Sunday, November 6, 2011

72 Year Old Mom Dying w/ Birth Complications

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Thursday, September 29, 2011

Wallmonkeys Peel and Stick Wall Graphic - Paesaggio Invernale - 36"W x 25"H





  • ALL orders CUSTOM printed. When you place an order, the image is made in the USA, just for you!
  • Printed on WHITE, premium, self-adhesive, re-positionable fabric paper.
  • No nails, frames or glue. No professional installation required.
  • Simply peel and stick! Easy to remove and re-apply.
  • BE SURE you ordered the right size for your intended use!





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Wallmonkeys Peel and Stick Wall Graphic - Paesaggio Invernale - 36"W x 25"H










   Brand: WallMonkeys




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Wallmonkeys Peel and Stick Wall Graphic - Paesaggio Invernale - 36"W x 25"H Overviews




WallMonkeys wall graphics are printed on the highest quality re-positionable, self-adhesive fabric paper. Each order is printed in-house and on-demand. WallMonkeys uses premium materials & state-of-the-art production technologies. Our white fabric material is superior to vinyl decals. You can literally see and feel the difference. Our wall graphics apply in minutes and won't damage your paint or leave any mess. PLEASE double check the size of the image you are ordering prior to clicking the 'ADD TO CART' button. Our graphics are offered in a variety of sizes and prices.
  • WallMonkeys are intended for indoor use only.
  • Printed on-demand in the United States Your order will ship within 3 business days, often sooner. Some orders require the full 3 days to allow dark colors and inks to fully dry prior to shipping. Quality is worth waiting an extra day for!
  • Removable and will not leave a mark on your walls.
  • 'Fotolia' trademark will be removed when printed.
  • Our catalog of over 10 million images is perfect for virtually any use: school projects, trade shows, teachers classrooms, colleges, nurseries, college dorms, event planners, and corporations of all size.





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  • Monday, July 11, 2011

    Hitler youth documentary about Baldur von Schirach Part 1.

    Part 1. Documentary about the Hitler Youth and their leader Baldur Benedikt von Schirach with also a few speeches of Adolf Hitler. Baldur Benedikt von Schirach (9 May 1907 -- 8 August 1974) was the head of the Hitler-Jugend (HJ, Hitler Youth) and Gauleiter and Reichsstatthalter ("Reich Governor") of Vienna. Schirach was born in Berlin, the youngest of four children of theatre director Rittmeister Carl Baily Norris von Schirach (1873 - 1948) and his American wife Emma Middleton Lynah Tillou (1872 - 1944). Through his mother, Schirach descended from two signatories of the United States Declaration of Independence[who?]. English was in fact the first language which he learned at home and he was not able to speak German until the age of five. He had two sisters, Viktoria and Rosalind von Schirach, and a brother, Karl Benedict von Schirach, who committed suicide in 1919 at the age of 19. On 31 March 1932 von Schirach married 19-year-old Henriette Hoffmann, the daughter of Heinrich Hoffmann, Adolf Hitler's personal photographer and close friend. Hoffmann's professional relationship with Hitler is examined by Otto Strasser, who claims that the sole copyrights for Hitler photographs were granted to Hoffmann in exchange for acquiescence towards Hitler's extra-marital involvement with his daughter, something Hoffmann initially demanded an explanation for in 1926. Von Schirach, says Strasser, was "a young effeminate aristocrat" upon whom Hitler bestowed Henriette and the HJ position ...

    Sunday, May 15, 2011

    Two Americas!

    Similar Videos: ILoveProfHowdy.Com +++ "Let every student be plainly instructed and earnestly pressed to consider well the main end of his life and studies is to know God and Jesus Christ which is eternal life (John 17:3)." The Laws and Statutes of Harvard College in 1643 "All scholars shall live religious, godly, and blameless lives according to the rules of God's Word, diligently reading the Holy Scriptures, the fountain of light and truth; and constantly attend upon all the duties of religion, both in public and secret." Two central requirements in Yale College 1745 charter +++ "I believe the Bible is the best gift God has ever given to man. All the good from the Savior of the world is communicated to us through this book." -- President Abraham Lincoln "The Bible is worth all other books which have ever been printed." - Patrick Henry (original member of the Continental Congress) "The Bible is the anchor of our liberties." - President US Grant "It is impossible to enslave mentally or socially a Bible-reading people. The principals of the Bible are the groundwork of human freedom." - Horace Greeley (Editor) "That Book is the rock on which our Republic rests." - President Andrew Jackson "In all my perplexities and distresses, the Bible has never failed to give me light and strength." - Gen. Robert E. Lee "So great is my veneration for the Bible that the earlier my children begin to read it the more confident will be my hope that they will prove useful citizens of their ...

