesame person who fined youwould not want to change hismind easily.
However, there are manycases in which the bodyreconsidered and acceptedthe “recurso”. It can be pre-sented within one monthfrom notification of penalty.
B) RECLAMACIÓN: The“Reclamación EconómicoAdministrativa” is presentedbefore “Tribunal EconomicoAdministrativo” who is a high-er authority. This “recla-mación” can be presentedalter the decision taken in“recurso de reposición”. In anycase, you can go direct to“reclamación” without previ-ous “reposición”.
You are not allowed to pres-ent both appeals at the sametime. It can be presentedwithin one month from notifi-cation of penalty.
In either case, the penalty(“SANCIÓN”) is not paid orguaranteed until the appeals
(“recurso” or “reclamacion”)are finalised. There would beno delay interests.Sometimes, these kind ofappeals are use to delay thepayment of sanctions.
Note that this article refersto penalties (“SANCIONES”)and not to the tax debt(“DEUDA TRIBUTARIA”). The“deuda tributaria” can beappealed (like penalties). In themeantime, however, the summust be paid or guaranteed.
If you do not pay or guaran-tee the sum, the Authoritycan attach (“embargo”) yourassets. In other words, toappeal the deuda tributaria,you have to pay or guaranteeand appeal. If you later suc-ceed in your recurso or recla-mación, the Authority willrefund the money, or theguarantee is cancelled.
If you do not succeed with“Reclamación EconomicoAdministrativa” the next stepis to present a “RecursoContencioso-Administrativo”
before the AdministrativeCourt. The “TribunalEconómico-Administrativo” isa government body of theMinistry of Economy. TheAdministrative Court belongsto Judicial Power and it isindependent.
Mariano Zunino Siri is alawyer registered in TenerifeBar Association since 1991.Office in Los Cristianos atEdificio Valdes Center Torre“A”, oficina 1, piso 2º. Phone:922 79 44 12.Letters to Mariano
Where I can get a copy ofthe Canarian Swimming PoolRegulations in English? I amhaving a problem with thecommunity on my complex, Ihave a ground-floor apart-ment, level with the swim-ming pool deck, and my bal-cony rail is 1.4 metres high.The community want to erecta 1.5m glass wall 500mmaway from my balcony rail,which would completelyenclose my apartment.
You can find informationabout swimming pool regula-tions in the CanaryGovernment web:http://www2.gobiernodeca-narias.org (although I do notbelieve there is an English ver-sion of it).
In any case, I understandthat your case, more thanbeing connected to the swim-ming pool issue, concerns theworks to be carried out bythe Community. In otherwords, you have to deter-mine whether the works tobe done are necessary (orcompulsory) to theCommunity. And even if theyare necessary, the worksshould not affect the privateproperty (or should at leastminimise the effect). I include apartial translation of some arti-cles of Horizontal Division Law(articles 10 and 11) that couldbe helpful:
The Community will beenforced to carry out neces-sary works for the property
and its services proper main-tenance and conservation, sothat it should fulfil all duestructural, habitability andsafety condition.
Proprietors who are unjustifi-ably opposed or delayed in theexecution of the orders, whichhave been enacted by compe-tent authority, will be individu-ally responsible for the sanc-tions, which could be imposedby administrative action.
In case of disagreement onthe nature of the works to becarried out, the ProprietorsBoard will decide what is rea-sonable and appropriate.Interested parties will also beable to request an arbitraryor technical judgement in theterms settled down by Law.
None of the proprietors willbe able to demand new facili-ties, services or improve-ments that are not requiredfor the proper communitymaintenance, habitability andsafety, according to itsnature and features.
What can I do if Ireceive a tax fine?
1 bedroom:
Torviscas large 1 bedroom apart-
ment with double bathroom with
terrace alouds pets. 390€
San Eugenio alto 1 bedroom
apartment with very large terrace
with panoramic
views situated in a
nice complex with
pools 450€ all
included
Beautiful 1 bed
apartment very nice
furnished in a
almost new com-
plex 600€
San Eugenio 1 bed
terrace with views
nicely furnished for
a quick rent 360€
2 bedrooms:
Cabo Blanco – 2
bed, 400€ p/m
Adeje – 2 baths,
independent
kitchen, ground
floor 550€ p/m all
inc.
Los Cristianos – 2
bed 2 bath duple,
modern furnishings
650€ all inc.
Roque Del Conde –
2 bed luxury apart-
ment with
Panoramic views
750€ p/m
Roque del Conde
luxury apartment
2 bedrooms with
very large terrace
very bright
panoramic views
650€ all included
Madroñal 2 bed
almost new com-
plex with garage
space. 550€ all
included
Los Cristianos
2 bedroom central
550€
Torviscas Bajo
2 bedroom with a
large terrace in a
complex with pool 400€
El Galeon, brand new apartments
400€
Parque de la Reina brand new
apartment with private garage 2
bed 1 bath 500€ 2 bed 2 bath 550€
3 bedrooms
Cabo Blanco - 3 bed, lounge, inde-
pendent kitchen 425€ p/m
Miraverde – 3 bed, 1 bath plus
garage 630€ p/m
Parque Del La Reina - 3 bed, 2 ½
baths, independent
kitchen and 400m2
garden, unfurnished
700€ p/m
Chayofa – 3 bed-
room 1 bath bunga-
low 700€ p/m all
inc.
San Miguel Vallage
– 3 bed, 2 bath
modern house with
drive in garage and
beautiful views
750€ p/m
Madranal –
Independent 3 bed,
2 bath villa with
garden and store-
room 1300€ p/m
La Caleta – 3 bed-
room luxury town
house 1500€ p/m
San Eugenio Alto –
brand new 3 bed-
room luxury villa
1500€ p/m
Apartment in an
almost new com-
plex with large ter-
race 650€ all
included
3 bedroom villa in
Madroñal almost
new with a private
pool large terrace
with sea views large
private garage 3 for
three cars only
1200€
Parque de la Reina
brand new unfur-
nished with private
garage 550€
5 bedrooms duplex
with 2 terraces with
sea views, with
garage and store-
room. Bargain 800€
Luxuries 5 bedrooms villa in Playa
Paraiso luxury furniture has a gar-
den and private pool outdoor lea-
sure area must be seen.
Holiday rentals
One bed apartments from 350€ p/w
and studios from 250€ p/w
SALES1 bedroom duplex
in Las Americas
55k box
El Galeon 2
bedroom brand new
86k
El Galeon brand
new complex 2
bedrooms with
garage and
storeroom 86k
San Eugenio studio
with large terrace,
views, 56k
Los Cristianos
studio apts.
