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Wordsworth home damaged in blaze

Large parts of Allan Bank property in the Lake District destroyed by overnight fire after a suspected electrical fault One of the “big three” Wordsworth houses in the Lake District has been seriously damaged by fire after a suspected electrical fault. Large parts of Allan Bank at Grasmere, Cumbria, have been destroyed in spite of an overnight operation by fire crews from five stations. No one was hurt at the National Trust property, which William Wordsworth made notorious by repeated complaints about its smoky chimneys. Two women tenants were safely evacuated after the alarm was raised at 1.30am. Firefighters from Grasmere and Ambleside were reinforced by crews from Coniston, Windermere and Keswick as the blaze spread through the large mansion, completely gutting the first floor. Extensive water damage is also expected throughout the remains of the late 18th-century building, which the poet and his family also disliked because of its incurably damp walls. Initial tests suggest that an electrical fault in the roof-space may have caused the fire at the house, which overlooks Easedale valley and the rocky southern face of Helm Crag. Allen Bank is not open to the public but well-used footpaths crisscross its grounds. Wordsworth grumbled about it initially as an eyesore from his then home at Dove Cottage, the other side of Grasmere Lake. He disliked not only its bulk but the “belching” smoke from its ineffectively built chimneys. When he moved there in 1808 to have room for his growing family and regular visitors such as the writer Thomas de Quincey, he found the smoke often filled rooms as well as the garden and grounds, because of the hopeless down draught. He also fell out with the landlord and in 1813 moved to the much grander Rydal Mount, two miles away, where he lived until his death in 1850. Both Dove Cottage and Rydal Mount are open to the public and among the Lake District’s biggest attractions. Allan Bank was bought in 1915 by Hardwicke Rawnsley, an clergyman and one of the founders of the National Trust. Rawnsley left it to the organisation when he died five years later. The National Trust has only recently completed repairs to Wordsworth’s birthplace at Cockermouth, which was damaged by the Cumbrian floods in November 2009 but has reopened while restoration of its garden continues. William Wordsworth Martin Wainwright guardian.co.uk

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Navy axes ‘Fukushima-type’ reactors

Reactors sharing similar design to ones at Japanese plant to be dropped because they fail to meet safety standards The Royal Navy is to drop a dangerous type of reactor used in its existing nuclear submarines because it fails to meet modern safety standards, defence ministers have disclosed. A safer type of reactor is expected to be used in the submarines that will replace the Trident fleet, as the existing design shares very similar features to the nuclear reactors involved in the Fukushima Daiichi disaster in Japan. Liam Fox, the defence secretary, told MPs there was a “very clear-cut” case to use the new type of reactor because it has “improved nuclear safety” and would give “a better safety outlook”. A heavily censored Ministry of Defence report disclosed earlier this month by the Guardian and Channel 4 News said the current reactors are “potentially vulnerable” to fatal accidents , which could cause “multiple fatalities” among submarine crews. The report, written by a senior MoD nuclear safety expert, Commodore Andrew McFarlane, said the existing type compared “poorly” with those in the most modern nuclear power stations because it relied on a vulnerable type of cooling system, falling “significantly short” of modern best practice for nuclear reactors. McFarlane warned that the naval reactors are “potentially vulnerable to a structural failure of the primary circuit”. An accident could release “highly radioactive fission products”, posing “a significant risk to life to those in close proximity and a public safety hazard out to 1.5km [1 mile] from the submarine”. Known as the PWR2, this type is used in the four Trident submarines based at Faslane, near Glasgow, and six Trafalgar-class ones now being taken out of service. Like the Fukushima power station north of Tokyo, the PWR2 relies entirely on back-up power supplies to provide emergency cooling in the event of an accident. Despite the anxieties about its safety, PWR2s are also being fitted in the seven Astute-class submarines being built. These vessels will also be based at Faslane. There have been debates within the MoD and the navy about whether the PWR2 should be used if a replacement to Trident is finally approved – or if a safer type, PWR3, should replace it. The PWR3 uses “passive” cooling, which makes it far less reliant on back-up power, and has additional methods of injecting coolant into a reactor. The PWR3 is widely used in modern US nuclear submarines. The debate has delayed a decision on what type of reactor to install by 18 months, McFarlane’s report disclosed, and has cost a further £261m. Fox was questioned in the Commons on the reactor’s safety by Angus Robertson, the Scottish National party’s defence spokesman, after the disclosure of the report. Fox said: “The government’s view is that that is the preferred option, because those reactors give us a better safety outlook. That is a debate on both sides of the Atlantic, but we believe that in terms of safety, the case is very clear-cut.” Robertson said: “This still raises concerns about the currently operational and incoming nuclear submarines, which don’t satisfy acceptable safety standards. The UK should give up its nuclear obsession.” John Ainslie, from the Scottish Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, who uncovered the original McFarlane report, said the new reactor would push up costs for the Trident replacement fleet by billions of pounds, since it would need designing and testing. “There is another option: they should completely abandon their plan to squander billions on new nuclear submarines,” he said. Defence policy Nuclear weapons Nuclear power Liam Fox Japan Severin Carrell guardian.co.uk

