Thursday 4 September 2008

Mp3 music: Kat DeLuna






Kat DeLuna
   

Artist: Kat DeLuna: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Other

   







Kat DeLuna's discography:


9 Lives
   

 9 Lives

   Year: 2007   

Tracks: 14






Raised in the Bronx and the Dominican Republic, Kat DeLuna grew up with a dear for singing and, at the age of 14, began attendance the New Jersey School of the Performing Arts. She formed an all-Latina R&B group called Coquette, which formerly open for knocker Cassidy, simply it wasn't long ahead she signed with GMB Music Group through the Sony-distributed Epic label. Her debut album (9 Lives), released in August 2007, was preceded by the clubhouse track "Snivel Up," featuring Elephant Man.






Monday 25 August 2008

Treating Pediatric Voiding Dysfunction

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Friday 15 August 2008

Counselors Prepare To Assist Returning Servicemembers

�Almost hundred percent of American Counseling Association (ACA) members world Health Organization completed a Capella University survey on military mental health issues have taken action to increase their understanding of post-combat and re-entry issues of returning servicemembers. The results also indicated that ACA survey respondents feel better disposed to help post-combat servicemembers than other mental health professionals wHO took the survey.

ACA members finger better prepared to help servicemembers


The ACA member results uncover some interesting contrasts and parallels with other mental health professionals who took the survey. Highlights let in (all statements refer to those world Health Organization took the Capella University "Joining Forces America" military-mental health review):


- Eighty-four percent of ACA members feel prepared to help post-combat servicemembers, compared to 61 percent of other mental health professionals.


- Nearly all ACA members (98 per centum) have taken at least one step to better their agreement of post-combat and reentry issues, compared to 75 percent of other mental health professionals.


- Neither ACA members nor other mental health professionals feel the mental health community as a hale is prepared to help returning servicemembers. Seventy-three percent of ACA members and 64 percentage of other mental wellness professionals said they believe the mental health community is not prepared.


- Only 6 pct of ACA members aforesaid they had little or no knowledge of post-combat psychological conditions, compared to 27 per centum of other mental wellness professionals.


"I'm not surprised with these results," aforementioned Richard Yep, CAE, executive director director of the ACA. "The mental health necessarily of returning servicemembers and their families have been a strong focus of our organization for several years now. We've made a point of bringing this takings to our members' care and ar committed to helping provide counselors with the resources they need to address this development challenge. We've offered multiple educational roger Sessions on this topic at our conferences over the past respective years, and also offer ongoing access to publications and continuing education courses on our Web site. In addition, we have advocated for federal pentateuch that will provide military troops with greater access to genial health precaution." One of ACA's 19 Divisions-the Association for Counselors and Educators in Government-represents counselors and educators in government and military related agencies.


"We're pleased to have ACA participation in this survey, and we applaud the many efforts they hold made to focus attention on this issue," aforesaid Chris Cassirer, acting president of Capella University. "Like the ACA, Capella has a potent interest in the takings of military mental wellness because mental health professionals and military personnel typify two of our largest groups of students. We believe a big part of the challenge in meeting servicemembers' mental wellness needs is making certain there are enough qualified professionals to address the need. Our online guidance and psychological science programs-including the only on-line CAPREP-accredited master's-level counseling specializations-make it more feasible to pursue advanced degrees in the mental health cademic

Thursday 7 August 2008

Gabriella Cilmi Proud She Isn't A Soap Star

Gabriella Cilmi is proud that she hasn't requisite to star in a soap in order to launch her music life history, the 'Sweet About Me' singer has revealed.


"I'm very proud of the fact that I didn't come from a soap," Cilmi tells the Daily Record. "Everyone swears they've seen me on Neighbours or Home And Away, only I've ne'er done them. I

Friday 27 June 2008

Artist Rachel Selekman Cuts the Middleman Out of Flower-Watering

Rachel Selekman's Yellow Velvet Spray (2008).Courtesy of Metaphor Contemporary Art
Is this Big Edie Beale's watering can? So overgrown, like it's been left outside too long and sprouted alien limbs (along with some lovely yellow flowers). It's hanging like a chandelier from the ceiling of Metaphor Contemporary Art in Brooklyn through July 20. —Emma Pearse



Monday 23 June 2008

For A Space

For A Space   
Artist: For A Space

   Genre(s): 
Electronic
   



Discography:


Welcome 4.000   
 Welcome 4.000

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 10


Secrets Behind   
 Secrets Behind

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 6




 






Monday 16 June 2008

Q&A: Neil Young hopes documentary will spur debate

NEW YORK (Billboard) - In the spring of 2006, rock singer-songwriter Neil Young was just a year removed from a near-fatal aneurysm when he became so enraged with the war in Iraq that he quickly wrote, recorded and released the protest album "Living With War." Not two months after its release, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young launched their Freedom of Speech tour, during which unwitting fans expecting the band's sweeter side were greeted instead with its serrated edge.


During a three-hour-plus concert, the band played nearly all of "Living With War" and many of the political anthems on which its legend was built, like "Ohio," "Military Madness" and "Find the Cost of Freedom." Despite CSN&Y's anti-establishment roots, the move angered some fans.


The forthcoming documentary "CSNY: Deja Vu" charts that friction, portraying fans who saluted the group's efforts and those who felt betrayed by them, while introducing viewers to Iraqi War vets who are now protesting the war as musicians, politicians and social workers. Directed by Young and due in theaters July 25, the film blends concert and behind-the-scenes footage with short news features created by CNN correspondent Mike Cerre.


Q: One of the film's most powerful scenes shows Atlanta fans angrily filing out of the venue, not before telling you to go to hell, and that's putting it kindly. When you look back on the tour, are there faces and middle fingers in particular that stick out?


Neil Young: "I remember some faces. There's one guy I remember for sure, and he's not in the movie. This was a harrowing experience at times, and it's not an experience that I would like to repeat. I think it was a one-off. I think if I did this kind of thing for the rest of my life, I'd become like CNN, and I don't really respect that very much. It's like the same thing on a loop. I don't see the need for that. I like to be a full-length program, not a repeating segment."


Q: Besides Atlanta, the reaction in Orange County, California, was particularly bad, and even spurred fights. Did the negative reactions cause you to second-guess yourself at all?


Young: "There was never any sense of giving up or anything. We went from July 4 to September 10 on the tour, and I remember feeling glad that we weren't playing on September 11. There were moments throughout it where you just shook your head and said, 'God, what are we doing?' But the songs were there, the feeling was there, the audience was there, and we were doing it."


Q: Crosby, Stills & Nash play to a different crowd than you do as a solo artist. You must have also been aware of the fact that there was less preaching to the choir going on than there would have been on your own tour.