Available with great
holiday rental
potential. Ideal for
investment from
56k
4 bedroom villa
with typical
Canarian patio of
400m2, 380K
2 bedroom apart-
ment in El Galleon
Adeje 95K
2 bed semi detached
chalet with shared
private pool 203K
3 bed villa in San
Euengio 280K
property of the weekAldea Blanca. 2 bed 2 bath detached bungalow with sep
fitted kitchen, lounge, 1 bed-ensuite, patios, parking.
Bank valuation 80,000€. Offers invited.
Must sell quick due to ill health.
Los Cristianos - Port royal
69.500 euros (Ref 167).
Fantastic Studio, with sep
fully fitted kitchen, lounge sat TV,
terrace
Island Village. San Eugenio
82,600 euros (Ref 183). 35M2
Studio, american fitted kitchen,
furnished, views of pool and
mountain, 6 pools on site, 24hr
reception,childrens play area,
shops,rest ect good for rentals
Los Cristianos - Margerita
128,000 euros (ref 172). 1 bed-
room apt, refurbished,new
kitchen,views pool & mountain,
very central for everything
Mareverde, Torviscas Bajo
97,000 euros (ref 162). Studio
south facing overlooking the pool,
sat TV, top floor, terrace, fully
equiped kitchen
Los Cristianos - Port Royal
136,500 euros (Ref 168). 2 bed 2
bath, ground floor apt, air con, new
flooring, good area, ideal for rentals.
Parque de la reina 103,600 (Ref
157). 2 bed , 1 bath apt, Brand
New, Sep fitted kitchen, terrace,
private parking space and lock up
Las Chafiras - Nr Golf Del Sur.
144,000 (Ref 193). 3 bed, 1 bath,
105M2 apt, fitted kitchen, utility
room, furnished, Sat TV, ADSL,
1st floor, large terrace of 35M2
GOLF DEL SUR. 595,000 euros
(ref 192) REDUCED. Luxury
Large Detached Villa, 3/4
Bedrooms, 3 baths, Large walk in
wardrobe, kitchen, utiliy rm, sw
pool and Bar and barbecue area,
chill out area with chess and tram-
poline, Extensive gardens, and
much much more....
www.canarianweekly.com Property
ONE BED APART-MENT, OASIS II, SAN
EUGENIO ALTOSpacious one bed apartment over-looking the Aqua Park. Fully fitted
kitchen, lounge/dining area andlarge terrace. 550 euros per monthincluding up to 50 euros for water
and electricity.
TWO BED APARTMENT, BALCON
DEL ATLANTICO,TORVISCAS ALTO
Spacious two bed, two bath apart-ment with separate utility room and
large terrace with stunning views.750 euros per month.
ONE BED APARTMENT, JARDINBONTANICA, ADEJEWell furnished 1 bed apart-
ment on well maintained com-plex close to all amenities. 530
euros per month.
2 BED APARTMENT,ROQUE DEL CONDE
Nicely furnished 2 bed apartment.Fully fitted kitchen, lounge, 1
bathroom and terrace with seaand pool views. Underground
parking for 1 car. REDUCED to625 euros per month.
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 49
Laderas, Palm Mar, 1 bed, large
terrace 450€
Castilia Vista Mar, 1 bed, great
views 450€
Playa Parasio, 1 bed, 450€
Feliciano, El Medano ,3 beds,next
to beach 450€ plus bills
Villa Tagoro, 1 bed, spacious apt
525€
Paloma Beach, Los Cristianos, 1
bed sea views 550€
La Conception, Las Chafiras 3
bed, 2 bath (available end july)
550€ plus bills
Granada Park, Los Cristianos,
beautiful 1 bed, 1 bath apartment
€600 pm inc
Palm Mar 3 bed bungalow, 650€
plus bills
Cho, Parque de la Reina 3 bed, 2
bath, detatched house unfur-
nished 700€ plus bills
Jardin San Miguel, Las Chafiras
3/4 bed townhouses, 2 bath from
800€
Property maintenance and cleaning services available call for details
MORE RENTAL PROPERTYS URGENTLY REQUIRED FOR WAITING CLIENTS
WE ARE LOOKING FOR QUALITY PROPERTIES FOR LONG TERMRENT IN THE LOS CRISTIANOS, LAS AMERICAS, SAN EUGENIOAREAS. PLEASE CONTACT US IF YOU HAVE A PROPERTY YOU
WOULD LIKE TO RENT OUT ON A LONG TERM BASIS.
IF YOU HAVE ANY PROPERTY FOR RENT OR SALE CONTACT US
1 Bed Golf Property 350€Large one bedroom, fully
equippedkitchen, seaand mountainviews, communitypool, terraceon Golf DelSur
1 Bed Adeje 450€Modern apt, with large bedroom/lotsof storage, fullyequippedkitchen, terrace,parking, pool oncomplex closeto local busroute,tastfullydecorated
1 Bed Golf Property 450€UK TV, Modern, Fantastic views, a truly
great apartment,tastfully decorat-ed throughout,pool on complex,modernkitchen and bath-room, onAmarilla Golflocal to shops.
Large Studio San Eugenio 500€Sunny apt with two largeterraces,Southfacing with greatviews, modernkitchen,UK TV,pool on complex,parking area, verycosy studio inquiet complex
3 Bedroom Apt Los Cristianos 850€Spacious and modern with two dou-
ble bedrooms.one single. Twobathrooms,walk inshower,largelounge, and ter-race. With nicesea view, com-plex with pooland tenniscourts
House 4 Bedroom Duque Area 1400€Very Spacious house with luxury fittings, sepmodern kitchenterrace with viewsto the pool andmountain, bed-rooms all double insize with plenty ofwardrobe space,tastfully decoratedwith garage, andtwo pools on com-plex.
For more information on all our rental portfolio please call today
Tel: 0034 922 797 438 Email: [email protected]
Office Address Ave Los Pueblos, Garajonay 1-4,Las Americas 38660
Established for over 10 years We have a wide selection of long and short term property available to rent
Luxury holiday villas and apartments also available.