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Tripoli muted in its defiance

Nightly explosions now part of the routine for residents in Libyan capital, with coalition attacks on Bousseta naval base under way Just east of the centre of Tripoli, not far from the now-deserted British embassy and the old Marriott hotel, curious crowds of Libyans are gathering to see first-hand evidence of the impact of the “colonialist crusader aggression” denounced by Muammar Gaddafi. Normally, anyone walking along the promenade might not have noticed Bousseta naval base, an unremarkable cluster of metal sheds around a jetty, half-hidden from view by a high wall and bounded by a breakwater on the seaward side. It was hit at around 10pm on Monday, one of the first targets of the third wave of coalition attacks, now a nightly routine of explosions and the crump-crump of erratic and ineffective anti-aircraft fire followed by a stream of white-hot invective in the state-controlled Libyan media. From the road, where the onlookers are double-parking their cars and getting out to gawp, not much is visible. But close up, it is a scene of devastation. A hangar-like building has been blown apart, its roof open to an azure sky with a few half-melted corrugated plastic panels hanging off at crazy angles. Inside are the remains of what the Libyans insist was a naval training and maintenance workshop, though it does include remains of four Soviet-made surface-to-surface missile launching vehicles, as well as fuel tankers, stores and other mangled equipment, all shrouded in an acrid fug of burned rubber and scorched metal, with rubble and shrapnel crunching underfoot. Captain Fathi al-Raati, neat in a ribbed blue uniform sweater with gold epaulettes, thinks the enemy had intended to destroy the half-dozen patrol and missile craft moored nearby. But they are untouched – and off limits to the reporters escorted to the site by information ministry minders. Thankfully, there had been no additions to the 48 fatalities recorded so far. “The personnel were told to leave as we were expecting this,” said al-Raati, explaining that the damage was done by six Tomahawk cruise missiles fired in two salvoes from naval vessels offshore – far outgunning air defences that were always rickety and have now, as the Libyans privately admit, been effectively suppressed. Bousseta’s sailors are making the most of the media presence, waving machine-guns and chanting patriotic slogans, as if having had their base bombed is some sort of military triumph. Libyans often insist they take pride in their ability to withstand attacks, though the crowds on the promenade are subdued, few of them buying the tea, water and nuts on sale on little plastic tables set by enterprising vendors. No one was shouting anything. Officially, there is nothing but bravado and defiance. Callers to the talk show on al-Shababiya (youth) radio are greeted by the presenter with the apparently bizarre words “Good morning victory” along with excoriating abuse of Libya’s enemies: the Arab League, which supported calls for the imposition of a no-fly zone, is referred to as “the Jewish League”. The “national council” formed by the Benghazi-based rebels is described as the “council of agents of the conspiracy”. The “conspiracy” is clear – to occupy and partition Libya and steal its oil. Al-Jazeera satellite TV, owned by the emir of Qatar, draws particular hostility, but its Saudi-owned rival al-Arabiya is equally loathed. State media refer routinely to the “Crusader-Zionist aggression” and highlight any opposition to it. Al-Jamahiriya TV quoted at length today from a Guardian story about Monday’s Stop the War rally in London, and gave prominence to Bolivia’s Evo Morales demanding that Barack Obama return his Nobel peace prize. Another big theme is normality: ordinary people interviewed on TV insist that everything is fine and functioning, shops are open, schools operating and work continuing, though the many shuttered premises in the alleys off Tripoli’s main Omar al-Mukhtar street tell a different story. So did the soldiers and the anti-aircraft battery at the entrance to the radio station overlooking the harbour, close to the centre than the battered Bousetta base. Older Libyans are distinctly unimpressed by Operation Odyssey Dawn. Mahfud Turki, 81, a former footballer who works in the famous Salim cafe on Green Square, remembers far worse danger when the “English navy” bombarded Tripoli in 1941. “This is nothing compared to that,” he says with a grin. The future may be unclear, but Gaddafi remains popular with poor people because he makes sure their monthly salaries are paid, Turki says. It is hard to assess the real impact of the war so far, but whatever their views, Libyans seem to be getting used to it. “It is all fine during the day,” says Ahmed, a 20-something driver. “Everything is normal until nine at night when the attacks start.” State TV reported on Tuesday that “masses” of citizens were heading for a fourth evening running to join protests at Gaddafi’s Bab al-Aziziya compound – to defend the “brother leader of the revolution” from Libya’s many enemies. “Now it’s boom, boom every night,” sneers one merchant. “Fuck the Americans.” Libya Muammar Gaddafi Middle East United Nations Ian Black guardian.co.uk

