Posts Tagged ‘Dolce gabbana women shoes’

Something about Dolce Gabbana Online

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Dolce Gabbana Online is a world of its own within the universe of D&G Dolce & Gabbana: a world where fashion meets irony and fantasy, where music plays a key role to re-define style, and where even the most traditional items, like the pinstripe suit or the black stretch dress, look fresh and attractively young. D&G,the brand name conjures up images of some of the worlds finest fashions in clothing and accessories. The founder of Dolce And Gabbana Outlet have stretched their Italian design influence into nearly every corner of the world and in every type of product, not the least of which have to do with shoes and clothing.

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Thursday, May 20th, 2010

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Dolce & Gabbana shoes range from pumps to tennis shoes, a proof of the brand’s dedication to the art of manufacturing footwear for every possible use imaginable.  The summer line of Dolce Gabbana Women Shoes are now out and you can be sure to make great finds among the stiletto, wedge, sling backs, and open toe varieties. If you are more into flats than high heeled shoes, there are pairs and pairs of D&G doll shoes and string sandals waiting for you to try them on. Get your Real Dolce And Gabbana and all your designer shoes at discount prices here at my Designer Shoes Outlet. Dolce And Gabbana is one of the premier brands that have been lording over the high end market for years now and it has become a force to reckon with when it comes to the style and quality of their various lines in apparel and accessories.

Females Should Own A Pair of Dolce Gabbana Shoes For Women

Monday, May 17th, 2010

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Provincial Governor Survives Iraq Bombings

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

BAGHDAD — Attacks by two suicide bombers on Wednesday in the city of Ramadi killed at least 10 people and wounded more than 30, including the governor of Anbar Province, a police commander said.

Anbar Province, the embattled region west of Baghdad, has been a bellwether for Iraq’s fortunes. In 2004, the killing of four American contractors in Falluja signaled the hardening of the insurgency. In 2006, when tribal leaders in Anbar turned against the insurgency in the Sunni Awakening Council, their efforts brought the first turn toward peace in the country.

On Wednesday morning, insurgents in Ramadi, the provincial capital, brought what may be another reversal in the region’s fortunes. At 9:30 a.m., a car bomb exploded at a police checkpoint near the governor’s office. When Mr. Fahadawi left the office to check on the explosion, a suicide bomber wearing an explosive vest attacked, wounding the governor.

The two bombs killed at least 10 people and wounded 30, according to a police commander, Maj. Gen. Tariq al-Dulaimi. Other reports said more than 20 people were killed and 100 wounded.

American forces took the governor to an American military base for treatment.

“They want to bring Anbar back to the past,” said Sheikh Hameed al-Hies, the head of the Anbar Salvation Council. He said violence in the region was increasing in anticipation of national elections scheduled for March. “The terrorists do not want Anbar people to participate in the elections,” he said.

He blamed the violence among the predominantly Sunni province’s tribes, which often play out among the police and military forces. “The main problem that we are suffering from here in Anbar is the problem of the tribal gathering, which is more dangerous than the sectarian gathering,” he said.

Wednesday’s attack follows a recent rise in deadly insurgent activity that Iraqi and American officials have called an attempt to re-establish the insurgency in a region from which it had been largely routed. In recent months, insurgents in Anbar have killed several important tribal leaders and staged regular attacks on police checkpoints.

A bomb outside a national reconciliation meeting in Ramadi killed 26 people and wounded 65; a suicide bomber killed 16 people at a restaurant popular among police in Falluja, and another killed six people at a police officer’s funeral in Haditha.

Local officials attributed Wednesday’s attack to al Qaeda, which previously had its stronghold in the region. But they also criticized local police for letting the region’s security to diminish. Two years ago, Anbar was a model for what Iraq could become; now it is becoming a warning.

The attacks show that the security forces are ill-equipped to fight a renewed insurgency, said Sheikh Ahmed Abu Resha, the head of the Awakening Council and a candidate for Parliament representing the Iraq Unity Alliance coalition. “Our security forces are fragile and need logistic support,” he said.