RENTALS
Brevi playpen, immaculate condition, includes musical toys, 40 euros. Singlebed, 190 X 70cm, excellent condition, 20 euros. Tel 659 756 793
Genuine Technics component stereo system, including graphic equaliserwith cabinet if required. Buyer to collect. Cost over £1000 when new, will sellfor 125 euros. Tel 686 165 218
100 paperbacks, good condition, top authors, 40 euros. Tel 627 084 434
Newborn Baby Bath Seat 5 euros. Baby Bath & Top and Tailing Bowl 5 euros.Hauk Winnie the Pooh Baby Bouncy Chair, 20 euros. Winnie the Pooh MosesBasket + Stand + Bedding, 25 euros. Winnie the Pooh Cot Mobile, 15 euros.Avent Microwave Sterilizer 5 euros. Mothercare bottles x 2, 5 euros. TENSMachine, boxed with instructions 40 euros. Bambino Mio Reusable Nappy Setincl 8 Nappy Covers, 26 Cotton Nappies, 1 Pack Mio Liners 40 euros. BonitoCharcoal BBQ 20 euros. 2 x boys outfits, shirt and trousers, suit age 3,BNWT 10 euros. Tel 922 782 679 (Adeje)
Coleman Powermate 1000 Generator and Battery Booster, runs on petrolmix 2 stroke, working, includes cables, output AC 230V 50HZ, DC 12V, 100euros. Tel 680 887 478
14ft fiberglass boat, 3.5 Evinrude outboard engine & trailer no licenserequired for this great family boat. Free mooring space included 500 euros.Raleigh Amazon ladies mountain bike top spec 100 euros. Tel 617 454 787
Tegran Washing Machine, excellent condition, gwo, 60 euros no offers. Tel922 714 317
Yes C Groove putter, 31” long, good condition, new grip. Yes head cover, 60euros. Odyssey tri-hot putter, 31” long good condition, Odyssey head cover,30 euros. Tel 922 738 071.
Red clowns musical cot mobile, suitable for girls and boys, 10 euros.Mothercare travel cot, only used a few times, 30 euros. Blue playmat, 7euros. Winnie the Pooh, music box for cot, 15 euros. Pink pop up tent, 10euros. Blue and white igloo tent, 5 euros. Winnie the pooh, musical ride on,can be changed to a rocker, 20 euros. Brand new Adidas winter jacket, XL,20 euros. Childrens swim jacket, 11-18kgs, 5 euros. Babyliss short hairdryer/straightner, only used a few times, 15 euros. Tel: 637 206 026
Amp and speakers Carlsboro GRX7 amp 600 watt plus 2 Jamo power 500speakers, 250 euros. Oven, 120 euros. 5 roller blinds all 2.8m long, 2 @1.9mwide with clear panel, 1 @ 1.4m wide with clear panel, 2 @.8m wide, 400euros. Oil filled radiator 20 euros. Freestanding stainless sink with drainer 25euros. Tel 660 493 507
2 Morley Boogie boards, 75 euros each. 2 sets fins, 25 euros each. Tel 690085 398
Large blue metal action sofa bed, good clean condition 225 euros. Woodenguest bed, pull out bed underneath and 3 drawers, 180 euros. Smirnoffoblong sign, 20 euros. 2 children’s booster seats as new, 7.50 euros each orboth for 10 euros. Tel 630 842 978
Pink and White “Unicorn” horse, battery operated, for up to 4 years, 20euros. Chicco “multiway” from birth buggy orange and navy blue,includes new born head support, cos toes and rain cover, as new, 80euros. Soft toy black and white panda 1m tall sitting down, 5 euros.Bambini double buggy black and beige both reclinable, sun hoods, under-neath storage, feeding trays cup holder, 80 euros. Fisherprice musicalZebra, child sits on and springs up and down and twirls around, 20 euros.Tel 646 947 348
Casual play vintage navy blue and black buggy, sun hood, fully reclinable,storage, large strong wheels, 45 euros Child stair gate, one bolt missing butusable. 10 euros. 12,000 piece puzzle, none missing, 20 euros. Power devilrouter 700 watt, variable speed 16000-28000 rpm, with 15 bits, 70 euros.King size quilt, 10 euros. 2 bedside drawers, white very heavy, 20 euros forboth. Tel 922 739 500
Ariston mini boiler 15 litre, 40 euros inc 2mtrs of cable. Baby sit in walk-er musical orange colour 15 euros. 2 piece Occasional suit size 16, palegreen, sleeveless lined fitted dress with long sleeve unlined jacket edgeto edge, 40 euros. 4 quality curtains, plain pink, suit patiodoors length each 234 x 295, all 40 euros. Leather trousers black size 12,standard (length) like new 20 euros. Large pouffe /bedding storagebox/on short legs med blue small cream motif 70cm x 70cm 40 euros.Computer tower see thru panels changing lights windows XP 224mg ram,recently replaced parts & serviced + monitor + hp deskjet printer qualityprints, cartridge needed all 200 euros. Tel 699 199 392 or 922 794 790
Variety of Eastern Buddah type items, rugs, pictures etc from 25 euros. Tel639 977 334
Pair of technics 1210 mk 2 turntables excellent condition (hardly used) 450euros. Ecler smac pro20 mixer, 80 euros. Pioneer A-209r amplifier withremote excellent condition still in box 75 euros. King size headboard beigefloral fabric with cane trim 200x95 cm and matching bedside tables withglass top 65x50x50 cm 30 euros. Tel 608 223 156 or 922 765 564.
Medical nebulizer, 70 euros. Tel 922 727 024
Books from baby board books to all school areas, to novels from 50 centseach. Toys and games for children 3 - 11yrs. Yellow check dresses 1 euro.Black lightweight PE shorts, 1 euro. School furniture, tables, bookcases,chairs from 3 euros. Large settee, tweedy material 30 euros. Ikea bed 30euros. Incidental furniture from 3 euros, Tel 648 770 265 or 922 765 217
Chicco Polly highchair suitable from 6 months to 3 years. Adjustable seatpositions and seat padding; includes 2 trays, very good condition, 45 euros.Tel 922 178 868.
Fold up bicycle, Dahon/Bickerton. Fits easily into car boot, comes with car-rying bag, needs new three speed cable, 70 euros. Tel 922 794 495
Moses Basket with bedding and stand 10 Euros. Blue baby’s bath, fits overthe normal bath, 10 euros. 5 metres green Intermas Climbanet (Green gar-den netting) 5 euros. Tel: 653 593 232.