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Will cuts kill the green agenda?

Despite news of funding cuts dominating the headlines it’s clear that only some councils still prioritise the green agenda – we ask how everyone can stay green without heading into the red This week, the Local Government Association and the Department for Energy and Climate Change signed a Memorandum of Understanding which sets out how local and central government can work together to tackle climate change. The document focuses on meeting targets and aims to help councils reduce emissions by participating in schemes like the Green Deal . But with cuts hitting local government hard and many ‘soft-options’ like libraries and swimming pools already bearing the brunt, how far up the agenda will green credentials come? Forum for the Future’s Sustainable Cities Index , which tracks sustainability progress in 20 of the UK’s largest cities, is perhaps proof enough that councils are still striving to achieve results in this area. Indeed, on achieving top spot in the list for the second year running chief executive of Newcastle city council Barry Rowland explained, ” sustainability is right at the top of our agenda, and we intend to keep it there “. However it was reported last week that London has failed to meet EU targets to curb emissions and given Mayor Boris Johnson more time to reduce harmful particles in the air – a sign that in London, councils are not doing enough. In this Q&A we’ll be asking how local government can stay on top of the green agenda despite budget cuts. Our panel will be online between 12pm – 3pm on Wednesday 23 March and comments are open for your questions and contributions now. Panel: Paul O’Brien is chief executive of the Association for Public Service Excellence (APSE) and previously worked with South Lanarkshire Council Anna Warrington is senior sustainability advisor at Forum for the Future Sam Coe is regional partnerships manager for Keep Britain Tidy . His main role is to develop relationships with local authorities, housing providers and any private sector organisation interested in improving their local environments Chris Shaw is assistant director of environmental regeneration charity Groundwork Gavin Fletcher heads up the Groundwork Leicester & Leicestershire (GWLL’s) conservation team and has a wide range of experience in bio diversity, nature conservation and the management of gardens and allotments Councillor Sarah Russell is councillor responsible for the environment at Leicester city council Councillor Joe Goldberg leads on finance and sustainability at Haringey council Martyn Williams is senior parliamentary campaigner at Friends of the Earth who are currently working on campaigns to ensure Government supports councils in tackling climate change This content is brought to you by Guardian Professional. Join the local government network to receive more like this direct to your inbox. Local government network blog Sustainable housing Kate McCann guardian.co.uk

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7/7 inquest verdicts set for 6 May

Coroner’s report into the bombings on London transport network expected to offer recommendations for improving security Inquest verdicts on those killed in the 7/7 bombings will be delivered on 6 May, the coroner, Lady Justice Hallett, has announced. The findings of the five months-long hearings into the deaths of the 52 victims of the attacks on tube trains and a bus in central London are expected to offer recommendations for improving security. Hallett heard evidence from 309 witnesses, including members of the security and emergency rescue services, during the hearings at the Royal Courts of Justice, as well as testimony from injured victims and their rescuers. Three bombs exploded on tube trains during the rush hour on the morning of 7 July, 2005, and one an hour later on a bus travelling through Tavistock Square. The attacks were carried out by four British-born suicide bombers of Pakistani origin, led by Mohammad Siddique Khan, a 30-year-old British Muslim from Leeds, who detonated a bomb on a train at Edgeware Road. Altogether 56 died, including the bombers themselves: seven victims on a Circle Line tube at Aldgate station in east London, six on another Circle Line train at Edgeware Road; and 26 on a Piccadilly Line train between King’s Cross and Russell Square. A further 13 died 57 minutes later on board the bus. More than 700 people were injured. The verdict will be issued on the day after the May local elections and the AV referendum on changing the voting system at general elections. 7 July London attacks UK security and terrorism London Stephen Bates guardian.co.uk

