Arquivo diário: janeiro 19, 2015
Cristina descobre quem desviou o dinheiro de José Alfredo; confira


Coluna Tom Barros 19/01/2015
Bela virada do Bugre
Uma vitória sobre o Ceará já seria bastante para empolgação sobralense, quanto mais uma vitória de virada. E não uma virada qualquer senão uma virada construída com dois belíssimos gols. O Ceará sem João Marcos, Ricardinho e Magno Alves, conseguiu ser melhor que o Guarany apenas nos trinta minutos iniciais. Sofreu para romper a forte marcação do Bugre, mas o fez com gol de Sandro (1 x 0). Teve ainda outra chance com Marinho. Depois disso o Guarany equilibrou com saídas rápidas ao ataque. Na fase final, a marcação do Bugre se impôs de vez. E os contra-ataques surtiram efeito. Num deles, Fernando Sobral foi parado com falta que ele mesmo converteu (1 x 1). E veio a virada com Eduardo, após perfeito serviço de Maciel. Bela vitória.
Primores
O gol de Fernando Sobral, cobrando falta, foi uma obra prima que trouxe à memória os notáveis batedores de falta do país como Roberto Dinamite, Zico, Bebeto. Mas obra prima também foi o golaço de Eduardo que pegou de primeira, bola ainda no ar, o serviço de Maciel. A propósito, Maciel, Fernando e Sávio incomodaram muito a defesa do Ceará.
Ótimo começo
Júnior Cearense está começando muito bem sua carreira de treinador: dois jogos, duas vitórias. Ganhou do Maranguape por 1 a 0 e ganhou do Ceará (2 x 1). No jogo de ontem adotou estratégia perfeita: bloqueio total quando estava sem a bola e avanço em velocidade ao ataque quando a recuperava. Ceará esbarrou no sistema de marcação que Júnior elaborou.
11 de junho de 1958. Brasil 0 x 0 Inglaterra pela Copa do Mundo da Suécia. Foto batida antes do jogo no Estádio Nya Ullevi em Gotemburgo. O capitão do Brasil, Bellini, e o capitão da Inglaterra, Billy Wright, trocam cumprimentos, observados pelo árbitro Albert Dusch (da Alemanha Ocidental) e pelos auxiliares Bertil Loeoew (da Suécia) e Istvan Zsolt (da (Hungria). Foto enviada pelo colaborador Elcias Ferreira.
Susto
O Fortaleza poderia na fase inicial ter definido o jogo. Fez 1 a 0, gol de Lima. E perdeu duas chances claras: a de Uillian foi incrível, pois sozinho mandou para fora. Depois Cássio também errou. Na fase final, ampliou com Pio. Depois cometeu o maior erro: acomodou. São Benedito empatou e até teve chance de virar. O gol de Cássio salvou o Leão (3 x 2).
Observações
Pio, o melhor, seguido de Samuel. Desatenção da defesa do Leão nos gols de Wescley e França não se justifica. Relaxar só com 2 a 0 não existe. Protesto de São Benedito contra o excesso nos acréscimos tem suas razões, mas o time abdicou de buscar a vitória até quando teve tudo para fazer o terceiro gol: França não deu sequência ao lance.
Imagem rara
O técnico Arnaldo Lira ainda gesticula muito no comando dos times treinados por ele. Mas gradualmente mostra a imagem de um novo Lira. Ei-lo sentado, observado o Horizonte no difícil empate (1 x 1) em casa no Domingão diante do Icasa. Lira sentado, calado, contemplativo. Coisa rara. E só conseguiu o empate no último minuto com gol de André Cassaco.
Pesquisa
Eugênio Fonseca descobriu os nomes de todos o árbitros que atuaram no futebol cearense da década de 1920. Muitos eram também jogadores. Confira: Lucídio Ferreira (Suiço), Raimundo Justa (Ninito), José de Morais Tavares (Pau Amarelo), João da Frota Gentil, Moacir Sampaio, Walter Barroso, Antonio Peterson, Aristides Quevedo, Vitório Teixeira, Meton de Alencar Pinto, Heitor Ribeiro, Antonio Pinheiro, Trajano Lebre, Aluisio Mamede, Picanço Filho. Citarei os demais na coluna de amanhã.
Diário do Nordeste – Jogada – 19/01/2015
Universo da moda será tema de duas novelas da Globo
Alexandre Nero sobre sua aparência: “Gosto de assustar as pessoas”


Chris Flores deixa mensagem de gratidão aos fãs pós-saída do “Hoje em Dia”
Kim Jong-un visits foodstuff factory for athletes: report
SEOUL, Jan. 18 (Yonhap) — North Korean leader Kim Jong-un visited a foodstuff factory for athletes, calling for a boost in production of nutritious food to help the country’s sportsmen, Pyongyang’s official news agency reported Sunday.
The Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), monitored in Seoul, said Kim gave his field guidance to the Kumkop General Foodstuff Factory for Sportspersons, without giving a specific time frame for his visit.
The English-language report said Kim praised the workers for their high productivity and their application of “advanced technology” in packaging.
Kim also noted the importance of the factory “not only in the sports field but also in developing the nation’s food industry.”
“He underscored the need for the factory to put main emphasis on boosting the production of varieties of foodstuff helpful to the care for nutrition of sportspersons and their recovery from fatigue and steadily improving their quality,” the report added.
Kim was accompanied by Choe Ryong-hae, secretary of the Central Committee in the Workers’ Party of Korea, and Kim Yo-jong, the leader’s younger sister and a vice department director of the same Central Committee.
(END)
Source : Yonhap
Império:Carmem vai dar um fim em Salvador!
A advogada está se sentindo cada vez mais encurralada e, para se livrar, ela pensa em acabar com o pintor misterioso

Carmem (Ana Carolina Dias) e Orville (Paulo Rocha) falam ao telefone sobre Érika (Letícia Birkheuer) e Helena (Julia Fajardo), que estão cada vez mais próximas de descobrir toda a verdade sobre Salvador (Paulo Vilhena).
“Nós criamos um monstro, Carmen. E estamos prestes a ser devorados por ele. Quanto mais fama o Salvador tem como artista misterioso, nós ficamos mais encurralados, ao passo que também ficamos mais ricos… Temos que saber a hora de parar…”, fala Orville.

