Find beauty tips, including how to get hot celebrity hairstyles
May
31
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Neither Perihan nor I were intending to watch the ‘Miss Turkey’ Beauty Pageant this year… that sort of thing isn’t our cup of tea. But when we heard that a few of Turkey’s most famous pop-stars — Tarkan among them — would be performing at intervals between beauty contest segments, we were curious. So, at “Show Time” we switched to the STAR TV channel.

The first pop-performer was Emre, doing a very credible job in English with “Tonight, Tonight” from “West Side Story”. Then it was Hadise’s turn with her international hit-song “Stir Me up”, also in English. So when href="http://www.learningpracticalturkish.com/turkish-words-and-music--tarkan.html"
target="_blank">Tarkan finally appeared in a Frank Sinatra-style pork-pie hat, singing and dancing to a selection from his new all-English Album “Come Closer”, the novelty of hearing Turkish pop-stars performing in foreign tongues had worn off. And it didn’t help that his act lacked its usual spontaneous excitement — seeming too well practiced…bordering on being unenthusiastic.

Not surprisingly, the sophisticated high-society audience-reaction was decidedly reserved…polite, but a little distracted. Certainly not effusive enough for an International Mega-Star of Tarkan’s reputation (nor for these highly-touted new musical offerings of his — which had been 10 years in the making). This was not his crowd.

It’s not that his performance was bad. Far from it. And, after the Beauty Pageant was over, he could barely fend off the throng of well-wishing fans and reporters blocking his way from exiting the TV show-center. But we couldn’t help wondering what the audience-reaction might have been if he’d performed the same musical-set in front of a younger, more-receptive group of people.

Still, a comparison could be made on that particular night between the dullness of Tarkan’s performance and the dullness of the Beauty Pageant — which was won, predictably, by a clone of most beauty contest winners these days. A tall brunette with skinny legs.

[Click following to access a fully illustrated HTML version of href="http://www.learningpracticalturkish.com/beauty-pageant--006-05-04.html"
target="_blank">Turkish Beauty Pageant Entertainment.]

Jim and (co-author) Perihan Masters are a husband and wife team,
living on the Aegean Coast of Turkey just 50 miles south of Izmir. Jim
was born in Shanghai, China — of American military parentage. Peri
was born on the Black Sea coast of Turkey near Trabzon, of Turkish
military parentage…Enticed by a Financial Times advertisement, Jim
joined a NATO sponsored enterprise in Ankara in 1974 where he met the
beautiful and brainy Perihan, a rising young Turkish banking
executive. Settled now in the heart of what was once the ancient
Ionian Empire — the couple live an idyllic life by the sea.. writing,
drawing and painting, teaching English, and providing computing
service support to local businesses. They also sponsor the MSNBC
award-winning href="http://www.learningpracticalturkish.com/">Learning Practical
Turkish Website
which has built an enthusiastic international
following of devoted Turkophiles and inquisitive language students of
all ages

Tags: turkish singers, entertainment, miss turkey 2006 contest



May
30
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There are various health benefits derived from celery and its juice. The medical virtues of celery were first described by the Greeks Discorides and Pliny. In the early middle ages celery juice was very beneficial for curing ailments such as stones, constipation, menstrual problems and for health disorders of the liver and gall bladder.

The green leaves and stem and the bulbous root of celery are all extremely rich in active ingredients that make celery a very important medicinal plant and very beneficial to health. There is a well balanced content of the basic minerals, vitamins and nutrients, but in addition there are important concentrations of plant hormones and the essential oils that give celery its strong and characteristic smell. These oils have a specific effect on the regulation of the nervous system, and have a great calming influence. It is the presence of the essential oils which makes celery special. These are also found in the seeds and, if available, they too can be added to the juice.

Celery is used for its strong stimulating and beneficial effect on a weak sexual system, but as is usual with plant therapies the normally active person does not have to fear an uncontrollable upsurge. Plant therapy tends to make the system normal. Like beet there is also a general health tonic effect.

The strong diuretic (water removing) powers of celery enable it to be used in the control of health problems such as arthritis and rheumatism. Sufferers cannot have too much and may consume the vegetable cooked or raw, or in juice form which is the most health effective treatment of all.

A tablespoonful of honey in celery juice, sipped slowly, will very effectively reduce the appetite if taken before a meal, and makes a delightful drink. You can take the same mixture as a nightcap when it will help you to relax into a soothing and restful sleep.

Those who take the juice who have in the past suffered from a tendency towards stones in the gall bladder or the kidneys usually find that these painful deposits do not form again. It seems likely that this effect is related to the anti-arthritic properties of the juice.

Kevin Pederson has been managing a number of natural home remedies websites which have information on home based natural cures by the usage of juices extracted from vegetables and fruits like celery.

Tags: natural home remedies, home remedies, natural remedies, health and beauty, celery juice



May
29
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ROME

It is a city, it is a dream, it is a memory of seemingly unlimited and unending power. It is history itself. It defines the word “empire.” The Eternal City. Roma. Rome.

One of the guidebooks claims that one can turn any corner in Rome and run into “something beautiful and unexpected that was placed there centuries ago, apparently in the most casual fashion.” This is not hyperbole, it is literally true.