    Saturday, April 9, 2011

    YouTube Partner Meetup Livestream: Ask YouTube

    Ask the YouTube team your burning questions about YouTube and the partner program.

    Saturday, January 22, 2011

    Create Memories of Lifetime In India

    Your honey moon is a lifetime investment. Travelling in India provides you with all sorts of comfort and opportunities. India travel packages understands you properly and offers some of the best and cost competitive tour packages and present India in unexplored pattern. India tour packages offers best packages which includes South India tour packages, pilgrimage tour packages, Heritage Tour Packages, wildlife tour packages, honeymoon tour, adventure tour and many more under the same roof.

    Honeymoon is the time to relax and get close and understand your partner in a better way. Honeymoon in India offers romantic gate way which you can treasure throughout your life. The cost of Honeymoon packages in India is minimal because of which honeymooners can have extreme fun in minimal prices. There are many online portals that can help you in hotel booking, flight booking and reservation for honeymoon packages in India. There are many reliable tour operators also who can help you in arranging your Honeymoon package in India.

    You can have your honey moon package at Goa, Shimla, Manali, Rajasthan, Nanital, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Andaman and Nicobar Island, Jammu and Kashmir and many more.

    Honeymoon tours India offers a complete experience of breathtaking and most romantic options in India. The sensuality pedals the land of India and love is in the air all over as you plan your honeymoon in India. Make your honeymoon witness the memories of TajMahal in Agra, Images of Khajuraho and define a whole new definition of love. Allocate the beauty and tranquility of Honeymoon in India with your loved one in a unique style.

    The various packages offered by honeymoon tours India are Romance in Rajasthan, Indulging Himalayas, Golden Triangle & Glories of Gwalior, Forts and palaces of Rajasthan, Exotic Rajasthan & Darjeeling, Honeymooners paradise, Sikkim valley of lovers and many more. You can book your package online as the booking conditions are available. Applying for visa is also not a big deal Indian government offers easy visa facility to the honeymooner from abroad. These suggested itineraries can also help you to plan your trip yourself or get it tailor made as per you requirement.

    Honey moon in India will actually take care of all your needs so that your focus is on the fun. Mark your honeymoon with golden ink by having your honeymoon package in India.




    Author is an associate editor for India Travel Packages. Get all possible information about Honeymoon Packages India and Honeymoon Tours India. We also provide information about online hotel reservation, Flights Booking and Holiday Packages in India.

    Tuesday, January 4, 2011

    The Brief History of Sexy Lingerie

    It is well recorded that the female figure varies a greatly. History shows that it has always been like this!

    Historically, what's been fashionable for the shape of the female body has gone from the sublime to the ridiculous! However, the dazzling female body has always been subject to what is covering it and history shows us that it's been covered in many different ways. Also, different parts of the feminine form have been accentuated, concealed, reduced, enlarged by the style of the current fashionable frill fripperies.

    We've witnessed some almost unthinkable extremes, from devices that required a small army to force the unfortunate fashion victim into, to the flimsiest, most whimsical mere flutter of a garment. Let's take a trip back at how sexy lingerie has developed and how it got to where it is today.

    To start with, let's get some terminology straightened out. Thanks to the world's most passionate language, we now usually refer to female 'underwear' as 'lingerie' - unless we're being derogatory in which case, depending on where you live, you can fill in the spaces!

    When we (at least us men) think of lingerie, we think of a flimsy material embellishing the female body in a way that gives us a hint of the pleasure that lie underneath. But the 'first' lingerie, probably from one of the Ancient Greek islands, was much different. These bewitching Greek women used a boned corset fitted tightly around the midriff, not for support or even for a 'slimming' effect, but to attract their men by showing their thrusting breasts in a most conspicuous way. Maybe not what we would call lingerie today but with much the same desired effect.

    As time passed, the female form took on new 'perfect' shapes dependant on the vogue. As each 'perfect' form emerged, frill fripperies were perfected and developed to flatter and accentuate that desired shape. The culture of the society dictated whether the breasts, the bottom or both would be highlighted and glorified. You could argue that nothing much has altered!

