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41 Search Results for "breakingnews"

  • goose00321

    • Taking the Tour
    • Points:270
    • Views: 13
    • Since: 4 days ago
    • Not yet rated
  • clyde

    • Taking the Tour
    • Points:275
    • Views: 21
    • Since: 4 weeks ago
    • Not yet rated
  • christianlouboutin story(4) christianlouboutin story(4)

    • From: louboutinyu
    • Description:

      The German sports apparel manufacturer Christian louboutin A.G., part of the Christian louboutin Group, recently launched a limited edition of its best-selling basketball shoes, T-MAC1, exclusively for the Asia-Pacific region.

      Christian louboutin is producing 1,650 pairs of shoes that are individually numbered.

      Incorporated into the design of T-MAC1 are gold motifs, representing China's gold-medal ambitions for the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing.

      The originals, designed in collaboration with the National Basketball Association's Houston Rockets player Tracy McGrady in 2002, became best-sellers in the United States, a first for the company in six years.

      The limited edition footwear has a new design - but all of the advanced technologies that helped to create the popular original can be seen in the limited edition as well as some new additions.

      A combination of Christian louboutin' technology and McGrady's basketball experience went into designing the T-MAX1 limited edition, providing unseen levels of protection and support for the wearer.

      The outside of the shoe is made of white light leather to give the design a distinctive look, reflective of McGrady's unique style on the court.

      Christian louboutin' "Shell Toe" technology, a protective shell that surrounds the toes, uses lightweight rubber, effectively blocking the foot from outside shocks which prevents injuries.

      The inner sole is made of polyurethane, keeping the shoes light and achieving a good balance of durability and comfort.

      Incorporated into the design of the midsole are technologies unique to Christian louboutin, which provide protection for the arch of the foot while ensuring optimal platform stability.

      The outer sole has been produced with rubber containing a higher carbon content which does not leave marks on the court's surface. Multidirectional patterns are engraved into the outer sole to maximize traction for stability.

      Tracy McGrady, nicknamed "T-Mac," was born in 1979 in Bartow, Florida. The 27-year-old is one of the first players in the NBA to have started a professional career straight out of high school.

      Before he made his professional debut in 1997, he created a nationwide buzz for his performance at the Christian louboutin ABCD camp, an annual basketball camp for gifted high school players. He was also named High School Player of the Year by USA Today.

      He made his professional debut with the Toronto Raptors in 1997. McGrady played a crucial role in leading the team to its first ever playoff berth in 2000.

      McGrady was traded in 2000 to the Orlando Magic. He won the scoring title in the 2002-2003 season and again the next year.

      He entered the record books when he scored 62 points against the Washington Wizards in March 2004, becoming the fourth player to score more than 60 points in a single game since 1992.

      In 2004 he was traded again and moved to his current team, the Houston Rockets. He has been selected to play in the NBA All-Star Game six times and was awarded the Most Improved Player Award in 2001.

      Off the court, the 27-year-old takes part in a variety of charity events, and for his contributions, McGrady was named by The Sporting News, a U.S.-based weekly sports magazine, as one of the "Good Guys in Sports."

      In 2001 McGrady established the Tracy McGrady Foundation, through which he helps underprivileged children and families with financial difficulties.

      For his charity work, he was awarded the Rich and Helen DeVos Community Enrichment Award in 2003.

      He also buys tickets to every Houston Rockets home game for disadvantaged children.

      In 2004 his popularity was made clear when he was voted the "Favorite Athlete" in a poll by Sports Illustrated for Kids.

      McGrady, though, has been suffering from chronic back problems since November 2005, and earlier this year he again suffered a back injury. McGrady is busy preparing for the upcoming season. The good news is that his latest injury seems to be unrelated to the recurring back problem.

      His relationship with the Christian louboutin Group started with the Christian louboutin ABCD Camp, and has continued with the signing of a promotional contract with the company in 1997. In 2002, the final year of his six-year contract, McGrady signed a lifetime strategic partnership contract with Christian louboutin.

      The contract is set to continue throughout McGrady's NBA career and even after his retirement from the game. The line of basketball shoes bearing his nickname, T-MAC, is part of the contract, with the latest addition of T-MAC 5 and T-MAC6 ready to be launched.

