PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

LateRooms.com - See The Coral Live in Bournemouth

The Coral are set to play a warm-up show for Glastonbury at the Old Fire Station in Bournemouth.

2011-05-13
BOURNEMOUTH, ENGLAND, May 13, 2011 (Press-News.org) The Coral will bring their unique brand of psychedelic indie rock to the south coast next month.

Bournemouth's Old Fire Station is set to welcome the band on Wednesday June 22nd, when they are likely to play songs from last year's fifth studio album Butterfly House and older material.

The gig will be one of two warm-up shows for the Wirral-based band before their performance at Glastonbury this summer.

With hits such as Dreaming of You, Pass It On and In the Morning to their name, The Coral have managed to combine critical acclaim with a degree of mainstream chart success.

Butterfly House, released in July 2010, was the first of the group's albums not to feature guitarist Bill Ryder-Jones.

He left the fold for personal reasons in 2008 and has not been replaced, with the band continuing to record and perform as a five-piece.

Tickets to see them play at the Old Fire Station are available online, priced at GBP18.50 plus booking fee. Doors are due to open at 19:00 BST.

Fans planning to attend the show will find a wide range of Bournemouth hotels at LateRooms.com, which recommends the Royal Bath Hotel Bournemouth.

Visit o2academybournemouth.co.uk/ or contact the box office on 0844 477 2000 for more information.

Editors Notes:

www.LateRooms.com is part of the B2C sector of TUI Travel PLC's Accommodation and Destination Division. Also within this sector are AsiaRooms.com and Hotels-London.co.uk.

LateRooms.com is the UK's leading online accommodation site offering late availability deals in over 37,000 properties worldwide, ranging from bed and breakfasts to five-star luxury hotels.

LateRooms.com offers customers a saving of up to 70 per cent off the normal room rate for a variety of independent and branded hotels. Customers can book online or by phone 24/7, whether booking 12 months or 12 minutes in advance - whatever time, whatever day. No other accommodation site offers this flexibility.

LateRooms.com arms customers with information to help them choose the right hotel. Users can read from over 540,000 true hotel reviews, written by customers who have booked through LateRooms.com and actually stayed at the hotel.

LateRooms.com is the first online site to use VisitBritain's official national classification system to rate its hotels, bed and breakfasts and guest houses. This ensures customers know the standards of quality they can expect when making a reservation.

To view LateRooms.com press pages, please see http://press.laterooms.com/.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

LateRooms.com - See Me Marley and I at Norfolk Venue

2011-05-13
Fans of Bob Marley may be attracted to the Norwich Arts Centre for a special performance this summer. On Wednesday June 15th, the Norfolk venue is due to stage Me Marley and I by Yaw Asiyama. Set to the backdrop of live reggae music, this one-man play tells a story of love and friendship amid the chaos and brutality of a military revolution in Africa. It is an autobiographical production written by and starring Asiyama, a poet and storyteller who used his real-life experiences to create the drama. As the young Yaw attempts to make sense of the world, he is comforted ...

LateRooms.com - Check Out Expanded Video at Rome's MAXXI

2011-05-13
The MAXXI gallery in Rome is showcasing the work of several artists as part of its cross-media Expanded Video project. Running until June 5th 2011, the initiative aims to blur the line between listening and seeing, turning them into "analogous and equivalent episodes". Masbedo, Jacob TV, Martha Colburn and People Like Us are the artists taking part in the event. Among the pieces due to be shown are a study of relationships between men and women, a stop-motion piece about killing dictators from history and a series of familiar scenes from movies that have ...

Tutoring Match Announces "Why Is Education Life's Most Valuable Investment?" Spring Essay Contest for Parents of School-Aged Children

2011-05-13
Tutoring Match has invited parents to participate in its 2nd essay contest "Why is education life's most valuable investment?" First Prize is an Amazon Kindle or Barnes and Noble Nook plus 3 hours of free tutoring for any family member. Second Prize is three hours of free tutoring in any subject for any family member. Third Prize is one hour of free tutoring for any family member. Each essay must be 250-500 words and include the following: - A clear thesis statement that answers why education is life's most valuable investment. - At least 3 compelling ...

ASG Bowl Announces Partnership with HCC Specialty

2011-05-13
From the time ASG Bowl arrived in the market place, their bowling insurance program has taken significant steps in becoming an agency to be reckoned with. After being named as The Official Insurance Partner of Strike Ten Entertainment, ASG Bowl quickly became a national name in the bowling community at large. While impeccable service, tailored solutions and competitive rates are what set ASG Bowl apart - they have now taken their agency to another level in developing an exclusive bowling insurance program with HCC Specialty (Wakefield, MA). HCC is a "leading international ...

Penguins continue diving long after muscles run out of oxygen

2011-05-13
Breathing heavily at the edge of an ice hole, an Antarctic emperor penguin prepares to dive. Taking a last gulp of air, the bird descends and may not emerge again for another 20 minutes. The penguin initially carries sufficient oxygen in three stores – the blood, lungs and myoglobin in muscle – to sustain aerobic metabolism. However, around 5.6 minutes after leaving the surface, lactate begins appearing in the penguin's blood and the bird crosses the so-called 'aerobic dive limit', switching to anaerobic metabolism in some tissues. So what triggers this transition? Cassondra ...