Shortly after the attack on Wednesday, the Iraqi Islamic Party, the country’s largest Sunni party, issued a statement declaring the violence an attempt “to bring back chaos again to Anbar territory,” which the party said hindered reconstruction and spread financial and administrative corruption.

Elsewhere in Iraq on Wednesday, violence continued to mar observances of Ashura which commemorates the death of the revered Shiite martyr Imam Hussein. During the two-week observance, hundreds of thousands of black-clad Shiites took to the streets or marched to the shrine city of Karbala. On Wednesday, as mourners in Diyala Province, north of Baghdad, commemorated the imam’s burial, a bomb hidden in a heap of trash killed seven people and wounded 28 others.

It was not immediately clear if Mr. Fahadawi had been a specific target of the bombers, although a new wave of violence has recently been unleashed against the Awakening Council, the confederation of Sunni tribes that sided with the United States to suppress the Islamist insurgency and drive Qaeda operatives and other foreign fighters from the province.

Mr. Fahadawi , a chemical engineer who was born in Ramadi and graduated from Baghdad University, had worked in a military commission under the Baathist government of Saddam Hussein.

He left Iraq in 2006 as fighting raged between coalition forces and the insurgents. He retreated to the United Arab Emirates, then returned to Iraq when the insurgency had been suppressed and Sunni political leaders invited him to participate in the provincial government.

He was chosen to be governor by the head of the Awakening Council, Ahmed Abu Risha, after the council won provincial elections early this year.

John Leland reported from Baghdad, and Mark McDonald from Hong Kong. Anwar J. Ali and Mohammed Hussein contributed reporting from Baghdad, and Iraqi employees of the New York Times from Ramadi and Diyala Province.

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Pope knocked down by woman at Christmas Eve Mass

Friday, December 25th, 2009

In his homily, delivered unflappably after the incident, Benedict urged the world to “wake up” from selfishness and petty affairs, and find time for God and spiritual matters.

The 82-year-old pope was unhurt after his fall, said a Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Ciro Benedettini.

Earlier, in Bethlehem, thousands of pilgrims from around the world descended on the traditional birthplace of Jesus, for the most upbeat Christmas celebrations the Palestinian town has seen in years.

While the Holy Land’s top Roman Catholic clergyman reminded followers that peace remains elusive, while the threat of sectarian violence in the Islamic world and the lava spilling from a volcano in the Philippines clouded the celebrations for other Christian communities across the globe.

At the Vatican, witness video obtained by The Associated Press showed a woman dressed in a red hooded sweat shirt vaulting over the wooden barriers that cordoned off the basilica’s main aisle and rushing toward the pope before being swarmed by bodyguards. She grabbed the pope’s vestments as she was taken down, with Benedict seemingly falling on top of her.

The commotion happened as the pope’s procession was making its way toward the main altar and shocked gasps rang out through the public that packed the basilica. The procession came to a halt and security rushed to the trouble spot.

Benedettini said the woman who pushed the pope appeared to be mentally unstable and had been arrested by Vatican police. He said she also knocked down Cardinal Roger Etchegaray, who was taken to hospital for a check up.

“During the procession an unstable person jumped a barrier and knocked down the Holy Father,” Benedettini told The Associated Press by telephone. “(The pope) quickly got up and continued the procession.”

In Bethlehem, residents celebrated their town’s annual day in the spotlight along with pilgrims and tourists. Visitors milled around Manger Square, mingling with clergymen, camera crews and locals hawking food and trinkets.

Christmas in Bethlehem has its incongruous elements – the troops of Palestinian boy scouts who wear kilts and play bagpipes in one of the town’s holiday traditions, for example, or the inflatable Santa Clauses hanging from church pillars and storefronts looking out of place and overdressed in this Middle Eastern town with not a snowflake in sight.

Jeffrey Lynch, 36, a sanitation worker from New York City, was taking a tour through the Church of the Nativity, the fourth-century Crusader era structure built atop the grottos that mark the spot believed to be the birthplace of Jesus.

“It’s a miracle being here on Christmas Eve. It’s a lifetime opportunity. I wish everybody could be here,” he said.

