01.31.08

Sport - Mansell tips Button to break duck

Posted in Dating advices, Dating tips at 3:25 am by admin

Former world champion Nigel Mansell believes Jenson Button is on the verge of breaking his duck and will go on to become Britain’s next world champion.


The 26-year-old racer has yet to win a Grand Prix in 106 starts and has endured a miserable 2006 season.


But Mansell told BBC Sport: “I’ve no doubt Jenson will get the monkey off his back this year.


“By the end of the year he’ll have won at least one race and hopefully a number of them.”


Button’s Honda team have dating advices parent services single
this season.


The Briton, who had been plagued by tyre problems throughout the Australian Grand Prix earlier this month, exited the race in the dying metres when his engine blew.


Do I think he could get the right package to be world champion, then yes
Nigel Mansell

And at Imola last weekend he had to settle for seventh place after a pit-stop blunder ended his hopes of finishing on the podium.


“Getting pole this year in Australia was fabulous and obviously the car is quick,” said Mansell. “But Honda’s christian dating tip has come into question and the set-up of the car is suspect in certain times of the race.”

Feature:
Mansell ready to race again

The 52-year-old, who sealed his only world title for Williams in 1992 and will return to race action at the Grand Prix Masters - for ex-F1 racers over 45 - in Qatar on Saturday, believes Button has the makings of an F1 horse lovers dating advices.


“But until he wins and wins consistently being a world champion is ads dating advices free personal
else,” said Mansell. “Do I think he could get the right package and have the right dating girl teenage tip to be world champion, then yes.


“I hope he does it - it’s about time we had another world champion in England.


“Jenson with the right car has got to get it together and I think a win should only be just around the corner - I hope sincerely for the fans that’ll be the case.


“But he’s like a number of F1 drivers - on his day and in certain parts of any race he’s fantastic. He just needs to give it 100% all of the time.”

01.30.08

News - Sports commentator tips

Posted in Dating advices, Dating tips at 2:39 am by admin

Radio Five Live football dating advices free interracial site Ali Bruce-Ball combined his love of sport and drama at school to land his dream job.

Find out how he did it and share some of his top reporting tips.


I always loved playing sport and watching sport but I never thought I could turn this passion into a career. At school I did a lot of theatre, in fact, I was a bit of a show off. My love of speaking to an audience and sport came together in this dating romantic tip job.


I trained as a news black dating man tip. When I started I didn’t have much knowledge of current affairs and all I really wanted to do was do sport reporting. But it was really worth doing a news journalism course as it gave me all the basic skills I use today. If I’d done a course purely on sports journalism, I think I might have fallen out of love with sport.


I commentate on both TV and radio but what I really love about radio is the dating advices hot woman - saying what I think as it occurs. I get nervous every single time I am on air, but it all adds to the excitement.


What happens if I run out of things to say? It happens all the time. This is why it’s really useful to have another commentator sitting next to me. That way I can hand over to them.

If you are on your own, the key skill is to describe what is in front of you. If you think of yourself as eyes of the listener, hopefully you won’t run out of words during the game.


When you are commentating, it doesn’t sound very good if you keep repeating the same word. This can be a problem in sport as there are only so many different moves. Take football for example. You don’t want your commentary to be “pass, pass, shot at goal, save, pass, pass.”

One tip I learned from another journalist is to write down a list of different ways of describing the moves and cross them off as you use them, to avoid repetition.

Here are is my list, why not see if you can add to it:

Pass

  • Stoke
  • Curl
  • Float
  • Skim
  • Nudge
  • Glance
  • Flick

Shot at goal

  • Fizz
  • Smash
  • Rocket
  • Thunder
  • Stab
  • Bullet
  • Power
  • Thump


Another good tip is to turn the volume down on the TV while you are watching a game and record yourself commentating into a tape recorder. Then play it back.

At first it might feel weird listening to your own voice but it’s really useful. And keep the tapes! You never know who may want to listen to your commentary! Also, it’s always good to listen to them at a later date to see how much you have improved.”

01.29.08

News - Tips to help you stay safe online

Posted in Dating advices, Dating tips at 12:47 am by admin

There are now thought to be more than 200,000 malicious programs in existence - the vast majority of which are aimed at subverting Windows PCs.


These problem programs can arrive via e-mail, instant messenger, through your internet connection or even your web browser if you visit the wrong website. The threats are so numerous and appear so fast that Windows users must feel under siege.


While there is no doubt that attacks on PC users are getting more sophisticated, it is possible to avoid the vast majority of problems by taking some straight-forward steps and exercising some common sense.


If you are worried about your computer it is possible to scan it via the web to see if it is infected. Companies such as Trend Micro, Kaspersky and Microsoft all offer free scanning services.


Organisations such as the Computer Emergency Response Team (Cert) also offer advice on how to set up a safe net connection.

ANTI-VIRUS


The first piece of security software every PC user needs is some anti-virus software. It must also be regularly updated to ensure it protects you against the latest threats.


One of the ways that virus writers try to catch out anti-virus software is by pumping out enormous numbers of variations of their malicious creations. Good anti-virus programs use heuristic techniques to spot viruses that have not been formally identified but have all the online dating advices canada
.

STAYING SAFE ONLINE
Use anti-spyware and anti-virus programs
On at least a weekly basis update anti-virus and spyware products
Install a firewall and make sure it is switched on
Make sure updates to your operating system are installed
Take time to educate yourself and family about the risks
Monitor your computer and stay alert to threats
Hi-tech crime: A glossary

Many PCs now come with anti-virus installed and though an annual subscription can seem expensive, it might be cheap when you consider how much it could save you if it stops your bank details being stolen.


As well as retail versions of anti-virus there are now some free programs that do a good job of protecting you. Avira, Avast and AVG all produce free anti-virus software.


Microsoft now sells a package of security programs but, so far, they are only available to US users.

FIREWALL


A firewall is also an essential piece of security software for PC users. Newer versions of Windows XP have a firewall built in and this will give you protection against nuisance attacks and many of the more serious ones.

HI-TECH CRIME PLANS
The BBC News website is running a series of features throughout the week
Tuesday: What did we catch in our honeypot?
Wednesday: Anatomy of a spam e-mail and hackers face to face
Thursday: How to spot a phishing scam

However some people feel that the Windows XP firewall is a bit limited in its features. Many anti-virus programs have a firewall bundled with them.


There are free firewalls available too from firms such as Comodo and Zone Alarm.


To block some of the attacks it can also be useful to connect to the net via a hub or router. Often these have a firewall built in and, even if not, will do a good job of blocking a lot of the low level attacks.

SPYWARE


Increasingly simply browsing the web can subject you to all kinds of dangers. Specially crafted websites can initiate so-called “drive-by downloads” that exploit weaknesses in Microsoft’s Internet Explorer browser to install programs you never asked for.

Google logo, AP

Google has started warning people if they hit an unsafe site

At best these will annoy you with pop-up ads, at worst they will let someone else take control of your PC. High school dating tip software will help stop these taking hold and help you clean up your PC if you do get hit.


There are add-ons for browsers, such as McAfee’s Site Advisor that warn you about potentially harmful sites. Also Google has now started warning when you are about to visit a potentially unsafe site. Search sites such as Scandoo will also flag sites loaded with malware.