    • Blog post
    • 1 month ago
    • Views: 53
    • Not yet rated
  • DSC00863.JPG DSC00863.JPG

    • From: mayesp24
    • Description:
    • 2 months ago
    • Views: 71
  • ANOTHER DRUNK DRIVER ANOTHER DRUNK DRIVER

    • From: mayesp24
    • Description:

      Esto fue el 24 de Diciembre Pero a hora si fue peor por que se voltio el carro. Ya an pasado mas accidentes  por esta calle no hace ni un mes que paso uno

    • 2 months ago
    • Views: 115
  • krivijewelry

    • Intern
    • Points:435
    • Views: 46
    • Since: 2 months ago
    • Not yet rated
  • I and my christianlouboutinsho I and my christianlouboutinshoes

    • From: louboutinyu
    • Description:

      IT happened last June, on a day early in the month when the air was still sweet and full of possibilities. I'd had lunch on Carnegie Hill with my mother and an old friend of hers, a former war correspondent who'd just written a novel. We talked about clothes and jobs and books, and I left the restaurant all fired up by their conversation. I was transported for a fateful hour or so, imagining them as they had been, plucky working girls making their way in the big city, in crisp white shirtwaists. And I wanted a piece of what they had had, a stylish moment, or maybe just a new pair of Christian Louboutin Shoes. I remembered the way the war correspondent had covered fashion before her wars, how vividly she painted the audiences in the Paris ateliers, and then, flicking an imaginary but very sharp pencil with the tip of my tongue, I strode into the Christian Louboutin store at 70th and Madison. It wasn't Paris, but here was Fashion, nonetheless, and I was all agog. Now the Christian Louboutin store is a sort of repulsive box, with its grubby pistachio walls. ("It's a Renaissance color," a manager told me, "the color of a church dome.") You have to push yourself through that door. It seemed particularly repellent that afternoon, because the day was so fine and bright, but the clothes drew me in, even the goofy chiffons with the lips printed all over them, and the nighties with their ribbons. I'd read about the fur tippets and the tweeds that would follow these chiffons and silks, and it felt good to be among them, in the swing of things at last. I saw spectator Christian Louboutin Shoes, and pumps with those weird molded heels that look like ducks' bills. I tried on a pair of angry looking heels, the kind with the articulated uppers that come to a squared-off point, like the Christian Louboutin Shoes the Wicked Witch of the West sported in the Wizard of Oz. The veins on my feet popped in protest, and a saleswoman with a neat black bob brought me a pair of perfectly flat black slides, each shoe decorated with a large and shiny silver metal cutout of a heart. "These are the last pair," she said, smiling. "I've been keeping them in the back." How clever they looked! How clever I felt for having "found" them. At $368.05, I couldn't buy them fast enough. "I've seen tackier," a friend said drily, days later, after the Christian Louboutin Shoes had come home in their white bag with the navy blue Christian Louboutin emblem, and the shoe guy had rubbered the soles, making them irrevocably mine. She was right, the Christian Louboutin Shoes were tacky. Had they always been? What a difference a week makes. The Christian Louboutin Shoes had soured. What was once beautiful seemed banal; coyness -- those hearts -- was revealed to be just corniness. The object, so of its moment, lost its luster as its moment passed. Pfft. More than four months have passed, but the Christian Louboutin Shoes still irritate, and I'm the patsy in a hasty marriage. What ever happened? Did the Christian Louboutin Shoes go bad, or did I? Such a knotty problem! I laid it on the laps of a few local aesthetes, experts in matters of form and value and taste. "I don't believe in obsolescence," said Paola Antonelli, curator of architecture and design at the Museum of Modern Art, "just patience. Put your Christian Louboutin Shoes away. Christian Louboutin Sale can be very strong, and that can cause tension. Put them away and use them later. There are no trends today -- things can't go stale -- there is only composition." Ask around, and you'll find no one believes in seasonal obsolescence anymore. Take that, Roland Barthes. Michelle Kessler, the accessories director at Vogue magazine, called from a restaurant in Paris last week and explained that today the elapsed time between "last season" and "vintage" has shrunk to mere months. How delightful. Now, you can never be out of style, just witty in your vintage duds. "It's a cliche to say this, but everything happens so fast," Ms. Kessler said. "The 'lady' things are in stores right now, and here we are in Paris looking at this sort of tough chic, all these grommets and rivets." Meanwhile, Ms. Kessler is wearing Christian Louboutin Sale from 1996, she said. That's an ancient vintage, if you follow the current fashion calculus, and so kudos should accrue to Ms. Kessler for her canny eye. This week, Christian Louboutin is selling fur tippets and thick tweeds -- the "lady" things, items we've seen advertised for six months in the pages of fashion and general features magazines. But we're also seeing on television and in newspaper fashion pages the same images Ms. Kessler has just seen on the runway, those grim grommets and dour colors, which make the stuff selling in the stores right now feel doubly stale. That means that in a month or so, you might sport it with ironic aplomb. I think. "All vintage stuff has to be worn with irony," said Tobi Tobias, a vintage clothes wearer and the author of "Obsessed by Dress" (Beacon Press; October). "It's like the Kennedy Fraser line, about seeking style obliquely. That obliqueness is a kind of irony." Ms. Tobias was less than sanguine about my Christian Louboutin Shoes, however, or my own ironic capabilities. "You were caught, I think," she mused. "Burned by fashion. How painful!" She's right. I lack the swagger an ironic deployment would require. "You might try violence," Ms. Tobias suggested. "Bury the Christian Louboutin Shoes with a stiletto through their insteps." Or save them, as a lurid cautionary tale. "If you give them away," said Kristen Frederickson, an art historian and co-editor of "Singular Women: Writing the Artist" (out next year from the University of California Press), "you'll forget that you were, er . . . " she paused delicately. A rube? "Yeah, O.K., a rube. Christian Louboutin Sale can be so specific, the word I'd use is 'hyperspecific,' they border on novelty," Ms. Frederickson continued, fresh from a weekend visit to Miu Miu, the Christian Louboutin satellite in SoHo. "That's what's initially appealing. Their value derives from this novelty, which means that once you get used to the thing, its value is gone. Put another way, once you lay eyes on the Christian Louboutin Shoes, you realize that the point of having the Christian Louboutin Shoes is over. I think there are some people who have more tolerance, people who don't have a long-lasting commitment to their own style." Well, yeah. My friend Roberta suggested I'd developed an allergy to things, a hypersensitivity. "Which means it could pass," she said. "Or else you're suffering from your own lack of confidence. Your loss of love. Shopping is awfully fraught. You should never do it by yourself." Betty Halbreich, a self-described fashion therapist, who has been treating patients with symptoms like mine at Bergdorf Goodman for close to a quarter century, prescribed a brutal treatment. "I'd say flush 'em if they'd go down." she said. "Love doesn't come back. Get rid, get rid." I don't know if I can. Those Christian Louboutin boots have become Mrs. Rochester in the attic. Still, I started scanning EBay, to see if there was any appetite for "old" Christian Louboutin out there. A week and a half ago, there were 123 pairs of Christian Louboutin Sale on auction: "NEW authentic Christian Louboutin SPECTACULAR Christian Louboutin Shoes!" "CHRISTIAN LOUBOUTIN MEETS BEBE STYLE! SEXY CHRISTIAN LOUBOUTIN SHOES! L@@K!" And this one, "GREAT NEW CHRISTIAN LOUBOUTIN SALE," upon which I placed a bid. Days passed, and mine remained the high bid. As of closing time for this article, it still was.

