Winehouse ‘refuses to leave St Lucia without a native chef’

Washington, May 28 (ANI): Amy Winehouse has reportedly refused to return to her native London without a Caribbean chef.

The holidaying pop star, 25, was said to be on the lookout for a cook who would dish up soul-feeding food for her when she goes back to UK.

“She often eats St. Lucian feasts courtesy of one of her favourite restaurants, The Pier at the Sandals Halcyon resort,” Contactmusic quoted a source as saying.

“She has had her friends make enquiries with some of the chefs at Sandals and some other restaurants on the island. That way, being back will not be too hard to deal with.

“One of Amy’s favourite things about St. Lucia is the food and she’d love to have that as a reminder of the island when she is back in the UK,” the source added.

Pals of the Rehab hitmaker are allegedly lending in a helping hand to help the singer believing it would keep her health and eating habits in check.

The source told thisislondon website: “She really doesn’t look after herself when she is back in London, and is always skipping meals.” (ANI)

New study may offer treatment for anxiety disorders, depression

Washington, May 13 (ANI): A new study from the University of Michigan has shed light on why some individuals may be predisposed to anxiety.

The research team has identified a brain chemical called fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF2) that plays an important role in brain development, and in anxiety.

Lead researcher Dr Javier Perez suggests that the new discovery can offer potential new treatment for anxiety disorders and depression.

In the study, researchers examined FGF2 levels in rats selectively bred for high or low anxiety for over 19 generations.

The researchers found lower FGF2 levels in rats bred for high anxiety compared to those bred for low anxiety.

The study also suggests that environmental enrichment reduces anxiety by altering FGF2.

Perez and colleagues found that giving the high-anxiety rats a series of new toys reduced anxiety behaviors and increased their levels of FGF2.

Furthermore, they found that FGF2 treatment alone reduced anxiety behaviours in the high-anxiety rats.

“We have discovered that FGF2 has two important new roles: it’s a genetic vulnerability factor for anxiety and a mediator for how the environment affects different individuals,” said Perez.

“This is surprising, as FGF2 and related molecules are known primarily for organizing the brain during development and repairing it after injury,” he added.

The findings suggest that part of FGF2′s role in reducing anxiety may be due to its ability to increase the survival of new cells in a brain region called the hippocampus.

Previous research has suggested that depression decreases the production and incorporation of new brain cells, a process called neurogenesis.

Although the researchers found that high-anxiety rats produced the same number of new brain cells as low-anxiety rats, they found decreased survival of new brain cells in high-anxiety rats compared to low-anxiety rats.

However, FGF2 treatment and environmental enrichment each restored brain cell survival.

“This discovery may pave the way for new, more specific treatments for anxiety that will not be based on sedation – like currently prescribed drugs – but will instead fight the real cause of the disease,” said Dr Pier Vincenzo Piazza, Director of the Neurocentre Magendie an INSERM/University of Bordeaux institution in France, an expert on the role of neurogenesis in addiction and anxiety who was not involved in the current study.

The study appears in The Journal of Neuroscience. (ANI)

Italy’s elegant Forte dei Marmi still lures the jet set

Forte dei Marmi – At the turn of the century, the Tuscan coastal town of Forte dei Marmi became hugely popular with artists, aristocrats and intellectuals from all over Europe.

Nowadays, the “beautiful people” still flock here to spend their holidays among the pine trees. In downtown Forte dei Marmi, the fashionable CafĂ© Versilia on the Piazza Garibaldi was a popular haunt for famous cultural names such as English writer Aldous Huxley, Italian poet Gabriele d’Annunzio or German author Thomas Mann. The latter allegedly based the character of the sorcerer, Cipolla, in his 1929 novella Mario and Magician on someone he met on the premises.

The tranquil resort on the attractive Versilia coast continues to lure an immaculately-clad jet set and remains a byword for elegance. Guests sip a glass of prosecco under the linen sunshades which line the far-reaching golden sands.

The beach bars are abuzz in the summer months, competing for attention alongside an extensive range of water sport activities and an ambitious cultural programme. The main beach stretches five kilometres between the rivulets of Fiumetto in the south and Cinquale to the north.

The name Forte dei Marmi translates as The Fortress of the Marble and the first settlers in this swampy area were dealers in the glossy white rock whose use in architecture goes back to classical Greek times.