But the Holy Land’s top Roman Catholic cleric, Latin Patriarch Fouad Twal, reminded listeners in a holiday address that peace remains out of reach. “The wish that we most want, we most hope for, is not coming. We want peace,” Twal said after he passed into Bethlehem in a traditional holiday procession from nearby Jerusalem.

Some Christians in other far-flung parts of the world also saw gloom edge out the holiday cheer.

Baghdad’s small remaining Christian minority was to celebrate midnight Mass in daylight for security reasons, and churches were under heavy guard. A bombing this week targeting a 1,200-year-old church in Mosul killed two passers-by, underscoring Iraqi Christians’ concerns.

A marble palace once occupied by Saddam Hussein housed an impromptu Christmas celebration for US soldiers and others far from home.

“I have mixed emotions,” said Lt. Col Timothy Bedsole, 52, an Army chaplain from Alabama who was marking his second Christmas in Iraq since the 2003 invasion. “It’s a very happy time for us as Christians and a very sad time to be away from our families.”

Few were celebrating at a tent camp 220 miles southwest of Islamabad, Pakistan, erected to house Christians left homeless by a rampage of looting and arson by Muslims in August.

The Christians say they have received cell phone text messages warning them to expect a “special Christmas present.” They’re terrified their tents will be torched or their church services bombed.

“Last year I celebrated Christmas full of joy,” said Irfan Masih, cradling his young son among the canvas shelters and open ditches of the camp. But now “the fear that we may again be attacked is in our hearts.”

Far to the east, in the shadow of the erupting Mayon volcano in the Philippines, thousands of families were spending Christmas Eve in shelters as the volcano belched out 20 gray ash columns Thursday, some of them a mile (1.5 kilometers) high.

Government workers and volunteers tried to keep some 47,000 displaced residents entertained with games, movies and concerts, a heavy burden during the Christmas season in this majority Roman Catholic country.

Noodles, fruit and corned beef were distributed at the shelters for Christmas Eve dinner. Children in one evacuation center gleefully lined up for ice cream.

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Ahmadinejad to seek UN compensation for WWII

Saturday, December 19th, 2009

Iran’s president says he will soon write to the UN Secretary-General asking for his country to be compensated for World War II damages.

“We will seek compensation for World War II damages. I have assigned a team to calculate the costs,” Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said at a Friday press conference in the Danish capital.

“I will write a letter to the UN Secretary-General [Ban Ki-moon] asking for Iran to be compensated for the damages,” he added, pointing out that such a move is necessary to ensure that justice was served.

Ahmadinejad told the reporters that the countries that won the Second World War had inflicted a lot of damage on Iran by invading the country and using its resources.

The president added that while the former Soviet Union, the United States and Britain received compensation after the conflict, Iran had been given nothing to make up for the suffering its people had endured.

“During this period, the Iranian people were subjected to a great deal of pressure and the country suffered a great deal of damages but Iran was not paid any compensation,” Ahmadinejad explained.

At the start of World War II, Iran declared its neutrality, but the country was soon invaded by both Britain and the Soviet Union on August 26, 1941 in Operation Countenance.

Iran’s refusal to give into Allied demands and expel all German nationals from the country was the excuse they needed to occupy the country. Within months of the invasion Iran became known as “The Bridge of Victory” to the Allies.

When invading the Soviet Union in 1941, the Allies urgently needed to transport war materiel across Iran to the Soviet Union.

The effects of the war, however, were very catastrophic for Iran. Food and other essential items were scarce and severe inflation imposed great hardship on the lower and middle classes as the needs of foreign troops were prioritized.

“Not only was Iran deprived of any compensation for World War II, but 10 years later, the Americans even went as far as arranging a coup to reverse a popular uprising that had led to the nationalization of oil,” said Ahmadinejad.

In 1953, Washington orchestrated a coup against the popular and democratically-elected Iranian prime minister of the time, Mohammad Mosaddeq, whose efforts led to the nationalization of the country’s oil industry.

Almost half a century later, former US secretary of state Madeleine Albright acknowledged the pivotal role that the US played in the coup, coming closer than any other American diplomat to apologizing for the intervention.

