| Southport 
			Fashion Show 2014 is on its way! 
			 PLANS are well underway for 
			this years Southport Fashion Show, is due to be held on Sunday, 23 
			March 2014, 12pm to 6pm at the Southport Theatre and Convention 
			Centre. 
			    The event which is organised by 
			GModels and Casting Agency, directors Lisa Hames and Jeff Wilkinson 
			have already secured some of the Towns most elite clothing shops, 
			hair, accessory and beauty salons to take part in the event which 
			guarantees fashionistas a full day of shopping, fashion shows, 
			entertainment and much more there will be something for everyone on 
			the day.
 The day will be hosted by "Juice FM" radio hosts Baz 
			Todd and Gemma & will include special guests appearances.
 
 Alongside the 7 featured main fashion shows there will be dance 
			performances by Streetbeatz which will include the Chickpunkz who 
			recently got through to this years Britain's Got Talent, plus there 
			will be a spectacular performance by multi talented performer Sophie 
			Morris.
 
			 Professional singer & Michael 
			Buble tribute Scott Chapman will be performing at the event. Scott 
			has recently performed BBC1 and ITV1 as well as supporting artists 
			such as Alison Moyet, Alexandra Burke, Jamelia, Diversity & Heather 
			Small.         Newly founded Southport Charity 
			Community Link are the events chosen charity, also they are set to 
			receive a percentage of the admission fee & also will have 
			fundraising activities there on the day of the show.
 Tickets are priced at:- £7 and can be purchased online by visiting:-
			
			
			gmodels-ca.co.uk they will also 
			be available through selected stores.
 
			     If anyone would like to get 
			involved in this fantastic day as a exhibitor or if they would like 
			to feature on the Milan styled runway please contact:- 
			
			fashionshow@live.co.uk and please say you got the 
			information from us at Southport Reporter! Range High Named 
			as one of the Top 100 State Schools! 
			 RANGE High School was has 
			been named as one of England's Top 100 Non-Selective Comprehensive 
			Schools, by David Laws MP, Minister of State for Schools. Pupils at 
			the school, judged 'outstanding' by OFSTED for the 5th time in May 
			2013, achieved record GCSE results last summer. 
			 Mr Laws said:- "Your school 
			is clearly equipping its pupils for success in both further study 
			and future employment. The results are a shining testament to the 
			hard work and success of your staff, governors and pupils. I would 
			like to offer my thanks to you and all at your school for your 
			pursuit of the highest standards of educational achievement."
 Graham Aldridge, Headteacher, said:- "We are very proud to be 
			named as such a high performing school. We challenge and support all 
			our pupils, as a non-selective state school, to achieve their best. 
			We are thrilled that this has been recognised."
 |  | Barcelona Band 'Chami 
			Cool & La Fama Jam' Northwest mini Tour to Liverpool 
			 OVER 30 January to the 5 February 
			2014, Chami Cool & La Fama Jam will be on a mini tour from for the 
			Band in Liverpool, Manchester and Wigan. The main gig is being held 
			at 'The Kazimier' on Saturday, 1 February 2014, with local Liverpool 
			bands in support.
 Chami Cool & La Fama Jam are members of the diverse, colourful 
			family and musical collective of 'Manu Chao' in Barcelona. 
			Nourishing reggae, raggamuffin , rumba and dub, they have a natural 
			mix of mediterranean spice and flavour in their sound.
 
 Chami Cool is the song writer, composer and lead singer of La Fama 
			Jam, he is French Morrocan and born in 1975. He has participated as 
			singer and song writer with various bands in France and Spain such 
			as 'El Sol 31' 'Plan B' 'Kabongo' &
			'La Fama Street' and 'Manu Chao'
 
 Chami Cool originally comes from France, he sings in French, English 
			and Spanish and plays with 'La Fama' and 'Street 
			Massive'
			in 
			Barcelona. Chami is a synonym for bright colours, wide smiles 
			projecting joy, optimism, solidarity and hope.
 
 Barcelona Rumba
 
 A music based on the street philosophy of celebration, culture, 
			solidarity and optimism, it reflects and identifies a positive view 
			to day to day life.
 
 In Barcelona the sun draws music out onto the street corners and 
			plazas, with musicians who come from different corners of the world. 
			That multicultural community is representative of La Fama Jam.
 
