President Kirchner announced last month the government will invest $1 billion in the country?s railways, but critics say that may be too little too late.
By Jonathan Gilbert,?Correspondent / February 22, 2013
Relatives of the victims of a train crash attend a one-year anniversary ceremony at the Once train station in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Friday.
Victor R. Caivano/AP
Enlarge
Paolo Menghini's t-shirt bears the face of his son, Lucas, a?victim of one of Argentina's deadliest train accidents, which occurred?a year ago today.
Click Here for your FREE 30 DAYS of The Christian Science Monitor Weekly Digital Edition
The crash at Once train station in Buenos Aires killed a total of 51 people, and will be commemorated this evening by the victims'?families, led by Mr. Menghini. Argentina?s trains, however, are still?unsafe.
The crash at Once was not an isolated incident. In the first six?months of 2012, there were more than 1,200 accidents and 190 deaths on?Argentina?s main train lines, according to a government document.
The grieving families blame the current government of Cristina Fern?ndez de Kirchner for the deaths of their relatives, saying it did?nothing to improve a system that deteriorated after it was privatized?in the 1990s.
?The government is not a bystander,? says Menghini, whose son was 20?when he died. ?It stands accused. It knew what could happen and did?nothing.? Two former government transport secretaries, Ricardo Jaime and Juan Pablo Schiavi, are indicted in the case, but a trial date has?yet to be set.
Argentina?s railways were privatized at the beginning of the 1990s,?when concessions for various routes were auctioned off by Carlos?Menem?s administration. The contracts, however, favored the operators?and made it difficult to enforce sanctions and fines, says Pablo?Martorelli, president of the Argentine Railway Institute. He believes?a period of increased state control is forthcoming.
?The government allowed the companies to manage themselves. They stopped investing, and complaints about safety and security fell on?deaf ears,? says Sergio Garc?a, editor of Todo Trenes magazine,?dedicated to the railway industry.
President Kirchner announced last month the government will invest $1?billion in the country?s railways, and will replace the aging trains?of the Sarmiento line, along which the crash took place, with 400 new?Chinese wagons. In July, it withdrew the concession held by Trenes de?Buenos Aires (TBA) to operate the Sarmiento and Mitre lines.
But critics say the moves are belated.
?Once is the best example of Kirchnerism?s failure to act,? says?Leandro Bullor, an analyst at the University of Buenos Aires, using?the term that refers to Argentina?s politics since 2003, when N?stor Kirchner, the President's late husband and predecessor, came to power.
Kirchnerism also allowed years of mismanagement of oil company YPF before renationalizing it last year, Mr. Bullor says. In the case of the railways, despite government spending on the network, politicians?are believed to have allowed a handful of businessmen to misappropriate?substantial state subsidies while ignoring damning safety reports.?Alleged corruption has been at the heart of recent protests against?Kirchner.
Since 1991, Argentina?s usable railway network has dropped by 9,300?miles to around 11,800 miles today. Only 3,700 miles are considered safe for?passengers, who are packed into carriages. Inter-city journeys?are slow: It takes 20 hours to travel the nearly 500 miles from C?rdoba to Buenos Aires.
?It?s not enough to buy new trains,? says Mr. Garc?a. ?The tracks are?decrepit. There needs to be a long-term plan.?
The current government has repeatedly failed to mention Once as it seeks to absolve itself of responsibility for the crash, victims' families say. Kirchner only mentioned the crash once over the course of 11 months, in addition to offering her condolences to the victims? families last?night.
Her supporters pin the blame on former President Menem, but he is an?overused scapegoat for Argentina?s current problems, says Bullor, the?analyst.
?Fifty-one people died because of this government?s indolence,? saysPaolo Menghini. ?There needs to be a profound change since, as things stand, the tragedy of Once could repeat itself tomorrow.?
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will be seeking to put a strong U.S.-Japan alliance on full display in the face of potential threats from a nuclear North Korea and an assertive China when he meets U.S. President Barack Obama on Friday.
Abe, who has kept his ratings high since taking office in December, also needs Obama's signoff on his economic revival recipe of big spending and hyper-easy monetary policy.