    During Medieval times it was thought that the natural form and shape of a woman should be constrained and that the breasts should be firm and small. This condition was probably admirable for those normally built that way but perhaps not so good for those of a more luscious construction. Many types of corset were worn with the single purpose of flattening the breasts and/or the bottom. It has been said that, in order to draw attention to that part of the anatomy that shouldn't draw attention, some women folk wore small bells over their breasts to remind the men folk of the pleasure that still lay tantalizingly beneath.

    The 'modern' corset is said to have been introduced by Catherine de Médicis, wife of King Henri II of France. She enforced a ban on chunky waists at court attendance during the 1550s and had a questionable effect on women folk for the next 350 years.

    The Renaissance saw another change in the preferred female shape. Women now required cone shaped breasts, flat stomachs and slim waists. In order to actualize this look, they also needed to employ maids or family members to dress them because the cinching up of their corsets was done from behind and required much effort.

    Due to this unnatural method of bringing about 'perfection', Doctors and other notaries contended that these corsets restricted women's bodies so tightly that their internal organs were being impaired and their ribs were being permanently misshapen. Around that time it was common for women folk to collapse or fall into a swoon. This was usually put down to their delicate nature but, in fact, it was because they simply found it difficult to breathe! There are many accounts of women folk dying because of serious punctures to vital organs due to this practice.

    In the early 18th century the whalebone corset still kept women folk tightly bound but the artistry that reflected the times was painstakingly incorporated into clothing and the corsets were decorated with dazzling ribbons, lace and embroidery. A part of this lightening up was the fact that it became fashionable for the breasts to be pushed upwards to the point of almost popping out.

    Towards the end of the 18th century the corset was being worn by the gentry, the burgeoning middle class and even by nuns in convents. It was often proudly displayed by its wearer because it was a visible outer item of clothing at that time. In itself it was an object of beauty and ornamentation and its display was part of social civility.

    However, as people became more educated and aware, they started to question and critique many things including art, politics and, you guessed it, vogue. Backed up by professional people like doctors, public opinion became such that boned corsets were actually outlawed in many localities.

    By the early 19th century, a much softer approach to the female shape became popular. The vogue still demanded the support that the old corset had given so it returned with more elaborate methods of construction. Boning was still used in small sections which allowed for better and more comfortable movement.

    The vogue at the time was for a more separated look for breasts and a corsetiere by the name of M Leroy (who designed the wedding corset for Marie Luise of Austria when she married Napoleon Bonaparte in 1810) perfected a model which he called a 'divorce', allegedly because of the 'separation' involved. The most significant aspect of this perhaps, was the fact that women folk were able to dress and undress themselves due to more elaborate lacing construction.

    During the 1840s the extremely exaggerated shape for women folk caused whalebone to come back with huge hoops and crinolines that were covered with all kinds of fabric and fineries. Unfortunately for women folk, it became the vogue to have waists small enough for a man to put his hands around and the need for even harder waist-cinching became the female nightmare of the day.

    It wasn't long before hoops and crinolines were replaced by the soft 'S' silhouette. This style still used the corset but added a bustle to the back creating an exaggerated rump. Once again it was the women folk who had to suffer for vogue, needing to stand most of the time due to the cumbersome bustle on their rumps. Obviously men found this appealing because it gave them more opportunities to stare at the sexy women folk with their large bustles.

    As more innovation came to vogue design, greater varieties of corsets were developed. During the morning, a lady could wear a lightly-boned corset for visiting friends, an elastic corset for riding sidesaddle, a boneless corset for an excursion to the beach and a jersey corset for riding her bike. The corsetry industry was in its heyday!

    Towards the end of the 19th century the corset supported not only the breasts but also the newly developed stocking. Stockings were held up by garters and suspenders which were then attached to the corset. These devices, although a triumph of design, probably added yet another frustrating aspect to the vogue-conscious female of the day.

    By the beginning of the 20th century, corsets were being laced down as far as the knee. But many people didn't like that style, and vogue designers were leaning towards an uncorseted, more free-flowing style. Sexy lingerie was about to take a whole new dimension. With the advent of the industrial revolution, and the introduction of the sewing machine, Germany and France introduced the first corset manufacturing facilities.