Seals sense shapes using their whiskers to feel wakes

2011-05-13
Hunting in the North Sea, harbour seals often encounter murky water that impedes their vision; but it doesn't affect their ability to chase prey. Extending their vibration-sensitive whiskers, the mammals are almost as efficient at pursuing their quarry as they would be if guided by sight. Wolf Hanke and his colleagues from the University of Rostock, Germany, are fascinated by how harbour seals perceive the world through their flow-sensitive vibrissae. Having already found that seals can pick up and follow fish wakes up to 35 seconds after the prey has passed and knowing ...

Sex hormone precursor inhibits brain inflammation

Sex hormone precursor inhibits brain inflammation
2011-05-13
Researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine have discovered a steroid hormone that inhibits inflammation in the brain. The findings, to be published in the May 13 issue of the journal Cell, have implications for understanding the exaggerated inflammatory responses that are characteristic features of numerous neurodegenerative diseases. The discovery that the steroid hormone ADIOL, (5-androsten-3Β-17Β-diol), a precursor of androgens and estrogens, modulates inflammation induced by microglia cells could eventually lead to new treatments ...

Humanity can and must do more with less: UNEP

Humanity can and must do more with less: UNEP
2011-05-13
New York, Nairobi – By 2050, humanity could consume an estimated 140 billion tons of minerals, ores, fossil fuels and biomass per year – three times its current appetite – unless the economic growth rate is "decoupled" from the rate of natural resource consumption, warns a new report from the United Nations Environment Programme. Citizens of developed countries consume an average of 16 tons (ranging up to 40 or more tons) of those four key resources per capita. By comparison, the average person in India today consumes four tons per year. With the growth of both population ...

Turning plants into power houses

Turning plants into power houses
2011-05-13
"I have a slide that has a photo of a cornfield and a big photovoltaic array," says Robert Blankenship, a scientist who studies photosynthesis at Washington University in St. Louis. "When I give talks I often ask the audience which one is more efficient. Invariably the audience votes overwhelmingly in favor of photosynthesis. " They are wrong. This question and its surprising answer (below) is the point of departure for a provocative article published in the May 13 issue of Science. The article is the outgrowth of a Department of Energy workshop comparing the efficiency ...

Digestive problems early in life may increase risk for depression, Stanford study suggests

2011-05-13
STANFORD, Calif. — Depression and anxiety may result from short-term digestive irritation early in life, according to a study of laboratory rats by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine. The findings suggest that some human psychological conditions may be the result, rather than the cause, of gastrointestinal disorders such as irritable bowel syndrome. "A lot of research has focused on understanding how the mind can influence the body," said Pankaj Pasricha, MD, professor and chief of gastroenterology and hepatology. "But this study suggests that it ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Metabolically active visceral fat linked to aggressive endometrial cancer, new study reveals

Scientists glimpse how enzymes “dance” while they work, and why that’s important

California partnership aided COVID-19 response and health equity, report finds

University of Oklahoma secures $19.9 million for revolutionary radar technology

Study finds restoring order to dividing cancer cells may prevent metastasis

High-accuracy tumor detection with label-free microscopy and neural networks

Wayne State research reveals fetuses exposed to Zika virus have long-term immune challenges

Researchers deconstruct chikungunya outbreaks to improve prediction and vaccine development

Study finds one-year change on CT scans linked to future outcomes in fibrotic lung disease

Discovery of a novel intracellular trafficking pathway in plant cells

New tool helps forecast volcano slope collapses and tsunamis

Molecular coating cleans up noisy quantum light

From Parkinson's to rare diseases, discovered a key switch for cellular health

Tiny sugars in the brain disrupt emotional circuits, fueling depression

Mini-organs reveal how the cervix defends itself

Africa, climate, and food: How to feed a continent without increasing its carbon footprint

Researchers demonstrates substrate design principles for scalable superconducting quantum materials

How better software choices could cut US health care costs

Concussion history in NCAA athletes yields mixed health outcomes

Counting plastic reveals hidden waste and sparks action

Warming oceans may pose a serious threat to American lobsters

Deaths from drug-induced unintentional injury rise across the US

In car crashes with pedestrians, age and zip code may predict extent of traumatic injuries

AI optimizes evacuation, diagnosis, and treatment of wounded soldiers in Ukraine

Mastectomy linked to worsened sexual health, body image after surgery

Drop in credit score after cancer diagnosis linked to increased mortality, study shows

Use of weight loss drugs before bariatric surgery has soared in recent years, study finds

EMS call times in rural areas take at least 20 minutes longer than national average

Rectal bleeding in young adults linked to 8.5 times higher risk of colorectal cancer

Hospital closures disproportionately affect socioeconomically disadvantaged communities

[Press-News.org] LateRooms.com - See The Coral Live in Bournemouth
The Coral are set to play a warm-up show for Glastonbury at the Old Fire Station in Bournemouth.