“The Eisenhower administration believed its actions were justified for strategic reasons… But the coup was clearly a setback for Iran’s political development. And it is easy to see now why many Iranians continue to resent this intervention by America,” she said in March 2000.

Ahmadinejad who had travelled to Copenhagen to take part in the Climate Change Summit, returned to Iran on Saturday morning.

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US media positive on Obama’s Oslo speech

Friday, December 11th, 2009

WASHINGTON — US media and leading opinion makers on Friday had largely positive views of Barack Obama’s Nobel Peace award speech in Oslo, with conservatives especially delighted with his choice of words.

“We’ve said before … that awarding President Obama the Nobel Peace Prize after so short a time in office and so few concrete accomplishments was a mistake,” wrote the Los Angeles Times in its newspaper editorial.

However the acceptance speech was “a blockbuster even by Obama’s lofty standards.”

The speech “should serve as a blueprint to guide international decisions on alleviating conflict, poverty and tyranny,” the LA Times wrote.

For the New York Times, Obama “gave the speech he needed to give, but we suspect not precisely the one the Nobel committee wanted to hear” by constantly mentioning the Afghanistan conflict.

There is no chance of winning in Afghanistan or in “the broader fight against terrorism, unless the United States hews to international standards and upholds its own ideals. That is Mr. Obama?s promise and his challenge going forward,” the Times wrote.

Washington Post columnist Kathleen Parker wrote that the speech “was both a Judeo-Christian epistle, conceding the moral necessity of war, and a meditation on American exceptionalism.”

Obama was “the unapologetic president of the United States and not some errant global villager seeking affirmation,” she wrote.

At certain moments Obama “articulates our problems in ways that elevate us beyond our pettier differences,” and the acceptance speech “was a triumphant expression of American values and character.”

Two fierce Republican Obama critics — former Alaska governor Sarah Palin and former House speaker Newt Gingrich, both potential 2012 presidential hopefuls — also praised the speech.

“I liked what he said,” Palin told USA Today. “Of course, war is the last thing I believe any American wants to engage in, but it’s necessary. We have to stop these terrorists.”

“I thought in some ways it’s a very historic speech,” Gingrich told a public radio morning show, according to the Politico website.

Obama “clearly understood that he had been given the prize prematurely, but he used it as an occasion to remind people, first of all, as he said: that there is evil in the world.”

The “evil” phrase prompted a CNN reporter to say that Obama seemed to be “channeling George W. Bush,” famous for his 2002 “Axis of Evil” speech.

Former Bush speechwriter Michael Gerson told CNN that it was “a complex, intellectually rich, impressive speech.”

Obama was “completely unapologetic” about US intervention in Afghanistan.

“He talked about America being a force for moral good, about the reality of evil. This was a very American speech. He didn’t speak as kind of the citizen of the world as sometimes he has in the past,” Gerson said.

Not everyone liked the speech: Bush’s ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton said it “followed the standard international leftist line,” and that Obama “played to the crowd and filled the speech with cliches from the American and international left.”

And prominent liberal commentator Arianna Huffington noted the “supreme irony” of accepting the peace prize after ordering a troop surge in Afghanistan.

The problem, Huffington said Thursday on The Joy Behar broadcast chat show, was that Obama has not told Americans how the Afghan war will make them safer.

Surveys ahead of the ceremony showed that most Americans were skeptical about the president accepting the award: only 19 percent of Americans believed that Obama deserved the Nobel, according to a CNN/Opinion Research poll out Wednesday, while an earlier Quinnipiac University survey put support at 26 percent.
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EPA chief: US will regulate CO2 with common sense

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

COPENHAGEN — The United States for the first time outlined a dual path toward cutting greenhouse gases that would involve both President Barack Obama’s administration and the U.S. Congress to reduce greenhouse emissions.

Speaking Wednesday at a U.N. climate conference in Copenhagen, Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa Jackson described her agency’s decision that greenhouse gases should be regulated as complementary to U.S. legislation — not an effort to supplant the work of Congress.