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US judge shelves Google library plan

Some authors had complained they had not given permission for books to be scanned and made available online Google’s controversial plans to create the world’s biggest online library have been shelved by a US judge. In a ruling filed in the US district court in Manhattan, judge Denny Chin ruled the company had gone “too far” in its ambitious plans and rejected a legal settlement with authors and publishers that Google reached in 2008. The web giant has scanned millions of books, many held at some of the world’s greatest libraries including Oxford University’s Bodleian and Harvard’s libraries, and made them available online via its eBooks platform. The plan has split the publishing industry and attracted fierce criticism from authors and rival tech firms. While Google said it would show only snippets of works that are in copyright, some authors complained that they had not given their permission for the scanning in the first place and were wary of Google’s future plans. In court Google rejected calls for an “opt-in” solution where copyright owners would decide whether or not to be part of the scanning project. The company said the idea was not viable. Chin suggested he might look more favourably on a settlement that allowed copyright owners to “opt in”. “While the digitisation of books and the creation of a universal digital library would benefit many,” Chin wrote, Google’s current pact would “simply go too far”. It would “give Google a significant advantage over competitors, rewarding it for engaging in wholesale copying of copyrighted works without permission,” he said. The agreement rejected by Chin was negotiated with the Authors Guild and the Association of American Publishers. Under the settlement, Google would continue to digitise books and sell access online and the company would pay $125m (£76.9m) in royalties every year to the copyright owners of the books being scanned. Copyright concerns persisted, however, as the ownership of many of the works being scanned by Google could not be established. Hilary Ware, managing counsel for Google, said the judge’s decision was disappointing. “We believe this agreement has the potential to open up access to millions of books that are currently hard to find in the US today,” she said. “Regardless of the outcome, we’ll continue to work to make more of the world’s books discoverable online through Google Books and Google eBooks.” “Publishers are prepared to modify the settlement agreement to gain approval,” said John Sargent, chief executive of Macmillan, in a statement issued by the Association of American Publishers. He said they would work to overcome the objections raised by the court. Google co-founder Larry Page was the author of the firm’s plans to make 150m books accessible via the search engine. He has been promoting the idea since shortly after the company was formed in 1998. Google began working with several libraries in 2004 to scan and digitise books and other writings in their collections, and has said it has completed 10% of the effort. The search engine currently allows users to search about two million books that are out of copyright, including the works of William Shakespeare. That service will be unaffected by the ruling. Chin’s decision is the latest in a series of setbacks. The plans have attracted criticism not only in the US but across Europe and in China and Canada. It is also separately being investigated by the US Justice Department on competition and copyright grounds. Google United States Digital media Libraries Intellectual property Ebooks Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

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Calls for invasion after Gaza strikes

Islamic Jihad claims attacks on Beersheba and Ashdod as Israeli vice-premier calls for new offensive in Gaza Strip Palestinian rockets have struck two cities deep in Israel, wounding one man and prompting a deputy to the prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, to call for a new offensive against the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip. The attacks, which drew retaliatory air strikes from Israel, marked the biggest escalation of hostilities since Israel launched its assault on Gaza two years ago. Islamic Jihad, a smaller Gaza faction and occasional Hamas ally, claimed responsibility for the attacks on Beersheba and Ashdod that followed a surge of shelling between Israel and Hamas that killed four Palestinian civilians and five militants on Tuesday . After the deaths on Tuesday in Gaza, Netanyahu voiced regret for the civilian casualties, which he said resulted from errant Israeli shelling. The Israeli vice-premier, Silvan Shalom, said the situation recalled the runup to Israel’s 2008-2009 Gaza war, in which around 1,400 Palestinians died. Hamas has mostly held its fire from the enclave since. “We may have to consider a return to that operation,” Shalom told Israel Radio. “I say this despite the fact that I know such a thing would, of course, bring the region to a far more combustible situation.” With dissident movements rocking the Arab world, the US-backed Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, has broached reconciliation with Islamist Hamas, which defeated his Fatah faction in a 2006 ballot and seized control of Gaza in a civil war a year later. Shalom said Hamas might have opened a new front with Israel “to stop any possibility of dialogue among the Palestinians or to come to the intra-Palestinian negotiation in a far stronger position”. Hamas is shunned by the west for rejecting peace with Israel. Under Hamas rule, Gaza has been kept under grinding embargoes by Israel and neighbouring Egypt. Security and economic prospects have improved under Abbas’s Palestinian Authority, which has a limited mandate in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Islamic Jihad said it fired Grad rockets, assembly-line weapons more sophisticated than some shorter-range projectiles militants have used in the past, at Beersheba and Ashdod, 20 miles and 25 miles from Gaza respectively. An Israeli military spokeswoman said a Beersheba man suffered moderate shrapnel wounds and that the second rocket landed outside Ashdod’s centre, causing no damage. Authorities closed schools in Beersheba and advised residents to be ready to take shelter at the sound of sirens. Islamic Jihad said it sought to avenge “the Zionist massacres against our fighters and people” and would continue to fight “until the full liberation of our lands”, a reference to Israel, as well as the West Bank and Gaza. Hamas has described its attacks, which included the firing of more than two dozen mortar shells and rockets at the weekend, as retaliation for Israeli air strikes. Hamas has at times proposed a long-term truce with Israel. Netanyahu said Israel sought no further flare-up but would continue to respond to Palestinian attacks. Gaza Israel Palestinian territories Middle East guardian.co.uk

