Nancy Sinatra and 60s Style
As frank sinatra's daughter Nancy is destined to become famous, but this is her smoking diagram, defense makeup, and signature shoes, made her become household names. Nancy sinatra shows her own pipeline in the song "these boots for QuZhong", "bang bang, my baby shot me down)," and James Bond's theme, "you only live twice," and she had a brief acting career and elvis Presley starred in. We are doing a review her most fashionable moment in the 1960 s, from the big hair fashion men's clothing, and even consider a very terrible and simple Halloween costumes. Joanna. Douglas, senior fashion and beauty editor
Nancy in stripe, in the 1960 s
We just realize that you can for vertical and horizontal stripe different colors and sizes. Nancy doing this 50 years ago.
Nancy in stripe, in the 1960 s
We just realize that you can for vertical and horizontal stripe different colors and sizes. Nancy doing this 50 years ago.
News about Britney Spears and her fiance
Britney Spears just filed papers requesting her fiance as a co-conservator. Currently, her father Jamie Spears holds legal control over her multimillion-dollar fortune.
On Friday, the request to make Jason Trawick her co-conservator was made by Spears’ court-appointed attorney, E! News reports. Later this month, on April 25, that request will be considered by a judge. If fiancé Jason Trawick is named co-conservator, he will have control over her well-being, not her finances.
Spears and Trawick have been dating since 2009 and announced their engagement in December of last year. This legal action won’t speed up their matrimony. In fact, it was not Trawick’s idea at being co-conservator but Britney’s father.
Trawick was Spears’ manager from 2008 until earlier this year, when he stepped down from the position “to focus on their romantic relationship,” Rolling Stone reports. Meanwhile, Trawick plans to open an arts and entertainment division for Famos LLC, which includes partners Mick Jagger and Dave Stewart.
Since February of 2008 Britney has been under court supervision where Spears has met with the judge for updates on her health and finances. Her father stepped in for control in 2008 after months of questionable behavior. Following Spears’ divorce from Kevin Federline in 2006, she spent time in a drug rehabilitation facility, shaved her head and infamously hit an SUV with an umbrella outside Federline’s home.
After disastrous photo shoots, a lack luster performance at the MTV Video Music Awards and losing primary custody of her children, she was hospitalized in January of 2008. Britney’s news making headlines only continued with numerous paparazzi run-ins and continuous admittance into medical centers. With Trawick possibly becoming co-conservator one can only hope her troubled past is long behind her.
My analysis: the risk of sports fans
Steelers season-ticket holder Tom Duffy didn't have many reasons to cheer during last October's game against the Jacksonville Jaguars. Starting quarterback Ben Roethlisberger was sidelined with an injury, the back-up QB threw three interceptions and his team lost, 23-17 , in overtime - its second straight loss at home.
But the Steelers had their better moments, including an interception that sent Duffy to his feet screaming. The joy was short-lived in more ways than one.
"I screamed and something went off in my head," says Duffy, 37, a pension analyst. "Immediately it was this huge headache, like my head was on fire."
Being the diehard fan that he is, Duffy stayed through overtime to watch the end of the game. By the next morning, though, he knew something was really wrong.
Do not miss these the Health stories
Courtesy, Rick Perk,
Unsnipped: Vasectomy do-overs on the rise
A rising number of American men who underwent vasectomies - a procedure once considered permanent - are choosing microsurgeries to re-hook or reroute their reproductive tubes, according to two leading urologists.
Hi-tech shirt, 'nudges' you into the right yoga, positions
Boys, smile less in yearbook photos after age 11
'Macho' dudes are more likely to sacrifice for the team
The Eye Burns linked to the Clear Care, cleaner The
"I was very discombobulated," Duffy says, and he had a lingering headache.
A call to his doctor led to a prompt trip to the emergency room, where he was put through a battery of tests, including a spinal tap, MRI and angiogram.
Blood in the spinal fluid was a tell-tale sign that Duffy had burst a blood vessel in his brain during his outburst at the game. He spent four days in the hospital for observation and additional tests. Then he was discharged with strict doctor's orders. "Going forward, they told me not to scream," he says.
Attention sports fans: sometimes watching the game can be hazardous to your health. While sports can be a great way to blow off steam, bond with friends and the local community, and learn a thing or two about teamwork, there are some risks involved that go beyond gaining a beer belly or chipping a tooth while opening a cold one with your mouth. And the madness isn't just in March, it's year-round.
But the Steelers had their better moments, including an interception that sent Duffy to his feet screaming. The joy was short-lived in more ways than one.
"I screamed and something went off in my head," says Duffy, 37, a pension analyst. "Immediately it was this huge headache, like my head was on fire."
Being the diehard fan that he is, Duffy stayed through overtime to watch the end of the game. By the next morning, though, he knew something was really wrong.
Do not miss these the Health stories
Courtesy, Rick Perk,
Unsnipped: Vasectomy do-overs on the rise
A rising number of American men who underwent vasectomies - a procedure once considered permanent - are choosing microsurgeries to re-hook or reroute their reproductive tubes, according to two leading urologists.
Hi-tech shirt, 'nudges' you into the right yoga, positions
Boys, smile less in yearbook photos after age 11
'Macho' dudes are more likely to sacrifice for the team
The Eye Burns linked to the Clear Care, cleaner The
"I was very discombobulated," Duffy says, and he had a lingering headache.
A call to his doctor led to a prompt trip to the emergency room, where he was put through a battery of tests, including a spinal tap, MRI and angiogram.
Blood in the spinal fluid was a tell-tale sign that Duffy had burst a blood vessel in his brain during his outburst at the game. He spent four days in the hospital for observation and additional tests. Then he was discharged with strict doctor's orders. "Going forward, they told me not to scream," he says.
Attention sports fans: sometimes watching the game can be hazardous to your health. While sports can be a great way to blow off steam, bond with friends and the local community, and learn a thing or two about teamwork, there are some risks involved that go beyond gaining a beer belly or chipping a tooth while opening a cold one with your mouth. And the madness isn't just in March, it's year-round.