 A band that brings it's influences from the tastes and smells of 
			underground life, in the allure of this Mediterranean City.
 
 A mix of European, South American, African and Arabian rhythm and 
			song.
 
 Barcelona Rumba is proclaimed around the world and it has a unique 
			sound of it's own encompassing all of it's multicultural roots and 
			influences.
 If you want to find out what they 
			are like, please use these links:-  Audio links 
			
			1 - 
			
			2.
 YouTube Video Links:-
 
 
  Chami Cool and La Fama Street / Official video 2011 / Barcelona - 
			
			Link. 
 Chami Cool / La Fama Collective / Dale / Official video -
 Link.
 
 Chami Cool and La Fama Jam / Toul Monde / video barcelona -
 Link
 
 Chami Cool / Les Gents Doutant / unofficial Happy Feet clip -
 Link.
 
 Manu Chao feat Chami Cool / Por La Carretera / Belgrado 14 Sept 2013 
			-
			
			Link.
 
 Chami Cool feat Sebass, Sergio & Peyote / Tribute to Mandela - 
			
			Link.
 LETIZIA 
			BATTAGLIA - BREAKING THE CODE OF SILENCE 
			 Photograph Palermo, 1982. Nerina worked as prostitute and was 
			drug-dealing. She was killed by the mafia because she did not 
			respect the rules © Letizia Battaglia.
 THE Open Eye 
			
			Gallery, in Liverpool, is 
			presenting, for the first time in the UK, the intense work of 
			Sicilian photographer and photojournalist Letizia Battaglia (born 
			1935 in Palermo, Italy). Featuring a large selection of her iconic 
			black and white images, Letizia Battaglia - Breaking the Code of 
			Silence opens the exhibition runs until 4 May 2014 and will guide 
			the viewer along a journey into one of the darkest periods in 
			post-war Italian history. 
 Drawing from Battaglia's personal archive, which comprises over 
			600,000 images, the exhibition showcases work spanning from the mid 
			1970s to the early 1990s, including stark documentation of the 
			Sicilian mafia's violent reign of tyranny, as well as more recent 
			projects. The exhibition offers a unique opportunity to approach her 
			genre-defining photographic practice (often linked to that of 
			American 'crime' photographer Weegee) and reflect on 
			the role of photography as an individual and collective means for 
			taking action, bearing witness, providing evidence and documenting 
			history.
 
 Battaglia took up photography in the early 1970s, when she realised 
			that, as a journalist, it was easier to place her articles in 
			newspapers and magazines if these were accompanied by images. After 
			a short period spent in Milan where she met her partner and 
			collaborator Franco Zecchin, Letizia Battaglia returned to Sicily in 
			1974. After relocating to Palermo and regularly contributing to the 
			daily L'Ora, she became the pictures editor until the newspaper was 
			shut down in 1990.
 
 Over the years, Battaglia has recorded her love/hate relationship to 
			her home country with (com)passion and dedication, often putting her 
			life at risk. By alternating stark images of death, graphic violence 
			and intimidation connected to the Mafia with poetic still-life 
			photos and intense portraiture of children and women, Battaglia 
			provides a textured and layered narrative of her country.
 
 Letizia Battaglia worked on the front line as a photo-reporter 
			during one of the most tragic periods in contemporary Italian 
			history, the so-called anni di piombo; or 'the years of 
			(flying) lead', as they say in Italian. "[These were] 
			18 years in which the ferocious Corleonesi mafia clan would claim 
			the lives of governors, senior policemen, entire mafia families and 
			two of Battaglia's dearest friends: the anti-mafia judges Giovanni 
			Falcone and Paolo Borsellino." (Peter Jinks, The Observer, 4 
			March 2012).
 
 The selected works on show at Open Eye Gallery illustrate this 
			period and document Battaglia's attempt to come to terms with that 
			history and reconcile the love for her country with the memory of 
			these dramatic events.
 
 Over the last 2 decades, Battaglia has persevered in her struggle 
			against the mafia, a fight that she has pursued not only by means of 
			her photographic work, but also as a politician and public figure, a 
			publisher and as a woman.
 
 The Open Eye Gallery is located in 19 Mann Island on the Liverpool 
			Waterfront, (L3 1BP).
 The Gallery is open from 10.30am 
			to 5.30pm on Tuesday to Sunday, during exhibitions and is closed on 
			Mondays (except bank holidays) and during exhibition changeovers. |