These days adware tends to be very dating man online tip and it is far better to avoid an infection than try to clean up afterwards.


Security experts recommend migrating away from Internet Explorer to a browser such as Firefox or Opera. At the very least they say to keep Microsoft’s browser up to date with patches.


Anti-spyware activists Suzi Turner and Eric Howes run a website that lists the bogus security products to help you avoid falling victim. Microsoft makes free anti-spyware but there are many other products from firms such as Lavasoft and Spybot.

UPDATE


With Windows it is also important to keep your system up to date. Windows XP now regularly nags people about upgrades and Microsoft produces security patches on a monthly basis.

Online banking screen, BBC

Phishing gangs try to steal confidential details

Microsoft recommends automatic updating so patches are downloaded and applied as soon as they become available. As the time between the announcement of a what is argon dating advices and it being exploited is shrinking, it pays to act quickly.


The other things you can do to stay safe fall into the realm of common sense. To begin with never open an attachment on an e-mail you were not expecting - even if it appears to come from someone you know.


Never reply to spam e-mail messages as that just confirms your address is live and makes it more valuable. Be wary of any e-mailed message about online financial accounts you own. Learn to spot the signs of phishing e-mails.

APPLE

Apple users who feel confident that they are jewish internet dating advices services
to attacks should also take steps to protect themselves.

While virus attacks are virtually unheard of, the platform can be subject to malware and adware.

The firewall on an Apple computer should be switched on and common sense regarding potential phishing attacks should be applied.

01.28.08

News - £100m clean-up bill for acid pool

Posted in Dating advices, Dating tips at 12:08 am by admin

A notorious acid tar pool near Wrexham could cost up to 100m to clean up, a Wrexham councillor has claimed.


Paul Pemberton has launched a campaign to apply for European funding.


It is thought the pool at Rhos, built at a former brickworks, contains more than 1,100 chemical drums dumped since the 1960s.


Mr Pemberton and council leader Aled Roberts have put together a dossier to present to the assembly government and European Blog dating tip.


The lagoon is known to contain drums of sodium and sulphuric acid, but locals say they have no idea what else is there.


Wrexham council inherited the old Llwyneinion brickworks site from former Clwyd County Council, which bought it from the brick company more than 25 years ago.


If Wrexham council were to take this on and do it, we would have no education, no black dating man tip, we would have nothing at all
Councillor Paul Pemberton


The Environment Agency monitors the site, but does not recommend a clean-up because it is currently stable with no dating man older tip “pollutant linkages”.


Now there are fears Wrexham Council - with a budget of 170m - will never be able to afford the massive price tag quoted by consultants.


Mr Pemberton and Mr Roberts have compiled records dating back to the start of the tipping in 1960.


They now plan to appeal to MPs, AMs and the European Parliament to raise the money.


Mr Pemberton said: “Our budget for the whole year is in the region of 170m, and then we’re getting estimates of clearing the site of 100m.


“If Wrexham council were to take this on and do it, we would have no education, no road-sweeping, we would have nothing at all.

Llwyneinion pool on fire in 1980 (Picture: Evening Leader)

The pool caught fire in 1980 and the effects were felt for miles


“We have managed to put a portfolio together and an appeal. That’s going off to Cardiff to the assembly and also off to Brussels.”


Meanwhile, one skin cancer victim wants to know whether the pool - which he played near as a child - is linked to his illness.


‘Ignite again’


Although there is no proven link, Bryn Hughes said he and a friend - who both used the tip as a playground as youngsters - contracted dermatofibrosarcoma.


He claims his surgeon was amazed to see two people suffering from the disease.


Mr Hughes, who was diagnosed in 2000, said: “We have undergone big operations to get rid of it. Thankfully now, it’s all over, I hope.


“The surgeon in the hospital couldn’t understand why there was two people at the same time with the same form of cancer.


“It led us to believe maybe there was a reason.”


He added: “There was no restrictions, no fencing to stop children going in there.


“If there’s a possibility that place has caused anything that’s happened to me and my friend, somebody’s got to do something about it.”


In 1980, the pool caught fire and the effects of pollution were felt 20 miles away.


It took 60 firefighters nearly 18 hours to bring the blaze under control, and there are fears it could ignite again.










01.26.08

Sport - Fallon bailed in fixing probe

Posted in Dating advices, Dating tips at 11:57 pm by admin

Fallon left Bury St Edmunds Police Station in Suffolk via a back door, without dating tip first date to waiting reporters.

Fallon, Lynch and Williams are expected to be back in action on Thursday.

All three have booked rides with Fallon due at Salisbury, Lynch at Redcar and Williams at Carlisle.

The 39-year-old Fallon, who has ridden 161 winners this year, is well on the way to his seventh jockeys’ championship.

The Irishman claimed a double Classic success this year winning the Oaks on Ouija Board and guiding North Light home in the Derby.

Four times in his career he has ridden 200 winners in a year - in 1997, 1998, 1999 and last year. Williams, the stable jockey for Burke, and Lynch have 43 winners apiece this year.

All three jockeys were due to ride at York on Wednesday afternoon, and officials made a number of late changes.

Create dating advices site web
trainer Burke has just passed 50 winners for the season.



The whole thing is absolute nonsense


Elaine Burke
Wife of trainer Karl

His shocked wife Elaine, who said the couple were due to celebrate their 20th wedding anniversary on Wednesday, defended her husband.

“It’s all been best dating tip and spun,” she said.

Fallon was due to face a Jockey Club hearing later this year after the News of the World alleged in March that he and fellow jockey John Egan had brought racing into disrepute.


Both jockeys have strenuously denied the allegations.


Charges against the pair of accepting money or benefit in kind for tips were dropped by the Jockey Club.


In March, Fallon was banned for 21 days for dropping his hands and breaking racing rules over the defeat of his mount Ballinger Ridge at Lingfield.

Police said they were examining a large amount of catholic dating advices online, including computer records and documentation.

Jockey Club director of public relations John Maxse said: “This is an investigation which was initially handled by the Jockey Club, then it was passed on to the City of London police earlier this year.”



These are serious issues and are very damaging to the reputation of racing


John Blake
Jockeys’ Association

The Jockey Club was initially alerted to concerns over a number of races by Betfair.

Punters using betting exchanges can back horses, but also ‘lay’ them to lose.

John Blake, the chief executive of the Jockeys’ Association, said the arrests were very disappointing for racing.

“These are serious issues and are very damaging to the reputation of racing,” he added.

Blake said his dating advices in reading would be offering full support to the arrested jockeys.

01.25.08

News - Christmas reading digest

Posted in Dating advices, Dating tips at 11:48 pm by admin


One thing the authors of this book need no advice about is devising a compelling Christmas gift. Dating advices free free online, the appeal is more likely to have been for the giver than the receiver.

Flicking through the pages, several entries catch the eye. “Number 384: Keep Food From Sticking to Pans”… “Number 528: Refuse a Date to Ensure Another Request”… “Number 780: Care for a Black Eye” (useful, presumably, if you haven’t mastered refusing a date successfully).

This is the quality which makes it such a tempting purchase. It is bite-sized enough to encourage dipping in and out of between Chocolate Orange segments; diverse enough to appeal to almost any relative; yet looks serious enough to create the impression it could become a trusty source of family reference for years.