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Africa’s churches ‘failing women’

NGO report says church fails to act effectively in tackling violence against women in Rwanda, Liberia and Congo Churches can “no longer remain silent on the issue of sexual violence”, according to a Christian NGO, which said religious institutions were failing the communities they were meant to serve by not speaking out against the assault and rape of children. Tearfund , a UK-based Christian relief and development agency, commissioned research on the current and potential role of the church to tackle sexual violence in Rwanda, Liberia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). It said the results were a “shocking indictment of the widespread lack of a church-based response”. In Silent No More , a report launched at a conference on Monday at Lambeth Palace in London with the support of the archbishops of Canterbury, Burundi and DRC, Tearfund said: “The research showed there have been various responses from the church. In many cases the church has remained silent, where the church has spoken out, it has often led to increased stigma towards survivors. “The silence of the churches on this issue is often the result of fear and their inability to envisage how to engage effectively. Churches have too often failed to realise their mandate to care and stand up for people on the margins. For this reason aid agencies, donors and governments too have failed to recognise the potential of the church to respond to this need.” One community leader in Rwanda told Tearfund: “The church is the only reliable social network within poor countries. People cannot go to the cinema or a club in order to find space where they can get away from their problems. The church is all they have. Also, many people no longer have family. The church becomes their only source of ‘family’.” The report gave examples of how some churches were helping victims. The Anglican church of Congo has established an association offering practical support – helping women access preventative HIV treatment within 72 hours of an assault, raising awareness of rape laws, and assisting with social integration. But it was one of only a few instances of church-led activity. Among those attending the launch were Lyn Lusi, from Heal Africa , which helped Tearfund with its research in DRC. She told conference delegates that church leaders needed to follow the example of the anti-slavery champion William Wilberforce . She said: “It has taken 200 years for the change in relationships between blacks and whites to become reality. It has been a long road. The churches were key players, they knew what justice meant. The church is facing the same challenge – for justice between men and women.” One of the things church leaders could do was to read the whole Bible and “not just the verses that prop up their power base”, she added. Lusi and other speakers claimed that some men used scripture to justify hurting or marginalising women. Earlier this year, Anglican leaders wrote a letter acknowledging that churches were partly responsible for “perpetuating oppressive attitudes towards women” – there is divided opinion on the role of women in churches – and committed themselves to raising the profile of millennium development goal three: to promote gender equality and empower women. Religion Gender Rape Riazat Butt guardian.co.uk

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Gaddafi speech calls coalition ‘fascists’