In the 16th century, a certain Michelangelo Buonarotti, the Renaissance all-round genius commonly known only by his first name, was commissioned by Pope Leopold X. to draw up plans for the road to connect the marble quarries at Massa and Carrara in Apennine Mountains with the coast.

The artist set to work and both the road and a 300-metre along the pier were built so that the prized stone could be hauled aboard sailing ships. Today both locals and tourists gather at the spot to admire the spectacular sunsets.

A century later, the resort began to attract fishermen, farmers and quarry workers and it was in 1788 under the aegis of Grand Duke Leopold I that the town acquired its most notable landmark, the red brick fort in the main square “Il Fortino.”

Tourism in Forte dei Marmi only began to boom after World War II when wealthy Italian industrialists chose it as a summer retreat. Today the “Fortino” is home to the Museum for Satire and Caricature and visitors can admire exhibits dating back to antiquity as well as contemporary works. For those who want more there is even a specialised multimedia archive on the topic.

This town of around 8,500 residents – known to its admirers as “Forte” – offers an unusually rich tableau of cultural activities. There are numerous galleries and the town is a useful springboard for visits throughout Tuscany. Lucca, Florenz and Pisa are only a short ride away by local train.

There are plenty of chic cafes to visit in the central Forti and the town offers a wide range of hotel accommodation to suit all budgets. Four-star hotels line the promenade behind a fringe of oleander and palm trees while the more reasonably-priced establishments are generally found in the centre or on side streets.

The nearby Apennines offers all manner of sporting pursuits such as hiking and climbing tours while at the seaside windsurfers and kite surfers will find plenty to keep them occupied. A fine way of seeing Forti is from the saddle of a bicycle since in contrast to most places in Italy, the town has an extensive network of cycle paths. (dpa)

Keri Hilson Joins Keyshia Cole and The Dream on the 20-City ‘A Different Me’ Tour

Keri Hilson Joins Keyshia Cole and The Dream on the 20-City ‘A Different Me’
Tour

The Tour Kicks off May 13th in Cincinnati, Ohio

SANTA MONICA, Calif., April 20 /PRNewswire/ — Singer/Songwriter Keri Hilson
will join Keyshia Cole and The Dream on the A Different Me tour which will
kick off on May 13th in Cincinnati, Ohio. Riding on the success as a guest
artist on Lil Wayne’s “I Am Music Tour,” Hilson has been given another
opportunity to engage fans with an exciting stage performance during the
20-city tour.

Hilson’s debut album In A Perfect World recently debuted at #1 on Billboard’s
R and B/Hip Hop Chart. Her current single “Knock You Down,” featuring Kanye West
and Ne-Yo, is steadily climbing the charts, and the video landed today at the
#1 spot on BET’s 106 and Park.

Cole and Hilson collaborated on Hilson’s third single “Get Your Money Up,”
which is also featured on the new album.

Stay connected to Keri Hilson by visiting http://www.kerihilsonmusic.com/.

A DIFFERENT ME TOUR DATES
DATE CITY VENUE

Wednesday, May 13 Cincinnati Aronoff Center

Thursday, May 14 Milwaukee Riverside Theatre

Friday, May 15 Chicago Chicago Theatre

Saturday, May 16 Detroit Fox Theatre

Thursday, May 21 Atlanta Fox Theatre

Friday, May 22 Greensboro Special Events Arena

Saturday, May 23 Atlantic City Mark Etess Arena Taj Mahal

Sunday, May 24 NYC WAMU @ MSG

Thursday, May 28 DC Constitution Hall

Saturday, May 30 Norfolk Ntelos Pavilion

Sunday, May 31 Columbia, SC Township Auditorium

Tuesday, June 2 Newark NJPAC

Friday, June 5 Mashantucket, CT MGM Foxwoods

Saturday, June 6 Baltimore Pier Six Pavilion

Tuesday, June 9 Nashville Ryman Auditorium

Thursday, June 11 St. Louis Fox Theatre

Saturday, June 13 Dallas Nokia Live

Sunday, June 14 Houston Reliant Arena

Thursday, June 18 Oakland Paramount Theater

Saturday, June 20 LA Nokia

SOURCE Interscope Records

Yvette Gayle, +1-310-865-6278, fax, +1-310-865-7903, yvette.gayle@umusic.com,
or Fairley McCaskill, +1-310-865-9634, fax, +1-310-865-7903,
fairley.mccaskill@umusic.com, both for Interscope Records