But read beyond than the individual title entries, and the cracks quickly appear. For instance, “Number 5: Learn to Type”, in which the route to a matchmaking dating advices service life-enhancing skill is boiled down to a host of banal bullet points.

“Type the following letters - looking anywhere but the keyboard - saying the names of the letters out loud and using either thumb to hit the space bar: f f space j j space d d space k k spaceetc… Repeat this as many times as you need to in order to feel that you’re getting an intuitive sense of these letters.”

The result is a leaden course in drudgery anyone could have worked out for themselves. To its credit, the book offers helpful tips at the side of each entry - “consider taking a typing class” - but 17 is a lot to pay for such blindingly obvious advice.

The relative difficulties of items are measured in hammers. Learning to type is a dating idea teen entry while “Number 58: Become Prime Minister” merits five hammers.

Nestled between such grand feats is a huge amount of useful practical black dating man tip. How to decorate a room so it seems bigger, how to get your name off mailing lists, how to request a reference from an employer, and how to give a negative reference for an employee.

But just when it seems this might be a genuinely useful tome of reference, the reader stumbles upon big issues for which there could never be a right or wrong way.

“546: Get him to propose… Drop subtle hints from time to time, such as ‘We’d make a great team,’ or ‘I can’t imagine my future without you,’ rather than incessantly bombarding him with demands about marriage.”

“547: How to Propose Marriage to a Man” might as well be subtitled “What to do if Your Boyfriend Doesn’t Get Your Subtle Hints”.

The curious mix leaves the reader somewhat puzzled as to whether this is fish or fowl. Is it a serious book or just a bit of a laugh?

So here’s a bit of advice I would really like. How does one write a book which is ideally suited for an adult dating advices and denver
generous Christmas market and which will sell piles? This book will tell you how to write business plans, CVs, limericks, love letters and mission statements, but on this vital task the book speaks for itself.

Review by Giles Wilson. On Wednesday, Schott’s Food & Drink Miscellany

01.24.08

Newsround - Book Review: The Amazing Story of Adolphus Tips

Posted in Dating advices, Dating tips at 11:32 pm by admin

Author

Michael Morpurgo

Publication date

February 2006

The story

This is the tale of Michael’s grandma’s experiences as she grew up in Slapton in Devon during World War Two, told through her diaries when she was 12 years old.

It’s based on a true story.

It’s 1943 and Lily’s village is needed for soldiers to prepare to invade France so they must all move out of their homes.

But Tips, Lily’s treasured cat, has other ideas and stays in the danger zone.

Lily has no choice but to crawl through the barbed wire and see if she can find her beloved pet.

We first meet Lily through the eyes of her grandson, Michael (or Boowie as she calls him). She’s quite old and her husband has just died after a long illness.

Then you find out all about her through reading her teenage wartime diaries. She feels like a real teenager - she thinks thoughts she wishes that she didn’t and she gets upset and doesn’t know why.

You get to know all her family - her grumpy grandfather, her scruffy Uncle Tom and her mum, who’s sad because her husband has gone off to war.

There’s also Barry, a townie who’s been evacuated to Devon and ends up moving in with Lily’s family.

Then there’s Harry and Adie - Adolphus T Madison - who are black American soldiers in England preparing to invade France - once they’ve helped Lily find her cat first, of course.

Highlights

There’s a couple of really sad bits especially the tear-jerker part when Lily’s teacher Mrs Blumfeld persuades her grandfather to leave his farm.

It’s also really exciting when Barry and Lily have a narrow escape from the practice explosions.

And the end - which we can’t give away - makes you smile.

Any weak bits?

No, this book even makes you think about history and what it was like for ordinary people living through the war years without being too speed dating tip, sentimental or nostalgic.

Unputdownable?

If you think a book made up of a girl’s wartime diaries is going to be boring, then think again.

This is the sort of book you read at one go because you simply can’t wait to see what happens next. As Lily would say, this book is supreme.

NR rating:
five out of five

Have you read this book?


I have read The Amazing Story of Adolphus Tips by Michael Morpurgo and, as usually am when reading a book by Michael Morpurgo, excited to find out what happens next. It’s full of funny moments plus a few dating advices or violence to! lol. I blog dating tip recommend this to any Michael Morpurgo fans out there, well actually, to anybody really!
Dan, 13, Oswestry


I think it sounds brilliant and I love reading about World War 2 I think it is dating advices tip for men.

Jessica, 11, Liverpool


I read this book when it came out in hardback a few months ago and I loved it, I thought it was a really absorbing read. I like cats and books about the Second World War so it was a really good choice for me! If you like either of those I think you’d enjoy the book.
Immy, 13, Tunbridge Wells


I think Adolphus Tips is amazing but I have not read all of it.
Caitlin, Kirkintilloch

01.23.08

News - Kenya MPs fight ‘colonial’ dress code

Posted in Dating advices, Dating tips at 11:22 pm by admin


Three Kenyan members of parliament have entered the chamber in African clothes, in violation of rules dating back to the colonial era.

The three received a severe dressing down from Speaker Francis ole Kaparo and were thrown out of parliament last Friday.

But on Tuesday they were back - without the suits and ties demanded by the rules.

This time they were allowed to stay, and a committee will debate the controversial regulations later in the week.

Roads and Public Works Minister Raila Odinga was cheered when he entered parliament in a brightly-coloured Agbada, a flowing Nigerian robe.

“I was happy to see Raila seated in parliament dressed like a Nigerian minister,” said MP Koigi wa Wamwere.

Impatient

Mr Wamwere who is often seen sporting long flowing gowns has this year twice been asked to leave the House.

“Parliament should support African regalia,” he added.

Koigi wa Wamwere

Mr Wamwere fears that Kenya is not culturally independent

Mr Kaparo said that so far as he was concerned, Mr Odinga was wearing Nigerian attire.

He became impatient when Gor Sunguh, another unsuited dissident, bowed a number of times to cheering MPs, showing off his khaki casual trousers and a button-down shirt.

“This argument that the only dress that can be decent is European dress is to me awfully colonial. And I am not sure that even Europeans would today dare advance such an argument,” Mr Wamwere said.

“So you will be surprised that the champions of our new colonial culture, new colonial ideology new colonial argument today are not Europeans anymore. It is the Africans,” he said.

Male emancipation

He criticised the speaker for applying the double standards when it comes to the female MPs.

Mr Gor Sunguh

Mr Gor Sunguh’s shirt did not impress Kenya’s Speaker

“I see ladies allowed to wear quite freely. They come in trousers, nobody complains - they come in African dresses - they have full freedom to do so.

Mr Wamwere demanded for the male MPs to enjoy the same freedom which the ladies have.

However, Mr Kaparo, said that Mr Wamwere’s outfit was not really African.

OJ Hakim, a designer with African Inspirations in Nairobi told the BBC Network Africa programme that African attire could be very expansive and could come in different shapes and forms.

“I think that the African culture is very diverse and there are so many things within the culture that inspire African design.

African pride

The BBC’s Nyambura Wambugu in Nairobi says that it is not only the men who are complaining and that women are questioning the dress rule which has never been changed since the colonial era to adjust with modern times.

Cecily Mbarire, a nominated member of the parliament says MPs should be given an opportunity to debate the dress code.

Supporters of African attire outside the Kenyan parliament

Designers want the parliament to be proud of African culture

“What is acceptable to whom, that is the question.

