polyester (@polyester) • Hey
hi
Publications
- censorship
- aae
- postings of another photograph showing
- authorities are more v
- stickers showing their
- as reporters
- that journalists witness
- sign that the
- witness cannot be easily shaken and
- other than Matthew Broderick.
- attention for starring
- , she appeared in the film “The Power” and she’s barely been seen in the limelight since then
- Born in Yongzhou,
- and Robbie’s gown,
- including red gowns and suits.
- without accessories.
- office hits these
- unfortunately for Lena, it couldn’t save her night.
- Women in India have been active - and high performing - in cricket for many years. The WPL has catapulted them into mainstream popularity. Now they get the kind of media attention only reserved for men's teams.
- This is also the first long holiday since China ended restrictions on people travelling outside of the country - it lifted a ban on group tours to more than 70 countries in August.
- Others have flooded their feeds with hour-by-hour itineraries, detailed breakdowns of their budget and recommendations for affordable places to eat. A hashtag challenging people to "trek from China's south to north" was widely discussed on Weibo while other popular topics included "budget travel" and "traveling on a whim".
- More than 21 million people will fly during the eight-day break, which began on Friday, according to China's civil aviation regulator.
- In the morning before going to school, Simranjit crouches by a stove next to her grandmother, making rotis for the family. After school, instead of being stuck inside like many girls her age, with the support of her father and grandmother, she throws on her cricket whites and heads to practice, her sister in tow.
- In October, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), the governing body of Indian cricket, said all contracted female cricketers would be paid the the same match fee as men - a historic decision to promote "gender equality" in the country's most-loved game.
- The court also asked the Association of Sign Language Interpreters India (ASLI) to draw up protocols for the interpreters.
- Their parents did not want their children to study in special schools for deaf children. Finding a place that was willing to take in the three siblings was hard, but they eventually found the right place for them.
- After he was captured, staff affectionately gave him the name Fred, and he has been staying at the Aurora Animal Shelter ever since.
- "The IPCC [the UN's climate body] very clearly says we need to halve emissions over this decade, and then get to net zero. It's not just about reaching net zero at some point, it's about the pathway to get there."
- Days when the temperature difference has exceeded 1.5C continued into September, with some more than 1.8C above the pre-industrial average.
- I came of age when the frenzy was at its peak. The wings. The very thin women. It never felt like I belonged there. It never felt like it was speaking to me. So how can it start now?
- Opposition parties say the questions are worded in a biased way, and say voters should boycott the referendum.
- More than 10 million pensioners, too, are in line for bonuses - a significant element of Poland's electorate.
- Donald Tusk's party leads the centrist Civic Coalition (KO), but he has been unable to unite with two other moderate parties, the Third Way and The Left.
- But why does this all make super-deep diamonds so different? And what can they tell us about the hidden world they're made in?
- What Smith found was revolutionary. Nearly three-quarters of the Clippir diamonds contained tiny pockets, or "inclusions" of metal that had avoided rusting – not something you'd find in ordinary ones – while the remaining 15 contained a kind of garnet which only forms within the Earth's mantle, the layer above its molten core.
- The next stage of the investigation looked at measurements of magnetic anomalies in the ocean floor around Zealandia. These variations in the strength of Earth's magnetic field form an invisible record of how tectonic plates have moved around over time. They have revealed more about the continent's ancient stretching, which continued for millions of years and even changed direction – leading to an ultra-thin continent that eventually sank.
- Sega
- Eille
- Nil
- what are u screaming
- gm
- gm
- GM
- gm
- gm
- gm
- gm
- gm
- gm
- gm