Sunday, 17 August 2008

Eat Slugs, Warner Bros.: �Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince� Moved to July 2009

"But July's so far away, Hermione."Courtesy of Warner Bros.




Galloping gargoyles! Warner Bros. � apparently worried that a lack of 2009 tent poles might lead to a dreaded 20th Century Fox�style summer collapse � has moved Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince back from this Thanksgiving to next July. But is that the real reason � or have the ticket sales for the long-awaited Broadway debut of Harry Potter's wang, so much lower than those of Billy Elliot, scared Warners away from a fall release date? (Probably not.) We're totally disappointed � that trailer was pretty fantastic. Must we really wait until July to meet Hero Fiennes-Tiffin?



BREAKING: 'Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince' Moved to Next July! [Cinematical]







More info

Thursday, 7 August 2008

Asthma UK At The Birmingham Eid Mela

�This weekend Asthma UK will be teaming up with the British Heart Foundation and Diabetes UK to host a wellness marquee at the Birmingham Eid Mela, providing information and support for citizenry from the South Asian community.




The marquee will be run by staff, health professionals and volunteers, many of whom give birth asthma themselves, and world Health Organization will be on hired hand to provide advice, information and signposting services. Asthma UK will also be providing a range of popular bilingualist materials such as the life-saving Asthma Attack Cards, which provide basic selective information on how to recognise an asthma attack and what steps to take and Asthma UK's Emergency Care Materials which aid people wHO have been admitted to hospital with an asthma attack attack, avoid future emergency admissions.




There are over 81,000 people in Birmingham with asthma and the city has a large South Asian population. People from South Asian communities are three times more likely than andrew D. White people to have an emergency infirmary admission for their bronchial asthma, despite the fact that the incidence of bronchial asthma in South Asian communities is really lower than in the white population. Research has shown that people from the South Asian