“I think the dress code in this parliament needs to be discussed and we need to give our view because Koigi wa Wamwere has been consistent with the African attire I do not know see the reason why he can’t be allowed to be in the parliament,” Ms Mbarire said.

Mr Wamwere told the BBC that although the country has become politically free, he is worried that culturally Kenya is far from being independent and it is still tied to the European culture.

Our reporter says that the move by members of parliament has prompted the speaker to refer the matter to the house committee that will discuss the issue in depth and whose witnesses dating advices the house will adopt.

A group of Kenyan designers has backed the rebelling MPs and called for the government to “embrace, encourage and support ways of dressing among its senior members that honour Africa’s unique culture and proud history”.


What do you think?

Should African MPs be allowed to wear African clothes?

Or is a strict dress code needed to show respect in parliament?

This debate is now closed. Here is a representative sample of the comments we received.

Many people in Africa, particularly the so called elite, seem to think that to be modern one has to act, talk and dress like a European. They regard the local customs and mode of dress as primitive. Many of the politicians are simply colonialists in black skin. It shameful to see judges wearing wigs and robes that are alien to Africa.


Nyakairu,
USA

We have to be careful how we interpret and exercise our freedoms. Demanding to be allowed to wear an Agbada to the parliament is preposterous! Would you wear it to the office? No. Parliament is no different. For those who think that having to wear dress pants, shirt and a tie to parliament is slavery, why not simply do away with everything brought about by the white folks. I say go back to wearing traditional dresses, speaking in traditional languages (no English….noooo…that’s enslavement too, you know), walk wherever you go (a real African wouldn’t drive a Mercedes now, would he?) don’t use computers, put up a nice thatched hut and oh, don’t forget to go back to hunting and gathering! We need rules and regulations that are not open to personal interpretation! I say suit and tie or get tossed out. Period
John Njoroge, USA

Let me invoke the memory of the great Fela Kuti and I quote :

“If you say you be colonial man, you don be slave man before. Dem don release you now, but you nor wan release e yourself….” Fela Kuti - Colo mentality

Femi


Femi Anthony,
USA (Sierra Leone)

Yes, a strict dress code is needed. Shorts should not be allowed but formal African dress code should be allowed. Babbar Riga (Agbada) is a formal kind of African dressing. But if you mean strict European type clothing should be imposed on Africans, that is absolute hogwash.


Farouk Salim,
USA

For the respect of the august house there should be a dress code to be adhered to by all members, particularly male members. If not, the members will be dressing like they are going to the market or to a party.

Gassanja Joseph, United States

No matter what they wear, Africa is still funded and supported by Britain and other western nations. They speak our language and use our money. Clothes will never change that.
David Eubanks, USA-British

I expect those dress codes are from a much more formal era, when no man left the house without a suit and tie and no woman without her hat and gloves. Westerners rarely dress that way anymore, why should people on other continents? The MPs should be free to wear whatever they like and are comfortable in, as long as they are neatly dressed in clothing appropriate for the climate, culture, and the work being done.


Amy,
USA

I think it is really important to dress comfortably for the weather. Wearing suits on a hot sunny African day is not particularly comfortable. Europeans and North Americans dress to reflect the weather conditions they face. We (as Africans) should also do same. Having said that, it is pertinent that one should not dress “sloppy” to a respectable institution like the House of Parliament. But what is “sloppy” will be another bone of contention.
Gboyega Adesina, canada

Kenya is coming of age. Am I please to see some thinking and progressing leaders. My question is, will our politicians improve the quality of their work and start to serve the country as they should if they can now dress as they like? You go Raila!! Nawa for your Agbada
MUTHEU, Switzerland

Kenyans must as a matter of urgency begin the throw those drabs of colonial Africa. Stand up and be counted, be proud of your Africaness. Wear those beautiful flowing agbadas, kikuyu traditional dresses, Masai styles and walk the land of your birth with dignity and pride.


Kunke Adeniyi,
United States Of America

Bear in mind, Kenya MPs, that the material for the so-called African garments or regalia are all manufactured in either Britain or The Dutch–giving then hundreds of thousands of dollars each year. Where is the African Pride, then? Unless Africans start patronising what they themselves create, these empty noises about pride in African culture would forever remain just an ordinary dressing, a camouflage that hides our own inability to be truly original.
Mohammed Ali, Ghana

Finally a wind of change is blowing in Africa. There is now a realization that Africans lost almost everything they had (including their culture)to slavery and colonialism. Kenya’s members of parliament have every right to wear African clothing. This will be a good example for the young generation to emulate. Young Africans are on the verge of losing their African identity because of the influence of the western culture. Some of them cannot even speak their own language because according to them it is inferior and they try all they can to perfect their English or American accents.
Africans should adhere to their culture and cultural education and history should be enhanced to inform the youths that there is nothing to be apologetic about for being African.


J. Mumbi Mugambi,
Kenya/USA

I see no problem with the African dress for our male Parliamentarians. However, I think the so-called dignity of the House would be interfered with, if a colour code is not established. I think just like the Bar and the Bench, our Parliamentarians should be required to stick to dark clothing, irrespective of the cut or fabric.
Caroline Ndolo, Kenya

I am surprised that the Speaker of the Kenya Parliament is acting this way. He should tell us what he sees wrong with African attire. Ghanaian parliamentarians wear national dresses like the northern smock to parliament. And we are proud of them.
Ali Anankpieng, Ghana

The late Bernie Grant, MP for Tottenham until his untimely death 3 years ago, often wore traditional African dress at the State opening of the UK Parliament. A few eyebrows were certainly raised but he was most certainly not thrown out. If such attire is OK for the British Parliament I m sure that the world would not end if it were allowed in Kenya.
Martin, UK

I can’t even believe this is being discussed as a major controversial issue. That the speaker of the House would take the time to throw someone out because of what they were wearing boggles the mind. Why the dress code rule has been allowed to exist even 1 minute after that happened is shameful. Get rid of the rule and unless someone is naked in the houses of parliament - GET ON WITH RUNNING THE COUNTRY !!!
Robert Maina, Belgium

Surely part of the beauty of Africa is the incredible variety of life, this includes the people and their clothes. Let that beauty be seen everywhere including parliament, why restrict them to our dull and drab European styles.
Paul, UK

How ridiculous this war of attire has become in Kenya. I remind all those distinguished legislature to stop wasting time on this very trivial issue and start pursuing issue pertaining to economic growth, national security and disease killing millions of our fellow citizens everyday.
Reuben Amoke, United States of America

And as usual, put the blame on Europeans, whites, or whatever you want to call the people you blame…….
Anonymous, Earth

The spirit of Dedan Kimathi must be very troubled indeed. How can a people ever expect success when they are always imitating others and shun their own traditions?


Dr. A. Garrett Mills,
USA

I have on recent occasions seen some African leaders dressed in three-piece suit and other oppressive western attire, parading themselves in the blistering heat of the continent. Common sense would suggest that one would fare better, if garbed in outfit that is essentially suited for its own environment.


Patrick Babalola Sosu,
Atlanta, GA. USA

I think this is a reasonable rebellion against an enduring vestige of colonialism in Africa. It is symbolic that these significant signals of reasoned rejection are beaming from parliament, the very epitome of the people’s independence. I eagerly look forward to the day when African professionals, especially African lawyers, similarly shelve the shackles of dressing themselves up in colonially inherited but environmentally unsuitable outfits.