Inocente, Orville não percebe que Carmem já está com a solução: “Por isso não adianta pensar só na Helena e na Érika… Elas são consequências… A gente tem que se livrar é da raiz dos problemas: o próprio Salvador!”.
A advogada explica que é preciso sumir com o pintor misterioso e Orville não entende: “Sumir… como, Carmen? Das nossas vidas?”. Ela faz questão de explicar: “Não, meu querido… Da vida em geral!”.
Não perca a cena, que vai ao ar nesta segunda-feira, 19 de janeiro.
GSHOW
Western Australia : New year, same problems – but who can fix it?
January 19, 2015 – 6:44AM
Larry Graham

Alannah MacTiernan is unlikely to accept an invite to lead WA Labor into the next state election. Photo: Ryan Osland
Western Australia will start 2015 as it finished 2014 – with our dullard government broke and borrowing money like there is no tomorrow.
It all makes me think it might be time to get rid of these socialists and put a competent private enterprise party into power.
But where the heck would we find one?
WA Labor should be the obvious choice, but they are not.
I hate our political system being so far out of balance, but the last election dealt Labor a mortal blow and the polling shows their vote locked in the low thirties.
Winning from there is almost impossible, so unless WA Labor makes major changes they are doomed to spend a long time in the political wilderness.
Major political change is difficult and it got harder when the Rudd/Gillard/Rudd fiasco prompted Labor leaders to protect themselves by making it almost impossible to remove a leader.
And a leadership change is needed because, while Mark McGowan is quite popular, he is proving unable to increase Labor’s vote and the rule changes protect his job until after the next election is lost.
Then a post-election change puts the incoming leader in the untenable position of having to rebuild and reposition the party using McGowan’s losing staff and policies, and it also saddles the incomer with an aged political team.
That team’s old timers – Mick Murray, Peter Watson, Michelle Roberts, Margaret Quirk, John Quigley, Fran Logan, Chris Tallentire, Lisa Baker and David Templeman – all seem to have lost the necessary drive and initiative that is needed to attract votes.
Labor’s strategists know that during extended periods of poor polling, a well-managed leadership change can revitalise a lethargic party and they also know that a healthy organisation works best when it has a lot of well-managed talent in the wings.
But this is not the case with WA Labor.
Paul Papalia and Peter Tinley were once mentioned as leadership hopefuls, but both are now overlooked and the focus quickly moves onto the default leadership contender, Ben Wyatt.
I admit to being a Wyatt fan and think he has a lot to offer; but ideally he should spend some time as a minister before even thinking about becoming Premier.
Early mistakes tend to taint your political life and when Wyatt was very new, a group of discontented boneheads talked him into making that disastrously bungled tilt at the leadership.
That bungle seriously damaged his credibility and without it his inexperience was capable of being managed, and vice versa -but to ask the public to overlook both issues and to still make him Premier is a big ask.
This shortage of genuine leaders triggers speculation about parachuting someone who is not a current MP into the top job. After all, it worked for Campbell Newman in Queensland.
But it is a high-risk strategy that is only worth doing if it is likely to succeed.
The outcome of such a move is doubtful because the Barnett Government are currently doing alright, and public opinion is not as toxic towards them as it was towards Queensland’s Bligh Government.
But if WA Labor does choose this course of action, who could be parachuted into the leadership?
Ex Federal Minister Steven Smith, aged a spritely 59, and Alannah MacTiernan, 61, will find their names being bandied about, but these two will understand the size of the job that needs doing and know that a Labor win is only a remote possibility.
The fallout from one of these two leaping over their colleagues and then losing the election would be diabolical, and these two wily operators understand how destructive those internal recriminations can be.
When they weigh it all up, my assessment is that the leadership will tempt neither of them.
But that is not the only strategy available: drafting talent from the upper house worked for Labor with Peter Dowding, Kay Hallihan and Alannah MacTiernan.
And when confronted with similar talent shortages recently, NSW Labor promoted Upper House member Luke Foley into their leadership.
The problem for WA Labor is that they cannot be confident that any of their mediocre upper house incumbents are capable of winning a lower house seat, let alone taking on the leader’s job.
Consequently, Labor will need to find a truckload of untried and untested candidates who they judge are ready to win seats and then quickly be promoted into senior positions.
These folks will learn that the tough and brutally unforgiving parliamentary system has chewed up and spat out many with big reputations.
Wade Smith, Matt Birney, Troy Buswell, Adele Carles, Dean Nalder and many others would probably advise them that succeeding in politics takes time and a lot of hard work.
They also need to know that being in Opposition is extremely hard work.
Hopefully the reward for that hard work is that takes you and your party closer to government every day, but since Geoff Gallop stood aside, the reverse has been happening to WA Labor.
It’s Time (pun intended) for Labor to stop pretending all is good and they need to make some major changes aimed at giving the party a real political future.
Source : WAtoday
Anjelica Blonde Angel espetacularmente NUA na mansão
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