Hitachi C8FC Electric metal cutter with spare blade 150 euros. Black andDecker electric plane 50 euros. P B Power base 650 w PB650PL Planer 50euros. Skil Electric portable mixer 70 euros. Black and Decker router KW800710W 100 euros. Rubi Diamant DU200 L Electric tile cutter 300 euros. TilesBelcaire cotto 33,3 x 33,3 none slip Terracotta tiles 25sq mtrs in total, 150euros. Tiles Ibiza terracotta 33,3 x 33,3 6 sq mtrs in total 50 euros. Wirelessmicrophone SHURE PGX still in box 300 euros. Las Rosas Tel 600 821 100.
Fan, bag, blender, sun beds, ceiling lights, phone, patio chair & table,table, lamps, wireless keyboard & mouse, Childs wooden bed & mattressfrom 5 to 30 euros each. Baby boy & girl clothes 0-6 yrs, bodies, pyja-mas, suits, leggings, tights, skirts, 1euro each. Bike 4-7 yrs 20 euros.Bambini pushchair, 60 euros. Gents mountain bike, 30 euros. Domesticsilver gas bottle, 40 euros. Foot spa, 10 euros. TV stand 25 euros. Dogcarrier 15 euros. Portable radio cassette player 10 euros. Suit case, 10euros. Tel 679 088 846 or 922 795 592
WKL world key board 150 euros. Tumble dryer 85 euros. Dishwasher, 80euros. Plastic tables and chairs, 25 euros. Hoover, 15 euros. Mini gas bot-tle 25 euros. Digital satellite receiver 20 euros. Mini oven, DVD playerremote 20 euros. Tel 676 936 820
3 domestic silver gas bottle 35 euros each. Steam iron, 4 euros. 14” TV,microwave CD, stereo radio cassette recorder, 15 euros each. 29” TV, sil-ver 60 euros. 21” TV, 20 euros. Sandwich toaster, 5 euros. Built in oven,25 euros. Sony 3 disc changer tuner band/tape A/B with 2 speakers &remote control for 70 euros. CD stereo radio cassette recorder 15 euros.Fridge freezer 120 euros. Fridge, 40 euros. Electric kettles/citrus juicer,5 euros each. Birdcage, 10 euros. Tel 686 336 904
English keyboard/mouse, kettle/parasol/patio chairs table/many differ-ent AC adaptor D, C 12 v/18/9 many more from 2 to 15 euros each.Playstation 2, 40 euros. 14 computer monitor 20 euros. Black & Deckercharges 6 euros. Mountain bike, 40 euros. Video recorders 10 euros.Hammer drill 20 euros. Fax telephone machine, 20 euros. Table fan 15euros. Round pine dining table and 4 chairs 40 euros. Electric hand mixer,15 euros. Tel 679 788 586
Office Furniture; Table with 5 drawers, solid top, 50 euros. L shaped desk,movable drawers 30 euros. 3 different cupboard units varying from 30- 60 euros. 2 ordinary chairs 15 euros each. 2 leather chairs 25 euroseach. 1 leather director chair 30 euros. Fridge, 30 euros. A4 files 100for 20 euros. Tel 615 397 913
Nintendo Game boy Micro, Neon pink with 4 games (Shrek 2, Madagasgar,Pokemon and Namco museum) and charger 30 euros. 2 Pine bedsidetables with 2 drawers in each and chrome handles 20 euros. Tel 606 800150
High School Musical single duvet cover, pillowcase and curtains 20 euros.Disney Princess single duvet cover, pillowcase and curtains 20 euros.Barbie Hot tub party bus 15 euros. Los Lunnis Pram 5 euros. Los Lunnis
Kitchen 10 euros. Barbie Castle 10 euros. Dora the Explorer dolls from 5euros. Peppa Pig playsets from 5 euros. 20 Dora the Explorer Books 1euro each or 15 the lot. TV/Video Combi 10 euros. Tel 616 807 507
R4 DSI games chip (4gb) for Nintendo DS / DSI / DSIXL, includes any 15games, 40 euros. Tel 695 808 394
Dog kennel plastic, 35 euros. Chicco baby walker, 35 euros. Cream andbrown TV unit, 40 euros. Patio set, steel chairs, cream cushions roundglass table, 95 euros. Tel 695 975 873
Phillips 26” flat screen TV, 125 euros. LG DVD/video recorder, 75 euros.Phillips DVD and radio with speakers, 50 euros. Plasma log effect electricfire, 450 euros. Tel 619 674 854
Ladies mountain bike, 18 speed twist grip gears, back rack, pump, hardlyused, 100 euros. Pine double headboards, 240 cm long, good condition,20 euros. Reflector Telescope, 25 euros. Tel 600 700 521
Suzuki Jeep soft top, ITV until Nov, selling for spares, 400 euros ono. Canearmchair with yellow padded cushions, 20 euros ono. Tel 922 703 757
3 + 2 Sofa in fauz brown leather surround with shaded brown upholstery,as new, all cushions unzip for washing machine cleaning, completely re-upholstered recently, 500 euros ono. Tel 677 538 839
DVD receiver system home cinema, USB recording, 300 Watt, 5 speakers,1 passive Subwoover, radio, remote, 89 euros. Tel 651 033 932
Headboards,14” TV, wall unit, PC monitor, single mattresses,microwave/grill, sunbed, Sub-woofer, VCR 10 euros each. Ironing board,Patio tables & Chairs, Kitchen table, Sandwich toaster, Toaster, Stool, Bedside table, lamps, Iron, hair dryer, Dirt devil Light vacuum cleaner,Speakers, From 3 to 5 euros each. 4 rings electric hob, 21” TV, 20 euroseach. JVC DX25E Camcorder, 70 euros. Tel 646 615 794.
14ft boat, Evinrude 3.5 engine and trailer. No licence required, freemooring place in Los Cristianos Harbour (no fees) recently re-sprayed andengine serviced, 500 euros.Ladies Raleigh Amazon mountain bike fantastic condition 100 euros. Tel617 454 787.
Large windsurf board, 30 euros. Tel 922 770 887
Horse riding accessories all excellent condition, hat size 57 20 euros.Gloves XS, 8 euros. Whip 8 euros. Boots size 3 (35) 14 euros. Tel 922 740302
Two large”Delsey” suitcases - fibre glass with wheels, 25 euros each. Tel639 207 064 Los Abrigos or Los Cristianos by arrangement .