Kingsley Jesuorobo,
Toronto, Canada

Not all revolutions start with the sound of gunshots, we are now in the twenty first century and yet some law makers cannot wear cultural and climate friendly African clothes to make laws for Africans. The dissenting members of Kenya’s parliament have started a revolution that is not only going to change the way Kenyans think and act but also reborn in them African pride, The suits and ties don’t confer superior intelligence on the wearer.
Enifadhe Joe Orivri, United states of America

African MPs should abide by a strict and respectful dress code - but one of their cultural choosing.
Dilip Jivan, USA

I would like to remind the members of parliament that Kenya is in an economic and health CRISIS. Surely, this cannot be the time for trading fashion tips!
Eric Njogu Mbuthia, Kenya

If one observes black people over many years it becomes apparent that they have a need for more bright and warm colours in their lives than do the more dour Anglo Saxons. I was nurtured by and have lived with black folks all my life, shared their humble homes when I was young, was taught to ride and shoot by them and often feel more at home with them than with most whites. Many of the blacks in my home county in Kentucky still carry my family name and are very, very successful large farm owners. So, I do not find it out of place to think that Africans find European business suits boring and depressing. They should wear whatever is formal within their sphere of reference today!
Bill Riffe 74 years old., usa

There is no harm in wearing traditional clothes but at the same time, it very primitive to believe or even think that a suit and a tie are symbol of colonialism.
We live in the 21-century and a suit is no longer a symbol of colonialism. I am afraid the colonialist came and left but some of our citizens still have not changed with times.
The acclaimed father of Pan Africanism, the great Edward Wilmot Blyden tried to propose this same idea in Sierra Leone and Liberia in the nineteenth century. His flowery speeches and warm oratorial rhetoric made the idea succeed for a while. Only for the elite to undermine him once again and start dressing like the cultural mongrels they were. I foresee the same thing happening in Kenya. Odinga and co. will last for a while but the cultural slavery has been too deeply embedded in the average African.


Alimamy Ceesay,
USA

Aren’t there any more pressing issues to deal with in Parliament other than dress code? How about debating the ridiculous increase in MP salary that was passed some time back as the lay man struggles to pay taxes. Are we paying taxes so that our MPs can express themselves via dresscode?

infuriated Kenyan


In the US, the way one dresses often influences how people think of them. As sad as this sounds, I think I would have difficulty trusting a person in the government if they wore a t-shirt and jeans to meetings.
As long as what they wear does not affect the public’s view of them, they should be allowed to wear anything.
Adric Waterhouse, Dayton, Ohio USA

I must expose my ignorance in acknowledging the fact that I have never imagined that there is any parliament in Africa where the parliamentarians are outlawed from dressing in African regalia. I have lived with the myopic hpv dating advices
that African parliamentarians, like those in my country, Cameroon, are free to dress in African regalia. Shame to Keyan parliamentarians who fail to see the propriety of dressing in African regalia in parliament! Shame!
Luther, USA

Certainly, Africans must put on their national wears, which are more comfortable than the suits. Putting on suits just proves the point that Africans are still colonial slaves. Clothes show the way you think, and European clothes put on by an African shows how much he wants to imitate the European to solve African problems.
Kondwani Kamiyala, Malawi

let Africans be free from mental slavery, let them wear maasai dress if they want so.
thani, belgium

It is retrogressive to instil a rule made up by European colonialists decades ago with the aim of diminishing African pride for their culture. It is sad that in this day and age that someone as enlightened and well educated as the Speaker would throw members of parliament out of the house merely because they are representing their heritage and culture. I am almost certain that the MPs that were dressed in Dating advices personals canada regalia did not do so to spite or show disrespect for the house. In my opinion the rules of what adult dating advices michigan personals
acceptable dress in parliament need to be revised.
Paul Githiga, USA

Yes, we should accept being Africans. What better way to show this than by dressing up in a typical way that can be recognised as African. Who would dispute the beauty of a Maasai “maradadi”? Of course we should dress sensibly and in moderation.
Andrew Okello, Netherlands (currently in Iraq)

The members of parliament should be allowed to wear their African clothing. I believe that the speaker of the house has been so socialized that he can not appreciate African clothing as being appropriate. As Bob Marley said “emancipate yourselves from mental slavery”, I say to the speaker of the house emancipate your mind from colonial bondage.


Cavel Curtis,
Jamaica

01.22.08

News - Over and out?

Posted in Dating advices, Dating tips at 11:13 pm by admin

“We were alienated from the rest of the world. All the high street shops overstocked with CB. There was going to be this huge demand. It didn’t happen,” notes Mr Crumpton.

Nevertheless, he maintains CB is “still alive and well” - the torch being carried by lorry drivers, off-road 4×4 enthusiasts and caravan clubs. While handheld mobile phone use is now illegal in a car, CB is not.

And there is at least one area where the CB dealers might see growth.

Tiverton Age Concern is using CB radio to combat the feelings of loneliness and vulnerability felt by older people living alone, often in remote areas.

After the charity was left a legacy by a CB enthusiast, it issued 20 pensioners with sets. For a generation where not all are comfortable with the internet, and with many finding mobile phones too expensive, the radios are a godsend.

For an hour every morning, they chat on the radio. Some even have call signs and use slang like asking for an “eyeball”, a face-to-face meeting, says Mary Healey of Age Concern.

“One chap said ‘I can listen to other people talking if I want join in I can but it means the world when you are on your own and have only got the cat for company’.”



Add your comments on this story, using the form below.

All those decades ago, my younger sister (”Angel Eyes̶ ;) met “Arthur Daley” on the CB radio.. she went on it from under the duvet in her bedroom at night, all night and unbeknown to our parents. Once the eight foot long aerial hit the ceiling lampshade and knocked out the electrics in the whole house! I, as older sister thought the whole CB thing was incredibly naff! This “Arthur Daley” lived two roads away in south London and it was love at first “eyeball”.. they got married some years later and now have two lovely little girls! So it wasn’t just for truckers!
debbie, york

I have been on and off CB since the late 80s and I can say it has been a lot of fun. There was a time when it was almost impossible to find a clear channel to talk on - not so these days! We had endless fun on Saturday evenings playing a game of hide-and-seek in our cars using just the signal strength as a finder. The person who found could then go and hide and the game would begin again. Some of the home-bound home-base locals would often listen in to our silly banter as it made them feel part of the community. One year, the local CBers were asked to chaperone the Biggleswade Carnival; we had no trouble relaying messages around the whole town. The local police gave up and used us for messaging as their radios had too many black-spots!