Expectations for "Abenomics" - especially drastic monetary easing - have sliced about 10 percent off the yen's value against the dollar since Abe took office, raising concern abroad that Japan is weakening its currency to export its way out of recession.
"The situation in East Asia is becoming more and more precarious," said Mikitaka Masuyama, a professor at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies in Tokyo. "One of the things he wants to achieve will be reinforcement of the Japan-U.S. alliance."
"It would be a successful trip for Abe if his economic policy wins a nod from the U.S. side or at least if it is not rejected outright," he added.
Abe, who leaves for Washington on Thursday, also hopes to secure at least a wink and a nod from Obama that would allow him to argue that Japan can negotiate special treatment for politically sensitive sectors such as rice if it joins talks on a U.S.-led free trade pact.
U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk told Reuters in an interview on Wednesday that Tokyo must be willing to negotiate all trade sectors, but did not rule out the possibility of special treatment in the final deal.
Japan's big businesses wants it to join the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) deal to avoid being left behind in global competition, but powerful farm lobby groups are opposed, dividing Abe's ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP).
SHOULDER TO SHOULDER
Aides say Abe's top priority for the visit, during which he will hold a summit on Friday with Obama and deliver a policy speech entitled "Japan is Back", is to repair an alliance they argue was dented by the 2009-2012 rule of the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ).
"During the three years and three months of the Democratic Party government, there was a great gap in the U.S.-Japan alliance," said a close aide to Abe. "So the biggest objective is to rebuild the alliance."
Outside experts agree the alliance suffered under the first DPJ prime minister, Yukio Hatoyama, who tried unsuccessfully to revise a deal to move a U.S. Marine air base to a sparsely populated part of Japan's Okinawa island.
But Abe's immediate predecessor, Yoshihiko Noda, did much to repair the damage, they say.
The two leaders will certainly spend time on the need for stronger sanctions on North Korea and are likely to discuss beefed up missile defense after Pyongyang's latest nuclear test last week.
The hawkish Abe will also be hoping that putting a robust alliance on display sends a signal to China not to escalate the row over tiny islands in the East China Sea claimed by both Japan and China.
"It is important for us to have them recognize that it is impossible to try to get their way by coercion or intimidation. In that regard, the Japan-U.S. alliance, as well as the U.S. presence, would be critical," Abe told the Washington Post in an interview.
Tension has raised fears of an unintended military incident near the islands, known as the Senkaku in Japan and the Diaoyu in China. Washington says the islets fall under a U.S.-Japan security pact, but it is keen to avoid a clash.
Abe is expected to come bearing one welcome gift - a promise that Japan will finally join an international treaty on settling cross-border child custody disputes, known as The Hague Convention. Japan has been the only member of the Group of Eight advanced nations not to join the pact, despite pressure from the United States and other countries.
(Additional reporting by Paul Eckert in Washington; Editing by Ron Popeski)
BUDGET: "Include your guests in the ceremony. Most ceremonies are a passive, almost theatrical experience, where most guests are the audience. I think involving them in different ways can have a profound effect on the rest of the celebration."
BLOWOUT: "The only areas you cannot overspend on are these: good food, good service and great music and sound."
-- Yifat Oren, owner of LA-based event design company <a href="http://yifatoren.com/" target="_hplink">Yifat Oren & Associates</a>. Oren's clients include Kevin Costner, Jason Bateman and Mariska Hargitay.
Matthew Robbins
BUDGET: "Create a truly personal and unique dining experience. A personalized menu, for instance, that represents your favorite dishes, culinary traditions, or flavors from your favorite country or travel locations. Create a printed menu for each guest and lists edited details for each course explaining the ingredients, the history or reason for the dish. The menu doesn't need to be fancy or expensive but the key is to make it personal. Guests spend most of their time at the table, so why not make this special and unique?"
BLOWOUT: "Follow my advice for personalizing the menu, but take it a step further: create a truly inspired, custom tasting menu inspired by the season and the location. Give your guests that <a href="http://perseny.com/" target="_hplink">Per Se</a>, <a href="http://frenchlaundry.com/" target="_hplink">French Laundry</a> or <a href="http://bluehillfarm.com/" target="_hplink">Blue Hill</a> experience with many unique courses, and go for exotic combinations. Look for interesting wines to pair with each course and provide a custom menu to give each guest a "tour guide" to use as reference throughout the meal. Also push the envelope with the plating and the tableware. And save dancing for after dinner!"