3x1 scanner, printer, photocopier, canon 20 euros. Musical and lights chil-dren’s push along 15 euros. Sterelizer Avent bottles 15 euros. Robot setmixer, blender, etc, 20 euros. Black kettle 10 euros. Children’s car seat50 euros. Baby car seat 0kg 13kg 10 euros. Ccot wooden with acces-sories 15 euros. Children’s bed till 8 years 20 euros. Very big teddy bear,10 euros. Big lioness and cub teddy 10 euros. Tel 677 054 933 or 670 408045
Teak tall table and 2 tall teak chairs, good condition 145 euros. Teak din-ing table and 4 chairs, good condition 225 euros. 3 seater rattan sofawith cream cushion covers 300 euros. 2 1 seater rattan sofas with creamcushion covers, very good condition 300 euros. 2 door pine wardrobewith mirrored doors and 2 drawers at the bottom, very good condition,275 euros. Top loader Candy washing machine, as new 165 euros. Tel 922720 493
Fagor air conditioning unit perfect working order 120 euros. Fagorceramic hob with white border, VGC 120 euros. White Balay Oven, VGC120 euros. Fridge freezer white good condition freezer at the top fridgeat the bottom 155 euros. AEG dryer, as new 165 euros. Tel 659 731 832
Aluminium door white 98cm X 206cm complete with frame, 240 euros.Aluminium door white 93cm X 236cm complete with frame, 290 euros.Security bars white handmade with ornaments 74cm X 182cm, 130 euros.74cm X 74cm, 60 euros. Aluminum double door white 83cm X 88cm com-plete with frame, 95 euros. Aluminum main entrance door white withlight elements on the side and on the top 228cm X 138cm, 390 euros.Electric water heater 80L, 85 euros. Cream leather sofa 1 2 seater and 13 seater, like new, 495 euros. Tel 693 974 049
Panasonic Fax/telephone machine, 20 euros. HP F380 All in one printer/scanner/ copier, 45 euros. Epson stylus 740 printer, 15 euros. DVD play-er c/w remote, 15 euros. Camera Tripod, Veldon Professional full heightadjust and pan tilt head, 20 euros. Nikon F60 35mm SLR Camera VGC withNikon AF Telezoom 28-80mm lens and Voigtländer Macro Telezoom 19-35mm with carry case, 80 euros. Sony PS1 Playstation c/w 2 controllersand cables, 15 euros. Fire extinguisher, 8Kg powder type, 55 euros.Tower PC, Pentium 512Mb ram 60Mb hard disk, 15” flat screen, Keyboard,Mouse, Stereo speakers with sub woofer, all in one Printer, scanner, copi-er, 190 euros ono. Tel 666 200 104
Moses basket and stand 30 euros. Automatic bby wing with speed set-tings and sounds 30 euros. Baby door swing (new) 15 euros. Boucy chair10 euros. Newborn bath seat 5 euros. Matrix Pram from birth with carrycot and buggy attatchments 60 euros or 120 euros for all the above.Electronic exercise bike ( low mileage !!!) 50 euros. Underworktop fridge40 euros. Tel: 666902314
FREEADVERTS1
BARGAIN OF THE WEEKSingle pine bed with headboard & mat-
tress, hardly used, vgc, 70 euros. Tel 922 739 673 or 617 744 212
Page 50 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
Free Ads www.canarianweekly.com
How to submit your free adverts: PHONE 902 232 102 FAX 902 232 102 Email: [email protected] Just pop in the office in Las Chafiras (next to the Golf Shop). Deadline for Free ads has changed to Tuesdays at 5pm
A Waiter and a delivery driver are required for Roy’s
Pizza. Applicants must speak Spanish and be over
26 years of age. A contract will be offered. Please
call 690 611 693
A Marketing Company in the South of Tenerife urgent-
ly require the follow speaking staff; Croatian, Serbian,
Slovenian, Polish, Czech, Russian with some spoken
English. Basic wage paid, plus commission. Very
friendly office environment. Working hours 9.30 to
5pm Monday to Friday. Call Sue between these
hours on 922 713 070 or 686 154 066 anytime.
A chef or experienced
cook is required for a busy
bar restaurant. Good rates
of pay and contract given.
Applicants must be enthu-
siastic and hard working.
For an interview call
Surfers Bar on 922 753
037
CLASSIFIED3
PROPERTY2www.canarianweekly.com Classified
Call Centre Staff RequiredSelling warranties in Puerto Colon/San
Eugenio. 30 hours per week, basic and
commission paid. Full training given.
Fully legal. Call 646 859 539 or 922
713 590 for an interview.
Underground garage park-
ing spaces and storage
locker rooms at Winter
Gardens, Golf Del Sur. Tel
637 819 680.
w w w . t e n e r i f e -
centrallettingagency.co.uk
Need to let your property
sign up to our site for free
limited time offer
Yamaha R1 2003, 30,000kms, Fantastic condition, loads
of extras, very fast bike. 4,700 euros. Tel 610 285 953.
Toyota Paseo Coupe 1996, ITV April 2011. Very reliable
car, 995 euros. Tel 667 823 207
2009 Keeway 125 Auto 8000km box and lock, 1300 euros
ono. Tel 615 173 481
2 nearly new chest fridges
2.5 metres, 1,800 euros
each. Brand new meat cutter
1,200 euros. Tel 634 195 718
or 634 195 717
Large double/triple
garage wanted for
rent in the Las
A m e r i c a s / S a n
Eugenio area on a
monthly basis. Tel
Mark 659 202 826
WANTED
JOBS
CARS WANTED
PROPERTY FOR RENT
FOR SALE
WANTEDOffice furniture, at
least 6 desks with
chairs (18), computer,
printers, scanners and
anything else available
Please call Michael
on 636 044 700
Stylist required for full
or part time work.
An existing client base
would be an advan-
tage. Also opportunity
for Nail Technician. For more information
please call 922 789 058
100m² local for rent on
the Golf del Sur (Ocean
Country Club).
Fantastic opportunity in
a busy area. Fully fitted
and ideal for a supermar-
ket etc. Tel 609 537 259
Detached Villa 4 bed, Torviscas, Ocean views. Urgent
sale, genuine bargain, 250,000 euros. Tel 617 658 900
PROPERTY FOR RENT
PROPERTY WANTED
CARS BOUGHT FOR CASH – Anything considered. Offer
made once seen. WANTED small cars to medium cars, 4 x
4´s, small vans, people carriers, e.t.c. Call us now on 629
128 667.
CARS/BIKES
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 51
CARS/BIKES (CONT.)
MG ZR 1.8
ITV until April 2012, 16
valve twin cam, 160 bhp,
2004, 86,000km, 17”
alloys, all extras, air con,
elec sun roof, etc. Full
service history. 1 owner
from new, 5,500 euros.