Libyan leader calls coalition ‘fascists’ during speech at Tripoli compound as Hillary Clinton claims aides are considering exile Muammar Gaddafi has made his first public appearance since air strikes on his forces began, pledging that he will not surrender and calling the international coalition against him a “bunch of fascists”. The speech came after Barack Obama warned the Libyan leader may try to hang on to power despite the military intervention. But the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, said she understood people close to Gaddafi were in touch with other countries asking for advice on exile options. Clashes continued on Tuesday morning along the front line between rebels and Gaddafi forces north of Ajdabiya. Those forces, which appeared to be well dug-in, fired barrages of mortar and tank shells at the opposition fighters, whose advance on the city appears to have stalled. Gaddafi appeared outside his Tripoli compound early on Wednesday morning to speak to supporters who have formed a human shield to protect him. “We will not surrender,” he said. “We will defeat them by any means … We are ready for the fight, whether it will be a short or a long one … We will be victorious in the end,” he said in comments carried live by state television. “This assault … is by a bunch of fascists who will end up in the dustbin of history,” he added, to the approving roar of the crowd. The early morning address was his first public appearance in a week, and there was nothing in it to suggest any lessening of his determination to sit out what he calls the “colonialist-crusader” attacks on Libya. Gaddafi seemed aware of growing rumours about his whereabouts after two strikes on his Bab al-Aziziya compound – with one opposition source reporting him at a hideout deep in the Sahara. “I am here, in my modest tent,” Gaddafi told them. “I am here.” Clinton told ABC News she understood people close to the Libyan leader were in touch with other states about the situation. “We’ve heard about other people close to him reaching out to people that they know around the world, Africa, the Middle East, Europe, North America, beyond, saying what do we do?” she said. “How do we get out of this? What happens next? “I’m not aware that he personally has reached out, but I do know that people allegedly on his behalf have been reaching out.” Speaking to CNN during his trip to South America Obama said he hoped the military intervention would help the Libyan opposition start organising for change. He said it might not be “military might” but a belief among the Libyan people that it is time for a change that ends with “ultimately sweeping Gaddafi out of power”. “I think – our hope is – that the first thing that can happen once we’ve cleared the space is that the rebels are able to start discussing how they organise themselves, how they articulate their aspirations for the Libyan people and create a legitimate government,” Obama said. He added that the immediate goal of the mission that began Saturday was to prevent Gaddafi’s military from conducting an onslaught on the rebel stronghold of Benghazi. “Because the international community rallied, his troops have now pulled back from Benghazi,” Obama said. While Washington and its coalition partners, including Nato allies and Arab states, are establishing a no-fly zone over Libya and attacking the Libyan leader’s forces, the US president warned that Gaddafi was unlikely to back down soon. “Gaddafi may try to hunker down and wait it out even in the face of the no-fly zone, even though his forces have been degraded,” Obama said. Yesterday, Britain, France and the US agreed that Nato should play an important role in enforcing the no-fly zone over Libya . Muammar Gaddafi United States France Europe Nato Hillary Clinton Ian Black Chris McGreal Adam Gabbatt Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

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Jillian Michaels

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Jillian Michaels

The Biggest Loser Season 11 Episode 14 The Biggest Loser Seas 11 Ep 14 Part 4 of 5 The Biggest Loser SE 11 X 14 Part 3 of 5 New Jillian Michaels workouts: '6 Week Six-Pack' and 'Ripped in 30 … Jillian Michaels : Ripped in 30 (Empowered Media, $14.98). Lame-duck Biggest Loser trainer Jillian Michaels , under her Empowered Media label, has just released the comprehensive workout DVD Ripped in 30. The DVD features four 24-minute … Saving with Brandi: Amazon has Jillian Michaels 30 day shred for … Tuesday, March 22, 2011. Amazon has Jillian Michaels 30 day shred for only $7.99. I started this last night and I am soooooo sore! (But I think I secretly like it). Posted by Brandi at 3:23 PM. Reactions: 0 comments: Post a Comment … a little more than life: Getting Strong with Jillian Michaels My favorite workouts, hands down, are those of celebrity trainer Jillian Michaels . You may be hesitant because there’s so much hullabaloo about her, but she kicks arse. And she’s not fake about it. She’s not overly cheerful nor speaks … Love NBC's The Biggest Loser? This Celebrity journey is for you … As you all know this deteriorate of The Biggest Loser upon NBC will be Jillian Michaels final deteriorate – for right away during least. Earlier in the deteriorate you were introduced to Cara Castronuova as well as Brett Hoebel who will … Buy Cheap Jillian Michaels Power Packets Acai Berry Special Price Buy Cheap Jillian Michaels Power Packets Acai Berry Special Price Review Jillian Michaels Power Packets Acai Berry Product By: Thin Care, Model: , Asin: B00388ISNM Best Buy Cheap Jillian Michaels Power Packets Acai Berry Discount Ship … henglish says: Dawn's Daily Diggs: 30 Day Shred – Jillian Michaels Giveaway! http://t.co/QTx5sQ0

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