The current consultation from the government has a use-it-or-lose-it approach and we are being encouraged to switch to the CEPT band used in Europe; ironically the very same frequencies used by the original American rigs, but still only FM. We are not too happy with that idea as some EU countries do not regulate their radio users quite as well.10-10 till we do it again…
Gary “The Electron” Myers, Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, England

Never forget, these idiots used these illegal toys in the complete knowledge that they interfered with emergency radio frequencies causing deaths, aircraft landing equipment, etc and these criminals thought destroying radio controlled models was a “sport” via intentional interuption of the signals, and were menaces on the road (like using a mobile).Criminal Band radio was an accurate term.
Allan, Durham

CBs at the time were the best thing since sliced bread in an age where mobile phones were just a dream (or a brick with a mortgage) and the internet hadn’t even been thought of. The ability to “talk” to multiple people in a chat room type environment was great and FREE! As for foul or abusive language, the community policed this themselves and just refused to give abusers airtime (or drove to their location and boosted transmission power to drown them out).
Fox Hunts with cars (hide and seek) were a weekend occurence. One car hides and the others seek. A general clue given to get you going then track them down using the SwR meter (the closer you get the stronger the signal). Catch you on the flip side!
Mick “MatchMaker”, Bishops Stortford, Herts, UK

Breaker One Nine - You got your ears on good buddy? Anyone recall that East Kilbride near Glasgow was known as Polo Mint City? - because it has lots of roundabouts. And a Skateboard was CB slang for a regular car. So when asked: “Breaker One Nine - What’s your Twenty?” (ie Where are you?) - I’d answer: “I’m the red skateboard heading for Polo Mint City…”
Ken Morton, Glasgow, UK

Quite agree Crazy Cat, Not just long distance drivers used it, my father had a cb radio hidden in a briefcase in his car! The illegality of it added to the fun. The whole family had handles and we used it to keep in touch. It lost its frisson when it went legal!

Mad Pony, Bristol

In response to Ian Macbeth, Leeds, the toll bridge in Selby is now free…. so does this warrant the re-naming to “Freetown”..?!!
Mark, “Paytown”, North Yorkshire

I was born in 1981. My Dad was constantly on the CB. He was a newleywed, but paid more attention to the CB than his new family. He met another woman, started sleeping with her. It broke up my parents marriage and cost me my father. He set up home with the other woman and had a family with her. It’s much the same as the horror stories you hear about internet chatrooms nowadays! Technology changes, people don’t!
Helen, Edinburgh

As an Army instructor in the late 1980s it was fun trying to eradicate ‘CB-speak’ from trainee radio operators! But only last Friday I went to a friend’s house and discovered he uses a CB set to keep in touch with his elderly dad down the road!
Megan, Cheshire UK

Well its still being used in Leicester and Leicester Control is still there with “Red Rust” and the gang (Hi Rob).
A lot of people i meet dont even know that CB still exists.It still has the music and swearing but its only like that on the calling channel.CB lives on though so get those radios from the loft and get back on the air
Dave “Cubwolf” Smith, Leicester

I had an imported AM ‘rig’ and a home made antennae. Everytime I transmitted I blanked out every television set in a quarter mile radius! I think that kit like mine was probably the reason it was illegal in the first place.
Sean Clark, Loughborough

1 - 9 for a copy! When at secondary school, as recent as 15 years ago, I persuaded my parents (both original ’80’s’ CB-ers) to utilise the aerial still up that tree in the garden to give me my own CB. At that time there were still several people at school with the same idea, using their parents equipment that had been lying unused for several years. I met my now husband on the CB, and before mobile phones or SAT NAV, never went any distance in the car without plugging in the CB. Essential if you got lost - always an obliging trucker to assist. Sometimes tempted to plug back in to see if the stalwart enthusiasts are still waiting for a copy!
vicky, Moray, Scotland

CB was a really big part of my teenage years. I met my now best friend on-air “Red October”. Does anybody remeber the “Fox Hunt”. We all had Minis (Mine was the best) and used to be up all through the night trying to find other cars. Those were the days hiding in the middle of roundabouts!
Martyn “NightHawk”, London

“DX-ers”, (long-distance CB enthusiasts), took the hobby as seriously as their licensed HAM counterparts. I spent many pleasant evenings chatting on side-band to America, Jamaica, Brazil, even Australia. OK, it was illegal, but the authorities didn’t seem to mind. The 30ft antenna towering over my house was fairly obvious!
“Kamikaze”, Maputo Mozambique

I’m surprised that so few truckers use it now. As someone who commutes down part of the accident-prone A14 ‘Highway from Hell’, I am amazed at lorries blithely passing the A428 exit and heading up towards a Huntingdon tailback, when a CB would have warned them to divert….
Kit, Cambridge, UK

When we lived in a fishing town in Scotland my two sons had CB and their not too intelligent readheaded friend had the handle ‘Red Herring’ and couldn’t understand why no one came back to him! A friend of mine’s handle was ‘Schoolboy’ so we could say Schoolboy do you copy?
Alex Mitchell, Stockport, UK

In the earlie 80’s I ran a small country hotel in East Yorkshire. I found it quite amusing that young “CB’rs” would spend a couple of hours in the bar chatting to each other, then go to the car park, sit in their cars next to each other and talk to one another on their CB’s. As they say in Yorkshire “Thre’s nowt so queer as folk”
John Pheasant, Nottinghamshire

I used to use the CB a lot. I spoke to guys with cool handles like ‘The Outlaw’, and ‘Spiderman’, it felt like I was part of something dangerous, a rebellion if you like. We were subverting the Government and played by nobodys rules, not even our own.

Eventually I went along to a meeting and realised I was speaking with a group of 30-something, basement dwellers who drove 50CC scooters. I sold my rig soon after, the magic was gone.
Greg, Wick, Scotland

The best part of it was the names for places. My favourite was “Paytown” for Selby where there was a toll bridge.
ian macbeth, leeds

I was very actively involved with legal CB in Leicester, with the very well known “Leicester Control” on ch23. This group of enthusiasts were famous for giving accurate directions to truckers in our area. I also wrote a monthly column for a CB Radio magazine. What killed CB was the internet and the availablility of mobile phones and dating kid tip communications. It was fun whilst it lasted and many CBers went on to tke the RA exams. But I never forgot Roger “Red Rust”, Jeff “Murgatroyd”, Sid “Sunray” and many, many others. Yes the bucketmouths and music-players were a pain, but I made some very good friends.
Rob “Captain Jack” Davis, formerly Leicester, now Telford

It does bring back fond memories of hooning around Tamworth and surrounding villages on a pushbike with friends to arranged “eyeballs” with other “breakers”. Often it seemed that a lot of my peers while on CB radio were about 20+ years older than me but most treated my curiousity with respect and even more information.

