Lingerie brand La Perla introduces La Perla Beauty, featuring body care, fragrances, and makeup. See here images of the collection's body cream, lipsticks, and more with input from the brand's product development lead.
/PRNewswire/ After topping digital platforms and reaching audiences globally with his song "Canción Bonita," the multiplatinum musician, songwriter and.
MONDAY THE PM has convened a special Scotland task-force. First item on the agenda is The Douglas Ross problem . Silky Sunak can’t help himself and snorts that our Scottish leader looks like the chap who used to carry his bags at Oxford. “Where do we get these people,” he asks. Everyone nods in agreement. Dopey Williamson asks if we can’t just pull a Salisbury number on him by doing the old door handle trick and that he’s still got good Moscow contacts from his time at the FO. Gollum Gove tells the idiot we’d have to be a lot more discreet than that as the Daily Mail would have a field-day if it was revealed we’d asked Putin to do it. “How about getting the Dutch special ops wallahs to slip him a herbal snider the next time he’s in London for one of those Spectator bacchanals,” he suggests.
.... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... ....
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. Before Ralph M. Flores of Tomé died in 2017, he had written a book he called “Fractured Fables.”
Written, but not published. Not until his widow, Geri Rhodes, edited and organized her late husband’s text for the now published and retitled “The Illustrated Fractured Fables.”
The 13 fables are accompanied by cheerful illustrations by family members and friends. Flores’ thoughtfully worded fables are at the heart of the book.
Fables are generally short and can be prose or verse, with animals and other creatures talking and thinking like humans. Flores writes in prose about members of the animal world.
1
The page, cut from an old newspaper and clumsily glued into the notebook, relates an event that occurred in the Balkans. It was the winter of 1991, the war between the Yugoslav factions was entering its most savage phase, and many of the inhabitants of a town on the outskirts of Zagreb reported suffering from insomnia. More unexpected was a symptom that the Croatian doctors hastily chalked up to the traumatic stress of the bombings. The insomniacs, when they finally did manage to fall asleep, dreamed of a color they had never seen before: a kind of phosphorescent blue, halfway between sky and arctic.