-- Matthew Robbins, owner of NYC-based event design company <a href="http://matthewrobbinsdesign.com/" target="_hplink">Matthew Robbins Design</a>. His clientele includes Mary J Blige, Sade, Vera Wang and O Magazine, among others.
Debbie Geller
BUDGET: "If your budget doesn't allow for band changes or a band at all, work with your DJ to determine a flow for the evening and music style and tempo shifts throughout. It can even be as simple as programming your own iPod with different play lists for the various points in the evening."
BLOWOUT: "The one thing people remember in the days, weeks and months after any wedding is whether or not they had fun, so the area that I encourage my brides to splurge on is entertainment. A great band will facilitate an unforgettable evening. Beyond that, if you have the ability to change the energy of the music and entertainment throughout the evening, each time you do you will be injecting new life into the party. Dinner music should be subdued--guests should be able to have conversations. Following dinner, a change in the singers and or energy of your band will wake everyone up and infuse new energy into the evening. A DJ or further band change for after- hours or late night dancing will change the energy once again, keeping your guests wanting more."
-- Debbie Geller, owner of LA-based event design company <a href="http://www.gellerevents.com/" target="_hplink">Geller Events</a>
Marcy Blum
BUDGET: "In general, I really think that place cards and thoughtful seating can truly make a world of difference-- it's something anyone can afford."
BLOWOUT: "If people want to splurge, there are few things as exciting and energy lifting as fireworks in the right setting."
-- Marcy Blum, owner of NYC-based event design company <a href="http://marcyblum.com/" target="_hplink">Marcy Blum Associates</a>. Blum has planned events and weddings for Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick, and Billy Joel and Katie Lee.
Sharon Sacks
BUDGET: "Incorporate food from your ethnic backgrounds into the buffet or hors d'oeuvres; instead of doing table numbers, use names of places you've been as a couple; instead of place cards with names for the head table, use frames featuring your favorite photo of you and that person; use the proposal as a theme in the invitation or favor (one of our clients proposed to his wife in central park on a hockey rink, and they gave their guests crystal hockey puck paper weights featuring the proposal story)."
BLOWOUT: "To bring your wedding to another level, add a personal touch that incorporates you and your groom. This will set you apart from other weddings. What is personal to you won't be the same as personal for another bride. For example, if you are taking your guests away for a destination wedding, send them all custom leather passport holders with the invitation printed inside so they can use the passport holder on their trip; Hire your favorite performer to sing your first dance song; For a beach wedding: provide beach towels embroidered with each guest's name so they always know which towel is theirs, or bottles of sunscreen customized with the wedding logo; For a winter wedding: provide an embroidered cashmere blanket, Uggs, and flannel PJs to keep warm."
-- Sharon Sacks, owner of LA-based event design company <a href="http://sacksproductions.com/" target="_hplink">Sacks Productions</a>. Sacks has planned various celebrity weddings, including Nick Lachey's nuptials and Kim Kardashian's wedding to Kris Humphries.
Preston Bailey
BUDGET: "One of the best and most inexpensive ways to ensure your wedding is special is to ignore all the wedding trends. Express your individuality and focus on things and people you love. The wedding procession in particular is a great place to create your own unique tradition. I did a wedding once where the couple had the bridal party dance down the aisle. For another, the couple treated the procession like a fashion show. All the guests loved it."
BLOWOUT: "Hire a talented performer. I recently did a wedding where Alicia Keys performed, and she was incredible. But it doesn't always have to be someone that famous. If there's a local or regional singer or band you and your groom love, find out it they're available to perform a song or two at your wedding. A surprise concert is always a big hit with guests."
-- <a href="http://www.prestonbailey.com/" target="_hplink">Preston Bailey</a>, event designer and celebrity wedding planner. His <a href="http://portfolio.prestonbailey.com/about-preston/" target="_hplink">client base</a> includes Donald Trump, Oprah Winfrey, Joan Rivers, Donna Karan, Liza Minnelli, Michael Douglas and Catherine Zeta-Jones, Uma Thurman, Jennifer Hudson and Ivanka Trump, among others.