From CB radio and the contacts I made there I joined an organisation called Search & Rescue to assist members of the public, sporting events in the town etc - which eventually evolved to become a fully fledged British Red Cross Society members unit M16. So to Prinz Eugen, The Red Baron (and Snoopy), Viking and all the others of M16 - those really were fun days of my youth!
John Somers, Chesham, Buckinghamshire

I was a student in Leeds around 1981, trying to fly radio controlled gliders. My legal RC equipment used the correct alloted frequency of 27 Mhz or so. The illegal CB equipment used the same. This ‘CB christian dating teen tip was not appreciated by my RC glider. So, to gain some revenge back at my digs in Leeds I would wait in the evening until the local CB’ers came on the air by listening in with my ‘world bands’ capable radio / cassette and then turn on my radio contol transmitter and proceed to cause interference on their goings on. I know it worked because the incredulous voices would complain of the number ‘dB they were pulling’ dropping as I twiddled the control on my RC transmitter.
Steve Crutchley, St Albans, UK

Fond cb years remembered well, sitting in your car on the highest local hill trying to call out to others on hills across the country and if you were lucky recieving copies from abroad as well, great fun in its hey day but nothing like it was. Still got mine, gathering dust in some cupboard, you never know one day it might see some copies again. ‘Over and out’.
Andrew “Meatloaf”, Solihull, West Midlands

In 1981 I met my first boyfriend using my dads CB. Sitting in the car on the front drive I opened up a whole new world and a whole new group of friends, as a teenager who was bullied badly at school it was heaven to talk to people who didn’t have a clue who I was or what I looked like (or even where I was). Now my teenage daughter is on MSN night after night and we are endlessly warned about the dangers, in reality its no different to the CB, use it safely and its not a danger…

I soon left home and the fun of my dad’s CB set, however I wont ever forget cold winter nights sitting in his car chatting away feeling like any teenager anywhere, as if the world were at my feet. 10-10 till we do it again, Hot-Lips signing out.
Wanda “Hot Lips”, Welwyn Garden City

“Illegal for no good reason” and “harmless”? Not really. The reason ‘legal’ CB was introduced, using FM (a different mode, on a very slightly different frequency), was that FM transmissions cause a lot less interference than AM (as in illegal CB). It’s as simple as that. Unfortunately, the illegal users didn’t grasp the problems that they could have been causing to legitimate, and probably a lot more important, users of the radio spectrum.
Rob, Newcastle

The UK legal sets have restricted power and operate on FM, which reduces the transmission range. Due to the way sunspot activity affects us the early CBers could often talk to people in the States. I know people who were into CB in the early days who subsequently passed the exams to become Radio Amateurs so they could get back to talking to people on the other side of the world.
Darren Jones

Brilliant! I was “on the rig” for about 10 years - I had a severe stammer and it was my way of talking with people I’d (probably) never meet. As it happened, I met a girlfriend on there, and we had a great time. It was full of friendly people and I made many friends. The only downside was dismantling the 30ft antenna in my garden when a thunderstorm approached!
Edward Byard, Oxford

I remember using CB’s in the early 90s and by then it was becoming a joke - the sets were available for peanuts so many people would buy them and then mess around ‘on-air’. It just became a noisy mess where you couldn’t hold a real conversation without someone butting in and making silly comments. It was a great idea but spoiled by the same people who now cause trouble on on-line chatrooms. Technology changes - people dont…
Craig, Perth

All I remember is girls coming on air and dropping heavy hints their parents were out and why don’t you pop round to say hi. The rest of the evening consisted of a bunch of teens champing at the bit in a Vauxhall Viva outside some house realising you’d been had yet again and there were no girls, not there anyway.
Iain, UK

It’s still going strong, especially with 4×4 owners. The license is a complete waste of money as it hasn’t gotten rid of the foul language or the music on channel 19, but it’s getting better. You’d be surprised how many people are still using it, and it’s superb on the motorway!
David Jacobs, Hinckley

As a young kid living in rural Kent in the early 80s there wasn’t much to do of an evening. My memory of CB was sitting on Channel 14 - reserved for meeting other users, endlessly calling “one-four for a copy” and hoping someone would start chatting to me. In those days, people didn’t worry so much about children talking to complete strangers over the airwaves like they do now about internet chat rooms!
Tom “Lard”, Chelmsford

When off roading with others, CBs the best free all day conference call you can get and theres no limit to the number of participants. You dont get that with mobiles.
David Edwards, Chester

It’s still a great way to communicate between vehicles travelling closely together such as groups of truckers, caravaners, any vehicle marque clubs and for off-road driving. No cost for calling, no issues with network coverage and one person can instantly communicate to everyone else in the group. I got into CB in the early days but it’s better now because the airwaves are less cluttered and your less likely to get some idiot interupting you!
Chris, Nr Faversham, United Kingdon

My local Mini club uses CBs to make sure we all keep in touch, how sad do we sound? We often travel a long distance to shows and rallies and it’s nice to make sure we are all headed in the right direction should we get split up in traffic. Believe me - this is an absolute god send when going through the middle of London.
Philippa “Fluffy” Kruman, Cambridgeshire

It was through the interest of repairing CB and as a spin off two-way radios that I arived in my profession of communication engineering. Today I have work across Africa. That’s a big 10-4 good buddy… 10-10 till we do it again… we gone…
John “Septic Knuckles” Buckham, Lusaka, Zambia

Please dont perpetuate the old myth that CB’s were responsible for interference on radios, TV’s, hifi’s etc - they were not in the majority of cases. The electronic equipment at the time had unsophisticated ‘front ends’ which poorly dating advices game online play between radio and audio signals, hence it was the receivers fault.
Yellow Horse, whitehaven, cumbria

As a 14 year old boy there was only one real reason for CB - girls. CB opened up a whole new way of finding girls and we certainly made the most of it!
Charles Codrington, Bedford

My first introduction to CB was at a training session for new hunt saboteurs when a hand-held unit was passed around and experimented with. They were a godsend for co-ordinating large numbers of ’sabs’ at a single hunt and all the sab vans and Landrovers could be seen with the 5-foot aeriels. Of course the hunts soon worked this out and would buy their own units to jam us out. Everythings switched to mobile phones now.
Roger, Derby

I was a member of a CB club when I was about 12 - I didn’t think it was illegal as a) I only had 2 channels b) I could never get a signal or anyone to talk to and c) all the cool dudes had a car to put their radio in - I only had my Grifter although it was tooled up with American emergency sirens - nice.
Kevin Wilkinson, Hornchurch

Breaker One-Nine, what’s your 20? I Hammer’d Down on the A3 I eyeballed a Kojak with a Kodak so I pulled in behind a Suicide Jockey.
Max Allen, Her’sham ‘69

My father was a reader for the local ‘News for the Blind’ in the Deal area. Filled the gap between local newspapers and regional radio.
simon mallett, UK Maidstone

Breaker 1-4 for a copy? CB radio at its time was a fun thing to do. I personally met some great friends and the fun of ‘catching the skip’ and talking to CB users in other countries was just amazing. Things move on and so does technology - its in the process of being replaced by VOIP and wireless openzones, but I feel there is always a need for a general public frequency band - in what form though, who knows.
Nigel Underwood, Bristol, UK

I was a CB-er for a few years in the early 80s and enjoyed it enormously. My first rig was second hand and I used to have it in my bedroom with a ‘mag mount’ attached to the radiator! I then had a 50-50 pole out the window, but I used to take it in when the wind got up. I briefly went back on air in the early 90s to avoid the road jams, but it was not the same. Good days - ‘What’s yer 20?’ ‘I’m on yer back door good buddy.’ Looking back I must have sounded an idiot!
Mike “Hunchback” Wilks, Ruardean, Glos

Being a “radio ham” (and taken the Morse test) on air officially, we had our own share of idiots who transferred to CB to be “rebelious”. Mobiles and text are cheaper, and with Internet phones, will return to the few as before who experiment and who - ironically push forward communications as we now know it.
Graham, Northampton

Half the fun of CB was because it was illegal - and illegal for no good reason. It was a harmless and fun way to cock a snook at authority. 10-10 ’til we do it again, good buddies.
Mark “Crazy Cat” Esdale, Bridge, Canterbury