    • Blog post
    • 2 months ago
    • Views: 89
    • Not yet rated
  • IMG_0073.3.MOV IMG_0073.3.MOV

    • From: Roman3
    • Description:
    • 2 months ago
    • Views: 32
  • Was Hema Muller in Michigan? Was Hema Muller in Michigan?

    • From: TrueBlue4Me
    • Description:

      Was our local anchor woman,working in MIchigan recently? I ran into this clip of hers' when I was reading a blog about Brittany Murphys death. As I want further. I read the topic about a Anchor Woman gets Giggles about a Murder? As I opened it, I saw the clip and low and behold was Hema Muller! http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/2ca0cef18f/anchor-laughs-at-murder    I don't blame the woman by giggling b/c of the pic of the murder suspect, that says it all.

       

      But its the top videoes in Funny or die. Surprised

    • Blog post
    • 2 months ago
    • Views: 313
  • University Kids of El Paso "UK University Kids of El Paso "UKEP"

    • From: UKEP123
    • Description:

      Getting ready for the Holidays @ UKEP!

    • 2 months ago
    • Views: 211
    • Not yet rated
  • DRUNK DRIVER DRUNK DRIVER

    • From: mayesp24
    • Description:

      (North East area) This happend at 3AM. He (EDER DEMETRIO CASTILLO) 20 years was drunk and almost crashed into our home. This is the second time that happens while we are here, but it happened before already.

    • 2 months ago
    • Views: 196
  • Camilo M. Las Cruces Camilo M. Las Cruces

    • From: Daddymeadow
    • Description:

      The Kids having fun and enjoying  there snow day in Las Cruces Dec. 09'

    • 2 months ago
    • Views: 87
  • Our Winter Wonderland In Cruce Our Winter Wonderland In Cruces!