Tel 669 626 840
GOING BACK TO THE
UK… NEED A VAN?Citroen Despatch (Jumper)
2.0 HDI UK plates. RHD
panel van twin side door &
windows, 106,000 miles.
2,999 euros
Tel: 922 770 887
/ 687 046 866
JOBS (CONT.)
Models required for trainee
hairdressers in Los
Cristianos. Please ring Paul
on 635 347 033
MISC
FREE TO A
GOOD HOME. Harry is an adorable 5yr
old dog. He’s chipped,
snipped and fully
vaccinated. To meet up
with this gorgeous dog
call me on 625 864 465
A Company in the south of Tenerife require girls to
sell flowers for 5 hours a night in all south tourist
areas with a possibility of working in their shop during
the day. Good rates of pay, basic plus commission.
Own transport preferable with petrol reimbursement.
Call 634 195 717 or 634 195 718
A qualified chef is required for a busy restaurant in
Callao Salvaje. CV and references are essential.
Call Adrian or Jayne on 922 743 900
A position is available working in some of Tenerife’s
most prestigious hotels and on Catamaran excur-
sions giving tanning advice to guests. English essen-
tial and Spanish or Polish an advantage. Contract
provided and full training will be given. Call Louise on
620 701 944 or email [email protected]
BritishTelemarketers are required for an established
company in Las Americas. They also require English
Speaking Russian, German and Scandinavian
Telemarketers. Small basic and good commissions
paid in cash on a weekly basis. Call 665 546 872 or
922 791 793
Highly motivated British sales people are required to
join a successful Marketing office. The position would
suit successful reps looking for high earning potential.
If you are want a professional position earning up to
30% commission and a basic wage paid weekly call
Lee on 608 698 719.
The Travel Group require Telemarketing staff to join
their very successful team based in Las Chafiras.
Excellent rates of pay, commissions and bonuses
paid fortnightly with realistic earnings of an average
of 500 euros per 2 weeks pay period. A contract will
be given after a short trial period. Call 922 736 300
or email [email protected]
SERVICE POINT4
Service Point www.canarianweekly.com
CARS
BLINDS
Page 52 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
CARS TO RENTLong Term Rental
From 230€ per month, incl. Insurance.
Phone Terry on 661 264 080
Email: [email protected]
AIR-CONDITIONING
CLEANING
SAFECLEANFor all professional cleaning of carpets & upholstery
Tel: 609 066 [email protected] www.safecleantenerife.com
Ann Malpass M.A.F.H.P. M.C.F.H.P. Qualified Chiropodist.
All your foot care needs solved in the comfort of your own
home/hotel. Tel 625 799 570
Elaine Watson Jones MSSCh MBCHA, serving the commu-
nity from El Medano to Los Gigantes for 13 years.
Telephone 608 029 790
CHIROPODIST
CONSTRUCTION
ELECTRICIAN
AIR-CONDITIONING
GARDEN FURNITURE
GARDEN SERVICESTREES & GARDENS - PALM TREE CLEANING/ PRUN-
ING - Tree surgeon with 20 years experience. Tree sur-
gery, hedge trimming, garden maintenance / clearance
and rubbish removed. Tel 628 88 30 70 or 922 737 397.
www.canarianweekly.com Service Point
PATIO DOORS & WINDOWS
20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 53
MECHANICS & VALETSKITCHENS & BATHROOMS
LAWYERS
VISIT THE PRETTIEST & FRIENDLIEST MARKET IN THE SOUTH
9am - 2pm - Fancy a stall?Special new secondhand furniture section.
Have you got any furniture for sale?
Tel: 922 796 414 or mob 610 464 841
ALCALA EVERY MONDAYMARKETS
Tel: 922 778 050 Fax 922 778 051
Mobile 696 889 048Specialists in security shutters and blinds, locks security glass and grills.
QUALIFIED FITTERS AND FULL GUARANTEES
Free no obligation survey & quotation. We speak English & German!
ALUMINIUM & PVC VISIT OUR SHOWROOM in Granadilla!
Call for directions
PLUMBINGAll plumbing works undertaken including boiler replace-
ments, drain clearance, swimming pool pump repair &
maintenance. Tel: 680 278 579
PETSWORLDD O G H O T E L
Short or long holidays - Spacious kennels - Enclosed play area - 3 walks a day
TEL: 679 16 16 82
PETS
No car, no
problem we can
pick them up.
the English UpholstererSofas, bar seating dining chairsFree quotations & home visits
Call Mike at ReStyle 677 806 800
RE-UPHOLSTERY
REMOVALS
PERSONAL SERVICES
HEALTH & BEAUTYwww.tenerifehairandbeauty.com
UNIVERSAL EXPORTS FOR ALL YOUR REMOVAL
SERVICES 922 720 711.
BARGAIN BASEMENTUPSTAIRS! DOWNSTAIRS
EVERYTHING NEEDED TO START, ADD, FRESHEN OR
JUST REPLACE ANYTHING IN YOUR HOME!July/Aug – Watch out for our GOING, GOING, GONE! items on the TOP
OF THE RAMP. BAR:- Tables, chairs & industrial items also in stock.
Open Mon-Fri 10-30-17.30
Los Cristianos, Edf.Rosy, Calle Valle Mendez, opp
Police Station near Pet Shop Tel: 618 381 488
SECOND-HAND SHOPS
REMOVALS
MASSAGEOaki Massage Course. For full details visit
oakimassage.blogspot.com or call Mark on 634 985 961.
HAIRDRESSINGJENNI ex CUTTING ROOM, Paloma Beach is nowoffering
GENTLEMEN'S HAIRDRESSING from new premises in
same area, for a personal appointment please phone:
666742066. 25 YEARS EXPERIENCE
MARKETS
Service Point www.canarianweekly.com
Page 54 20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010
Conversational basic Spanish, “one to one” or small
groups, home or workplace visits. Experienced language
teacher at all levels. Excellent rates. Why not give it a try!