In my experience the only use that people made of their CB sets was talking about their CB sets to other owners!!
I tried to get the idea going of a voluntary community info service. Where people with special knowledge on a subject would spend a few hours on air offering advice about local directions, medical advice, DIY help, cooking tips, fixing TVs or whatever. It might have taken off but the killjoys would have swamped it with endless music or noises and ended it pretty quick.
Nigel Andrews, Worthing, United Kingdom

I remember the CB craze. Only a few (richer)kids in our school ever got involved, as the cost was enormous. A large antena was needed and the cost of the equipment was a lot(in those days) for people counting out their pocket money. A few boffs would venture to Tandy’s and buy stuff but it was never as big a craze as people said it was with the young- more with 20+ age group- and they were working people who were just a bit sad and imagined they were trucking an 18 wheeler. Come in rubber duck! Very much like a Sinclair C5 - rare as chickens teeth
Mark Smith, Southampton UK

Talk about government control! People find a way of making the world smaller and benefitting all that use it and just because the government cannot tax or control it they make it illegal.
Jack, Sidcup, UK

I asked an American friend of mine what happened to CB? Apparently its alive and well and living in the USA.
This article is the first I have heard about CB in the UK for years.
Anthony, Cardiff

Oddly enough yesterday I was driving down I65, Chicago to Indianopolis, and stopped off at a coffee shop - which had a large CB section - rigs, whips, mikes, etc. It seems CB never went away for the US trucker community!
Peter, Loondon UK

I used to take my C.B. set away to sea with me in the early 1980s. For a 4 watt set the reception and transmission at certain times of the day was out of this world once away from the UK. The best “copy” was with the Island of Guernsey and a guy sat in his “roller skate” on Brighton sea front while I was off the coast of Ghana, west Africa. a distance of some 4000 miles! The UK legal sets were only supposed to have a range of 12-15 miles.
Chris “Wooden Horse”, Grimsby, England

“It was seen as blog dating tip from a country that up until recently demanded that many long-range amateur radio users take a Morse Code test.”. Until recently it wasn’t ‘heavy-handedness’ by the British, it was an intenational requirement that radio amateurs demonstrated their competence in morse code. That has now been removed. Britain was the first to change its licence, although many countries retain morse code as a requirement for short-wave transmissions by amateurs.
Paul, Ayia Napa, Cyprus

CB was intended to be a local community facility. The equipment was low powered and antennas inefficiently short. Unless you lived a a remote area of the country it was a disaster from the start. A basic setup could transmit and receive for many miles and in or near cities the nutcases took over and filled the airwaves with abuse rendering it useless for its original intention. It seems to have been left to lorry drivers and taxi firms now. Many dedicated CB-ers went on Amateur Radio courses and took up that hobby.

However with all types of technology based hobbys of the 60’s 70’s 80’s they have succumbed to the computer and mobile communications. Many young amateurs and “proper” C.B’ers went on to be trained and employed in Communications or Technology based careers.
Mike, Hull

It became increasingly annoying towards the mid/late eighties to have someone use it as a Radio Station! I remember one Sunday morning whilst trying to chat to a freind, all 40 channels where being used and over half where complete morons! blocking channels with music. one was sending out just bleeps and squeals…At least these days we are only subjected to those who seem to have a passion for it. You listen, you join in….you switch off! easy!
Kathy, Cambridge

We used CB (FM) in Zambia in the 80’s as communication tools for anti-poaching operations, for free communications and even the Neighbourhood Watch base and operations vehicles used them. Fun to use, but almost valueless in highly built up areas where they require line of sight (unless the weather was ‘with you’). Great fun for a few years, I even used them as late as 1998 at my own safari camp.
Alister, Rugby, Warwickshire

Terms & Conditions


01.21.08

News - Magazine targets the ‘Indian lad’

Posted in Dating advices, Dating tips at 11:03 pm by admin

Is primetime Priyanka too hot to handle? Forgive me for pondering the merits of Priyanka Chopra, the Bollywood starlet and former winner of the Miss World beauty pageant.

But this is the burning question asked of us by the inaugural Indian edition of Maxim - the British “lad mag” which has just made its sub-continental debut with a pouting Priyanka plastered across its glossy front cover.

Readers are also promised information on “100 things you never knew about women”, a “how to” guide on professional begging, and a must-see article on the police inspector in Uttar Pradesh Panda, who fervently believes that he is the incarnation of the Hindu Goddess Radha.

‘Sizzling editorial’

There are health and survival tips.


‘Spend, spend, spend; enjoy, enjoy, enjoy’ would appear to be its unofficial motto

Read your views on this issue

Two bikini-clad models helpfully demonstrate how to perform the Heimlich manoeuvre (handy if you have a piece of food stuck in your throat).

Other parts of the magazine are a masala-like blend of men, motors and models.

Readers back in Britain will recognize the recipe. For audiences in the subcontinent, it is sizzling editorial.

The publishers of Indian Maxim have clearly calculated that 20-something men in Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore and Hyderabad are just as puerile and inane as their online dating tip for man in London, Birmingham and Manchester.

A picture in the magazine Maxim

India’s city boys want to lead a glamorous lifestyle

More curiously, they believe they have identified a new demographic: the Indian Lad.

So who do they have in mind?

Apparently, a call centre employee who is earning more in his mid-20s than his father was being paid in his mid-40s; a young man with small-town roots but big-city ambitions.

A social climber keen to sample the best food, wine, clothes, movies and machines; an image-conscious trend-follower with enough disposable income to afford the latest gizmos and gadgets; a guy with his finger closely on the pulse and the latest mobile phone in his palm.

It is the advice dating relationship tip of the new, metro-centric India.

Sex sells?

Of course, it is not the first time that Indians have been exposed to sex.

This after all is the land of the Kama Sutra - a country, as others have written, where the sculptures at its holy temples are often more explicit than its men’s magazines.

Statues of dancing courtesan in India's Khajuraho temples

Figurines in ancient Indian temples depicted Kama Sutra

What has changed is Indians’ willingness to talk and read about it openly.

It is no longer a matter of shame or embarrassment to have a magazine like this in the home.

If anything, it has become something of a glossy status symbol.

But the flesh quotient of the magazine - which, on its front cover at least, registers lower on the “bare skin scale” than the Indian version of Cosmopolitan - explains only part of its appeal.

In many ways, Maxim is less about beauties you can ogle than things you can buy.

It is about instant consumption and instant gratification.

Caste-less

Absent from its pages are articles on personal finance, offering tips on how best and cautiously to invest and save your money.

“Spend, spend, spend; enjoy, enjoy, enjoy” would appear to be its unofficial motto.

Also absent from its pages is any mention of caste.

Seemingly, it is a magazine for men who want to be defined by a lifestyle they are prepared to work and pay for rather than the privileges they have inherited or the caste-based grievances they have grown up nursing.

The publication of the magazine has sparked fairly predictable debates about the Westernisation of Indian culture and the permissiveness of its youth.

What it is has singularly failed to do is to generate much genuine outrage.

“Where are the VHP protesters burning copies in the streets?” asks Maxim editor Sunil Mehra, referring to the hard-line Hindu dating guy shy tip of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad, who have long viewed themselves as the guardians of Indian morality.

By capturing the aspirational mood of the times, Maxim looks almost certain to be a commercial success. Its first print run of 80,000 copies sold out in 10 days.

Click here to return

« Previous entries