“This is not an either/or moment. This is a both/and moment,” she told more than 100 people who packed a U.S. meeting room within the conference center.

The EPA on Monday gave the president a new way to cut back on greenhouse gas emissions when the agency determined that scientific evidence clearly shows they are endangering Americans’ health. That means the EPA could regulate those gases without the approval of the U.S. Congress.

The EPA decision was welcomed by other nations in Copenhagen that have called on the U.S. to boost its efforts to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

The full U.S. Senate has yet to take up legislation that cleared the Senate environment committee and calls for greenhouse gases to be cut by 20 percent by 2020, a target that was scaled back to 17 percent in the House after opposition from coal-state Democrats.

“We need legislation” to remove any uncertainty that businesses might have, Jackson added. “The reason for legislation is to take that question out of their minds. … We will work closely with our Congress to pass legislation to lower our greenhouse gases more than 80 percent by 2050.”

Jackson said the U.S. would take “reasonable efforts” and also “meaningful, common sense steps” to cut emissions, but didn’t provide specifics.

Negotiators on Wednesday, meanwhile, worked to bridge the chasm between rich and poor countries over how to share the burden of fighting climate change, and the top U.S. climate envoy, Todd Stern, highlighted the Obama administration’s efforts to curb greenhouse emissions.

“We are under no illusion this is going to be easy,” Stern said. “But I think an agreement is there to be had if we do this right.”

Lumumba Di-Aping of Sudan, the head of the 135-nation bloc of developing countries, said the $10 billion a year that has been proposed to help poor nations fight climate change paled in comparison to the more than $1 trillion already spent to rescue financial institutions.

“If this is the greatest risk that humanity faces, then how do you explain $10 billion?” he said. “Ten billion will not buy developing countries’ citizens enough coffins.”

China, which has recently overtaken the United States as the world’s top greenhouse gas emitter, strongly protested a blunder that prevented a top diplomat from entering the vast Bella Center where the 192-nation U.N. climate conference is being held.

Su Wei, the director general of China’s climate change negotiation team, told the meeting he was “extremely unhappy” that a Chinese minister was barred from entry three days in a row.

Su called the incident “unacceptable” and expressed anger that U.N. climate chief Yvo de Boer was not informed. De Boer pledged to investigate and “make sure it doesn’t happen again.”

Meanwhile, small island nations, poor countries and those seeking money from the developed world to preserve their tropical forests were among those upset over competing draft texts attributed to Denmark and China outlining proposed outcomes for the historic Dec. 7-18 summit.

Some of the poorest nations feared too much of the burden to curb greenhouse gases is being hoisted onto their shoulders. They are seeking billions of dollars in aid from the wealthy countries to deal with climate change, which melts glaciers that raise sea levels worldwide, turns some regions drier and threatens food production.

Diplomats from developing countries and climate activists complained the Danish hosts pre-empted the negotiations with their draft proposal, which would allow rich countries to cut fewer emissions while poorer nations would face tougher limits on greenhouse gases and more conditions on getting funds.

“When a process is flawed then the outcome is flawed,” Raman Mehta, ActionAid’s program manager in India, said of the Danish proposal. “If developing countries don’t have a concrete indication of the scale of finances, then you don’t get a deal — and even if you do, it’s a bad deal.”

A sketchy counterproposal attributed to China would extend the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, which required 37 industrial nations to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide and other gases blamed for global warming by an average 5 percent by 2012, compared with 1990 levels.

The Chinese text would incorporate specific new, deeper targets for the industrialized world for a further five to eight years. However, developing countries including China would be covered by a separate agreement that encourages taking action to control emissions but not in the same legally binding way.

Poorer nations believe the two-track approach would best preserve the principle of “common but differentiated responsibilities” recognized by the Kyoto treaty.

The U.N.’s weather agency unveiled data Tuesday showing that this decade is on track to become the hottest since records began in 1850, with 2009 the fifth-warmest year ever. The second warmest decade was the 1990s.

In Rome, Greenpeace activists climbed halfway up the Colosseum at dawn Wednesday to press for a historic climate deal at the Copenhagen conference.

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