    In 1910 Mary Phelps Jacob a New York socialite developed a new type of bra. Not happy with the corset stiffened with whalebone which she was supposed to wear under a new evening gown, Mary worked with her maid to sew two silk handkerchiefs together with some pink ribbon and cord. It was much softer and shorter than a corset and it allowed the breasts to be shaped in their natural condition.

    Mary Phelps Jacob was the first to patent an item of underwear named 'Brassiere', the name derived from the old French word for 'upper arm'. a little while after, she sold the bra patent to the Warner Brothers Corset Company in Bridgeport, Connecticut, for $1,500 (over $25,600 these days).

    In 1917 the War Industries Board of the United States asked women folk to stop purchasing corsets to free up metal for the production of war materials. This step released some 28,000 tons of metal, sufficient to build a pair of battleships.

    It has been said that the success of the bra is due mainly to World War I. World War I altered gender roles for good, putting many women folk to work in manufacturing facilities and wearing uniforms for the first time. Women needed practical, comfortable undergarments. Warner went on to amass over 000 dollars from the brassiere patent over the next 30 years.

    The other thing to take into consideration in the death of the corset was that World War I had taken its toll on the number of men. This meant more competition for finding a man so women folk needed to look their sexiest!

    With the Roaring Twenties and its sophisticated parties, vogue was turned on its back, the boyish look was in. The crusade for flat chests and stomachs along with straight hips and buttocks led to the introduction of the liberty bodice, the chemise, and bloomers which were loose-fitting and light. For the first time pastel-colored underwear appeared to replace plain old-fashioned white. To enhance the boyish look the first brassieres were perfected to flatten the breasts. What happened to the corset? The rump part that held up the stockings was shortened and became the suspender belt.

    The full-figured look came back in the 1930s. The feminine look once again became the vogue. Women were encouraged to look well-proportioned with a full-figure while remaining reasonably slim in the hips. Now women folk had a full set of underwear to help with the image: breast-enhancing brassieres, elastic suspender belts, not forgetting the girdle, which kept all the curves in their designated place.

    The 1930s also saw one of the biggest advancements in the underwear industry when the Dunlop Rubber company developed Lastex, an elastic, two-way stretch textile made from the fine thread of a chemically modified rubber called Latex. This could be interwoven with fabric which allowed the industry to make underwear in several sizes to appropriately fit a woman's body.

    The beginning of World War II and its shortages meant that Germany was unable to import the fabrics they had used up until then and their industry failed. Forever inventive, people started making home-knitted underwear out of materials to hand. Not the sexiest of lingerie but at least they kept themselves warm.

    At the end of hostilities underwear consisted of basic brassieres and suspender belts. This was acceptable to the majority of women folk but the teenage girl, just coming out of the oppression of the war years, became a target market. These young females could barely wait to become adults and wearing lingerie was a huge way towards achieving that aim. The German underwear industry developed lingerie sets that appealed to these young girls and the industry never looked back.

    In the U.S.A., the underwear industry was trying to create something new and cutting edge. Women were bombarded with all kinds of undergarments and top clothing to help them look sexy. The film producer Howard Hughes developed a new bra, a special wire-reinforced device for Jane Russell. This caused the censors throw their toys out of the crib about Jane's breasts being blatantly exposed all because of Hughes' terrifically innovative bra improvements.

    The Swinging 60s was a terrible era for the underwear industry thanks to the rise of women's emancipation movements. Feminists burned their brassieres and many lingerie companies were forced to close down. However Lycra had just been developed and women folk began to wear tight-fitting leggings. The iconic vogue item of that era however, was arguably the sexy little mini-skirt and the demand for bikini briefs. Famously, for a fleeting moment in time, topless swimsuits and topless dresses were the rage. But, unfortunately for most men and fortunately for the vogue industry, they were merely a 'flash-in-the-pan'!

    The 1980s saw the wire-reinforced bra become the number one best seller. While these are still in demand these days, the best seller at the moment is the push-up bra. Statistics show the average American woman owns six brassieres, one of which is a strapless bra and one is a color other than white.

    The modern female shape varies and is not as susceptible to fashion trends as in previous times. However, the dazzling sex will always looks breathtaking in sexy, slinky lingerie!

    So, there we have it. From the push-up corsets of ancient Greece to the push-up bra of today. Sexy lingerie? Nothing ever really changes!




    Clive Johnson works in the fashion industry and runs a target="_new" Sexy Lingerie & Underwear website