The legend is that if you throw a coin into the Trevi fountain, in the heart of the city, you will someday return. The fact that the bottom of the fountain is each day covered anew with coins demonstrates that visitors hope to come back to this place that represents so much of civilization’s past. Only the New World countries have a history that was not directly shaped by the people of this city. But even most of the inhabitants of the Americas came from countries, which, themselves, bore the indelible stamp of the Roman Empire, which, for centuries, ruled most of the then-known world.

Early Rome was a republic ruled over by Gaius Julius Caesar, who was assassinated in 44 B.C.E. After ten years of civil war and political chaos his heir, who came to be known as Caesar Augustus, established the monarchy, which brought in the Empire, two hundred years of prosperity and the Pax Romana (Roman Peace.) Rome ruled supreme over most of what we now know as Europe and it was said that a Roman citizen could travel anywhere without being in danger — no one would dare harm him. Because of this, people from the outlying provinces converged on the city to become politicians, military personnel and artisans - but mostly to become simply Roman citizens. Rome quickly became the center of art, culture and economy in the entire Mediterranean world. Although the empire crumbled centuries ago, the mystique of Rome has hardly diminished today. Built on the famous seven hills, the city has lived up to the legend that “all roads lead to Rome.” As the guidebooks claim, it is impossible to turn a corner without encountering a building or ruin or monument, which is like a living postcard.

Then, of course, there is Vatican City, St. Peter’s Basilica and the Vatican Museum, which houses in its complex interior the Sistine Chapel. Although it is clearly a separate entity and not part of the city life, that alone would attract thousands of visitors no matter where it was located. Michelangelo’s Pieta, the famous statue of Mary holding the body of Jesus, right inside the entrance to St. Peter’s, is one of the thousands of works of art in the city that make it hard to believe that these eternal masterpieces are really there, in flesh and blood so to speak, for ordinary people to see, if not touch.

Besides the Vatican, three of the most-visited landmarks in the city are the Coliseum, the Trevi Fountain and the ruins of the Forum.

Take a walk down the Corso, one of the busiest streets in the city, past dozens of clothing and art shops, follow the crowd to what feels like the very heart of Rome and you will come across the magnificent statuary of the Trevi Fountain. Bernini began the work, it was continued by Pietro de Cortona and finished a hundred years later, by Nicola Salvi. The fountain depicts Neptune as the King of the Sea looking down on his subjects from a chariot pulled by galloping and plummeting sea horses.

At 85 feet high and 65 feet wide, Trevi is the largest of the many fountains of Rome. Most of these fountains were built to mark the terminus of the aqueducts, which carried pure water to Rome. Today the fountain has modern pumps and the water is oxidized to keep it fresh.

Although some of today’s Romans will outwardly scorn the Trevi because it was made famous by an American movie (Three Coins in the Fountain) most are proud of it, as can be attested to by the groups of school children gathered around teachers lecturing at the base of the fountain on any spring day.

Perhaps even more famous and familiar a site to people all over the world is the Coliseum. This magnificent ruin has been reproduced so often and in so many different media that it is startling to come upon it while strolling down the Via Imperiali, the wide avenue that cuts through the city and takes one to most of the major attractions. Suddenly there it is, just as you have seen it hundreds of times. In spite of its ruined condition there is a strange thrill in standing where so many fought and died - where the lives of Christians and gladiators were saved or snuffed out at the whim of an emperor or an audience.

During the day there are always many tourists waiting to get inside the Coliseum and use the audio tour equipment. But come back at night and it is possible to feel the ghosts of those who witnessed, or experienced, either glory or violent death, strolling the ruined aisles.

Between the Coliseum and the Trevi Fountain, on the Via Imperiali, it is impossible to walk by what is left of the Roman Forum without going onto the “grounds” and invoking the memories of the feet that walked there so long ago and the events that took place which still impact many cultures.

The Forum, if not the geographic center of Rome, was the center of art, religion, politics and economics. In other words, all of the things that made Rome was it was. It held this position from at least 7 BCE to 4 CE.

The hills of Roman - most notably the Palantine and the Capitoline-surround the small valley that contains the remains of the Forum. The Senate met there and all important public meetings were held there. Because of this it was once crowded with innumerable statues and monuments honoring public officials. Temples and basilica honoring the gods were everywhere.

Quite naturally, the importance of the Forum as the symbolic, and actual, seat of Roman power meant that when there were political fights this is where they took place and as a result many buildings and monuments were damaged over the years. It was not until the 20th century that full and systematic excavation of the area took place and it is now possible to view enough of the ancient structures, whether original or restored, to appreciate the glory that once was the Roman Forum.

These are only a few of the sights to be taken in around the Rome. We have not spoken of the lovely Spanish Steps, the perfect architecture of the Pantheon, the Church of the Holy Cross with the tombs of Michelangelo, Da Vinci, Donatello, Macchievelli, Dante, Marconi, Fermi and Galileo and on and on. Churches not even mentioned in guidebooks contain amazing frescoes and, of course, everywhere is the work of Michelangelo.

It would be impossible to see everything in one trip, so if you go to Rome be sure to throw a coin into the Trevi, thereby assuring your return. The Eternal City will be waiting for you.

Misty Jones is a member of the writing team at
http://futuretravelplans.blogspot.com/ our goal is to build up to one thousand cities. Hopefully we will be writing live in the city at the time. :) Come travel the world with us and please send us your ultimate trip.

Tags: Travel, Italy, Rome, Insurance, Tickets, fun, relaxation, beauty, love