Call 649 227 833 or 922 163 270
OPEN 9am - 7pm Mon - Fri,
Sat 10 am - 5pmOther times by arrangement
Vina del Mar Hotel
Playa de las Américas
Ring Ray on:
922 790 822 or 675 569 804
The Travel ShopTHE BEST CHANCE OF GETTING THE FLIGHT YOU WANT AT APRICE YOU'LL LIKE. SAVE TIME AND MONEY, ALL THE FLIGHTSUNDER ONE ROOF. SCHEDULE OR CHARTER, "FRILLS" OR "NO-FRILLS", ONE WAY OR ROUND TRIP, STARTING IN TENERIFE ORUK. UNRIVALLED EXPERIENCE IN ASSURING THE BEST DEALS.FOR NEARLY 20 YEARS THE Nº 1 IN TENERIFE FOR FLIGHTS TOAND FROM THE UK. SOUTH ON 922 793 718 OR NORTH ON 922371 422 OR SOUTH AIRPORT ON 649 884 365 OR IN UK ON 0871717 4308
SEW & SEW’S - For Clothing Alteration’s. Also stocking
good quality used baby/children’s clothes, maternity wear,
nursery items, toys, books, curtains etc. I also buy the
above. Tel 671 784 608. Email: [email protected]
T-SHIRT PRINTING & EMBROIDERY
SPANISH LESSONS
SEWING
Colin PeelTiling SpecialistFor All Your Tiling Needs:
Bathrooms, Kitchens & Floors
Most Aspects of Building Work Undertaken
Tel: 679 736 409
TILING
TAROT READING / ASTROLOGY
TRAVEL
TRANSLATION
Professional Psychic, Tarot and Rune reader. Advice about
past, present and future financial and personal guidance.. Tel
Amy on 657 302 428.
International Psychic Tarot Card Reader. Confidential, reli-
able, caring readings in the privacy of your own home/hotel.
Tel : Anna 678 236 803
Mark the Island Astrologer. Financial / business, relation-
ship, health. One hour reading. Specific, accurate, guaran-
teed. Tel 922 772 422 / 610 089 157.
TENERIFE TRANSLATION SERVICESOver 20 years experience.
Official Translations, Medical, Conveyancing, Notary, Wills, Utilities,
Insurances, Building licences Etc.. Transport available if required.
Professionalism & Confidentiality guaranteed.
For these and many more call Tracey on 666 857 991
ALADDINS CAVE 922 720 493
SECURITY
FOR SALE & WANTED QUALITY SECOND
HAND FURNITURE & HOUSEHOLD GOODS
SOFA SALE - FROM 35€
SECONDHAND CENTRE
Menny Fix, Satellite TV Tel 922 792 116
Avnd; Antonio Dominguez 18, Edif: MarOLa Local 2, Los
Cristianos. EST 1994, Repairs, Maintenance & Sales.
TV & SATELLITE
TRANSLATION
SECURITY
WATER TREATMENT
TEETH WHITENING
SECOND-HAND SHOPS
Aalto
International Restaurant
c.c.Mirador, Los Cristianos, Tel: 922 790
560
10% discount
Aberdeen Steak House
Steakhouse
c/Hermanos de Betancourt, Edif Cerromar,
Los Cristianos
Avda Ernesto Sarti, c.c.Pueblo Canario,
Costa Adeje
c/Mexico, Hotel las Palmeras, Las
Americas
Avda Santiago Puig, Parque Cattleya, Las
Americas
Edif Royal Garden, Playa Las Vistas, Las
Americas
10% discount
American Dreamz
American, Italian & Tex Mex Cuisine
Avda Rafael Puig, under Tenerife Sol, Las
Americas, Tel: 922 798 784
10% discount
Banana Garden
International Restaurant
c.c.Palm Beach, Las Americas
20% discount
Bianco
Italian Restaurant/ Cocktail Bar
Safari Center, Las Americas, Tel: 922 788
697
10% discount
Bianco Duo
Italian Restaurant
c.c.Pasarela, Los Cristianos, Tel: 922 788 872
10% discount
Blue Cactus
International Restaurant
c.c.Costa Torviscas, Las Americas, Tel: 922
719 976
10% discount
Blue Rain Hair Professionals
Hair & Beauty
Vistasur, Las Americas, Tel: 922 798 560
10% discount
Bodegon Damary
Local Cuisine
Adeje, Tel: 922 710 327
10% discount
Bombay Blue
Indian Restaurant
c.c.Safari, Las Americas, Tel: 922 797 190
10% discount
Cantina Mexica
Mexican Restaurant
Las Galletas
10% discount
Casino Playa de las Americas
Casino
Hotel Gran Tinerfe, Las Americas
Free entrance for 2 people
Central Park
American, Italian & Tex Mex Cuisine
Avda Rafael Puig Nº16, Las Americas, Tel:
922 788 175
10% discount
Chill Out
Restaurant
Next to small tunnel, Los Cristianos
Harbour, Tel: 922 792 776
For every 2 people dining one eats for free
Dante Aligheri
Italian Restaurant
c.c.Salytien, Las Americas, 922 750 473
10% discount
Deco Nuevo
Furnishings & Textiles
Los Cristianos, Tel: 922 789 729
5% discount
Domus Aurea
Italian Restaurant
c.c.Safari Loc 7, Las Americas, Tel: 922
796 115
10% discount
Equinox English Card Shop
English Greeting Cards & Craft Materials
Las Galletas
10% discount
Gran Reserva Litoral
Italian Restaurant
Playa Fanabe Loc 204-205, Costa Adeje,
Tel: 922 719 328
10% discount
Gran Reserva Safari
Italian Restaurant
c.c.Safari Loc 2, Las Americas, Tel: 922
798 508
10% discount
Greek Corner
Greek Restaurant
c.c.Palm Beach, Las Americas, Tel: 922
753 788
10% discount
Hacienda Miranda
Grill & Tex Mex
Safari Center, Las Americas,
Tel: 922 794 699
Peatonal Estocolmo 14, Los Cristianos,
Tel: 922 791 103
c.c.Fanabe 5-10, Costa Adeje,
Tel: 922 712 586
10% discount
Harleys American Restaurant
American/British Diner & Cocktail Bar
Club Flamingo, Puerto Colon, Las
Americas, Tel: 922 714 123
10% discount
Harry’s Safari
Cocktail Bar
c.c.Safari, Above the Fountain Show, Las
Americas
10% discount
Harry’s Cocktail Plaza
Cocktail Bar
Plaza del Duque, Costa Adeje
10% discount
Head to Toe
Beauty and hair Salon
Salytien, Playa de Las Americas.