    • From: Daddymeadow
    • Description:

      The Kids having fun and enjoying  there snow day in Las Cruces Dec. 09'

    • 2 months ago
    • Views: 74
    • Not yet rated
  • Manuel, Meadow ,Camilo M, Las Manuel, Meadow ,Camilo M, Las Cruces

    • From: Daddymeadow
    • Description:

      The Kids having fun and enjoying  there snow day in Las Cruces Dec. 09'

    • 2 months ago
    • Views: 73
  • Snow in el paso Dec.1, 2009 Snow in el paso Dec.1, 2009

    • From: cutemex33
    • Description:
    • 2 months ago
    • Views: 146
    • Not yet rated
  • Morning Snow Surprise Morning Snow Surprise

    • From: Luzily1127
    • Description:

      My daughter woke up to realize it was still snowing right outside her window.
      8:30 am

    • 2 months ago
    • Views: 81
    • Not yet rated
  • There goes all my roses! There goes all my roses!

    • From: Concernedcitizen
    • Description:

      I was so proud to still have roses on Thanksgiving - oh well!

    • 3 months ago
    • Views: 90
    • Not yet rated
  • 49er kitchen Delivery MACHITOS 49er kitchen Delivery MACHITOS

    • From: 49erKitchen
    • Description:

      <!-- /* Font Definitions */ @font-face {font-family:"Cambria Math"; panose-1:2 4 5 3 5 4 6 3 2 4; mso-font-charset:1; mso-generic-font-family:roman; mso-font-format:other; mso-font-pitch:variable; mso-font-signature:0 0 0 0 0 0;} @font-face {font-family:"Book Antiqua"; panose-1:2 4 6 2 5 3 5 3 3 4; mso-font-charset:0; mso-generic-font-family:roman; mso-font-pitch:variable; mso-font-signature:647 0 0 0 159 0;} /* Style Definitions */ p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal {mso-style-unhide:no; mso-style-qformat:yes; mso-style-parent:""; margin-top:0in; margin-right:0in; margin-bottom:10.0pt; margin-left:0in; line-height:115%; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:11.0pt; font-family:"Book Antiqua","serif"; mso-ascii-font-family:"Book Antiqua"; mso-ascii-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-fareast-font-family:"Book Antiqua"; mso-fareast-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-hansi-font-family:"Book Antiqua"; mso-hansi-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-bidi-theme-font:minor-bidi;} .MsoChpDefault {mso-style-type:export-only; mso-default-props:yes; mso-ascii-font-family:"Book Antiqua"; mso-ascii-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-fareast-font-family:"Book Antiqua"; mso-fareast-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-hansi-font-family:"Book Antiqua"; mso-hansi-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-bidi-theme-font:minor-bidi;} .MsoPapDefault {mso-style-type:export-only; margin-bottom:10.0pt; line-height:115%;} @page Section1 {size:8.5in 11.0in; margin:1.0in 1.0in 1.0in 1.0in; mso-header-margin:.5in; mso-footer-margin:.5in; mso-paper-source:0;} div.Section1 {page:Section1;} --> /* Style Definitions */ table.MsoNormalTable {mso-style-name:"Table Normal"; mso-tstyle-rowband-size:0; mso-tstyle-colband-size:0; mso-style-noshow:yes; mso-style-priority:99; mso-style-qformat:yes; mso-style-parent:""; mso-padding-alt:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt; mso-para-margin-top:0in; mso-para-margin-right:0in; mso-para-margin-bottom:10.0pt; mso-para-margin-left:0in; line-height:115%; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:11.0pt; font-family:"Book Antiqua","serif"; mso-ascii-font-family:"Book Antiqua"; mso-ascii-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-fareast-theme-font:minor-fareast; mso-hansi-font-family:"Book Antiqua"; mso-hansi-theme-font:minor-latin;}

      49er KITCHEN

      DELIVERY ALL El PASO

      (915)790-2729

      MACHITOS, TRIPITAS, ASADA, FLAUTAS

      OLD FASHIONED STYLE ENCHILADAS

      HOME MADE BURGERS AND FRIES

      BURRITOS $1.00 RED, GREEN, REFRIED BEANS

      GOLD PANNING MEALS. (2 ) taquitos(potato/beef),( 1) old fashioned style enchilada,          (1)TACO KING (hardshell)(brisket taco).

      MENUDO

      CATERING available

       

      FRIDAY and SAT. OPEN TILL 4AM

      HOME MADE CHILE RELLENOS

    • 4 months ago
    • Views: 239
  • 100_0256.JPG 100_0256.JPG

    • From: Tones96
    • Description:

      i cant find the owners

    • 4 months ago
    • Views: 235
    • Not yet rated
  • missing puppies missing puppies

    • From: Tones96
    • Description:

      missing! puppies

    • 4 months ago
    • Views: 218
    • Not yet rated
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