Amazon.com: Robot in Love: 9781250185938: McBeth, T. L., McBeth, T. L.: Books
Her husband talked for years about doing a DNA kit. When 23andMe.com offered Texas Mom Blogger, Kiss My Tulle, a free kit to try out.
Iran agreed to a four-point plan for talks with the United States during the UN General Assembly last week, until US President Donald Trump threatened to increase sanctions against Tehran, President Hassan Rouhani said in a televised speech on Wednesday.
“This is another site that’s rewriting history” So says best selling author and acclaimed anthropologist Graham Hancock regarding Indonesia’s mysterious Pyramid, Gunung Padang. In this talk, he investigates the many megalithic sites that are bringing the established history of ancient Civilizations into disrepute. Indeed, Civilization is probably older than we think. His concluding evidence rests […]
These genuine adverts from the 1960s were breathtakingly unconcerned with sexism as they appealed to men's macho side, using images of subservient women as a way to flog everything from crinkle-free trousers to questionably-patterned ties.
“Every time he sees me, he says, ‘I didn’t do that.’ And I believe, I really believe, that when he tells me that, he means it.”…
Another one of my laurels also wanted to do a devotional with the self-worth theme, but she wasn't as excited about the Sneetches. She is g...
the ad campaign mimics the styling and taglines of anti-drug public service announcements, instead encouraging parents to 'know the warning signs of art' and 'talk to kids about art school'.
He Doesn't Love You
Original Second World War artworks produced as propaganda for the Ministry of Information have gone online and are now freely available on Wikimedia Commons. More than 350 pieces have gone online so far, but there are plans to digitise the entire collection of almost 2,000 art works. We present a selection here. See this Wikimedia page for more.
Your adolescent son has maybe questioned in his own mind what happens to a girl each month that results in a period.
Pope Leo XIII’s longevity as Pontiff of the Catholic Church (the third longest in church history) may have been down to his favourite tipple Vin Mariani. Pope Leo was so enamoured by this French tonic wine it is claimed he kept a hip flask hidden under his cassock, so he could enjoy the occasional snifter to perk up his spirits—which it undoubtedly did, as Vin Mariani was a heady mix of Bordeaux wine and coca leaves. The original drink had 6mg of cocaine per fluid ounce, which went up to 7.2mg per fluid ounce for the export market—mainly to compete with similar coke-filled tonics—such as Coca-Cola—sold in the USA. It was claimed that Mariani wine could quickly restore “health, strength, energy and vitality,” and hastened convalescence (“especially after influenza”). In one of their ads, His Holiness the Spokesmodel decreed: ...that he has fully appreciated the benefit of this Tonic Wine, and has forwarded to Mr. Mariani as a token of his gratitude a gold medal bearing his august effigy. Talk about a celebrity endorsement, eh? If God’s representative on Earth approved of the coca-infused tipple, that would have been quite a boon in...