Tel: 922 79 87 61
10% discount
Hip Hop Shop
Clothes Shop
Las Galletas
10% discount
Hooters
American Diner
Hotel Conquistador, Beachfront, Las
Americas
10% discount
Island Interior Designs
Lighting, Flooring, Design
C.C: Muelles de Génova, Palm Mar,
Tel: 922 748317
10% discount
James Bistro Carvery
Bistro & Carvery
Island Village, Opp Aqualand, Torviscas
10% discount
Joyeria Juan XXIII
Jewellers
C/Juan XXIII, Los Cristianos
10% discount
La Brasserie
Steakhouse/ Pizzeria
c.c.Litoral L204, Playa Fanabe,
Tel: 922 718 024
10% discount
Lido
Designer Jewellers
c.c.Safari, LaS Americas
10% discount
Linekers Bars
c.c. Starco, Las Americas
0.50€ off any drink
Little Italy Taberna
Italian Restaurant
Edif Don Jose (next to Burger King), Los
Cristianos, Tel: 922 792 570
10% discount
Little Italy Capri
Italian Restaurant
c.c.Lagos de Fanabe, Costa Adeje,
Tel: 922 712 795
10% discount
Little Italy Pompei
Italian Restaurant
Colon II, Las Americas, Tel: 922 750 111
10% discount
Little Italy Martini
Italian Restaurant
Colon II, Las Americas, Tel: 922 787 090
10% discount
Little Italy Tamara
Italian Restaurant
Avda Maritima s/n, Los Gigantes,
Tel: 922 860 011
10% discount
L’Osteria
Italian Restaurant
Laguna Park 1, Torviscas & Parque
Royale, Torviscas
10% discount
Magic Lounge
Cocktail Bar
Piramide de Arona, Opp c.c.Safari, Las
Americas, Tel: 922 751 094
10% discount
Mamma Mia
Italian Restaurant
c.c.Americas Plaza, Las Americas,
Tel:922 797 082
10% discount
Mamma Rosa
Italian Restaurant. Apto, Colon II, Las
Americas, Tel: 922 794 819
10% discount
Marios Restaurant
Italian Restaurant, Garden City, Las
Americas, Tel: 922 752 258
10% discount
Merceria Chari
Adeje, Tel: 922 782 785
10% discount
Molino Blanco
International Restaurant
The White Windmill, San Eugenio Alto, Tel:
922 796 282
10% discount
Monkey Bar Grill
Steakhouse/ Cocktail Bar
c.c.Oasis, Las Americas, Tel: 922 789 291
10% discount
Monkey Beach Club
Steakhouse/ Cocktail Bar
Playa Troya, Beach Front, Las Americas,
Tel: 655 259 826
10% discount
Oasis Fashion
Clothes Shop
c.c. Troya, Las Americas, Tel: 922 788 473
10% discount
Optica Garoe
Opticians
Las Galletas
10% discount
Oriental Garden
Oriental Restaurant
c.c.Americas Plaza, Las Americas, Tel: 922
797 082
10% discount
Overseas Oriental Restaurant
Chinese Restaurant
San Marino, Los Cristianos,
Tel: 922 792 013
10% discount
Perfumes.es
Perfume Shop
c.c.Oasis Local 28, Las Americas
c.c.City Center, opp The Patch, Las
Americas
c.c.Sun Beach, Playa Fanabe, Costa Adeje
Plaza del Duque, Playa Fanabe, Costa
Adeje
c.c.Americas Plaza, Las Americas
10% discount/15% when paying in Sterling
Quad Park
Excursion
La Camella, Tel: 922 725 176
10% discount
Rock Café – Live Rock Music
Next door to Yates, Starco, Las Amercias
10% discount
Restaurant Coeur de Filet
Italian Restaurant
c.c.Sun Beach, Fanabe Shopping area,
Tel: 922 717 893
10% discount
Ristorante Michelangelo
Italian Restaurant
Edif Parque Cattleya 5, Las Americas, Tel:
922 791 065
10% discount
Sand & Sea Beach Club
Beach Bar
Fanabe Beach Front, opp Burger King,
Costa Adeje
10% discount
Sangre de Toro
Italian Restaurant
c.c.Safari Loc 6, Las Americas, Tel: 922
793 227
10% discount
Slow Boat Teppenyaki
Japanese Restaurant
c.c. Safari, Upper floor, Las Americas, Tel:
922 795 395
10% discount
Slow Boat Colon
Chinese Restaurant
Puerto Colon, Las Americas, Tel: 922 713 416
10% discount
Slow Boat Oriental
Oriental Restaurant
c.c. El Duque, Costa Adeje, Tel: 922 712 158
10% discount
South Beach Cocktail Bar
Cocktail Bar
Puerto Colon, 1st floor, next to Subway
10% discount
Stop!
Clothes Shop
c.c.Oasis, Las Americas
Hotel La Nina, Las Americas
c.c.Galaxy, Las Americas
10% discount
Taberna del Puerto
Spanish Cuisine.
Infront of Los Cristianos Beach, by the port.
Formerly Meson Sterlitzia
Tel: 922 796 277
10% discount
Tandoori Nites
Indian Restaurant
El Camison, Las Americas, Tel: 922 750 527
10% discount
The Academy Bar
Laguna Park I, opp Ocean beach, Las
Americas
€0.50 off a drink
The Breeze Inn
Bar/Restaurant
San Telmo, Los Cristianos, Tel: 664 291 823
10% discount
The Great Little Italy
Italian Restaurant
Avda General Franco 39, Los Cristianos,
Tel: 922 790 004
10% discount
The Great Little Italy
Italian Restaurant
Playa Fanabe Loc 206-207, Costa Adeje,
Tel: 922 719 404
10% discount
The Premier Bar & Restaurant,
Fairways Club, Amarilla Golf.
Tel 639 990 476
Tibu
Cocktail Bar/Club
Next to Hotel Las Palmeras, Las Americas,
tel: 630 718 940
Free Entry
Tony Roma’s
Ribs-Seafood-Steak
Hotel Jardines de Nivaria, Playa Fanabe,
Tel: 922 724 806
Avda Rafael Puig 23, Las Americas,
Tel: 922 798 024
c.c Merididano, Santa Cruz,
Tel: 922 228 624
10% discount
Toro Tapas & Grill
Spanish Restaurant
c.c.Mirador, Los Cristianos,
Tel: 922 791 008
10% discount
Tramps
King of Clubs
c.c.Starco, Las Americas
1€ off per drink
Verdes
Italian Restaurant
Playa Flor, San Eugenio, Tel: 922 716 215
10% discount
Veterinaria San Isidro
San Isidro, Tel: 922 390 007
10% discount
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20 August 2010 - 26 August 2010 Page 55