Peter Callahan
BUDGET: "The one thing that really sets a wedding reception apart is having fun passed dessert hors d'oeuvres... Start them maybe 40 mins--or one long dance set--after guests have had dinner. Pick one iconic dessert: [maybe it's] your favorite ice cream in a mini cone, and pass it around the dance floor to guests seated and standing. It's an unexpected [treat] and brings back memories of childhood. Plus, everyone of all ages loves ice cream!"
BLOWOUT: "Break out more treats-- caramel-dipped lady apples, mini pies, mini popsicles with limoncella, cotton candy lollipops, and more. <a href="http://www.petercallahan.com/book/" target="_hplink">These</a> add a great unexpected energy to the reception and [raise] the tempo of the party."
-- Peter Callahan, owner of NYC-based catering company <a href="http://www.petercallahan.com/" target="_hplink">Peter Callahan Catering</a>. His clientele includes President Barack Obama, Vera Wang, Marc Jacobs and Carolina Herrera.
Buddy Valastro
BUDGET: "Accessorize your cake with some handcrafted sugar flowers. Nothing can beat the realistic look of a well-made flower, and it helps to tie in the table arrangements and bouquets used to decorate your reception. You don't always need to fill the cake with bouquets of sugar flowers, either choosing a fuller species will fill out the cake and make it look elegant."
BLOWOUT: "One of my favorite parts of any wedding is the dessert platter, because that is where quality of ingredients truly makes a difference. For the cake, I recommend splurging on a moist sponge cake with a decadent filling like ganache with fresh raspberries. I also love when people splurge on a Viennese table with a variety of pastries; it give everyone a sample of something different. I always recommend splurging on the dessert- it is the last thing your guests will taste!"
-- Buddy Valastro, owner of <a href="http://www.carlosbakery.com/" target="_hplink">Carlos Bakery</a>, featured on TLC show <a href="http://tlc.howstuffworks.com/tv/cake-boss/about-cake-boss.htm" target="_hplink">Cake Boss</a>.
Diann Valentine
BUDGET: "Consider setting up a table for guests to write personal Rainy Day Cards. When I released my signature wedding stationery <a href="www.weddingpaperdivas.com/diannvalentine" target="_hplink">collection</a>, I created a new concept called the Rainy Day Card. Guests are instructed to write a personal note to either the bride or the groom or to both of them with anecdotes of how to make marriage work during the tough times or encouraging words that they can look back on during the not so perfect times. After writing these notes, guests are instructed to seal them and address the envelope accordingly. The couple will leave the reception with a bag full of rainy day note cards and when they experience one of those rainy days -- as they are certain to come -- they should go to the bag of cards and pull out one to read and look for their family and friends to remind them of why they chose to commit their lives to one another."
BLOWOUT: "Photo booths have become extremely popular at weddings as an interactive activity. It allows guests to be silly and have some fun with their date or other friends at the wedding while the bride and groom are busy doing the normal wedding duties. This also becomes a nice keepsake that guests can take home and relive the fun they had at your wedding. There are many versions of this out in the marketplace but earlier this year, I discovered <a href=" http://www.hdphotobooth.com/explore/booth.html" target="_hplink">HD Photo Booth</a> and they have beat all of the competition. The founder of this company created a software that automatically re-touches every photo when it is taken so you end up with an image featuring a flawless face. I love it and guests are constantly raving about it."
-- Diann Valentine, <a href="http://diannvalentine.com/" target="_hplink">event designer</a>. Valentine's <a href="http://www.wetv.com/shows/i-do-over/cast/diann-valentine" target="_hplink">clientele</a> includes celebrities such as Usher, Martin Lawrence, Toni Braxton and Kelis, among others.
Michael Gaffney
BUDGET: "For brides on a budget, I recommend using white Casablanca Lilies. It's a flower that has a beautiful fragrance, style and beauty. My other trip is to use underwater lighting in a gloss tower. Gives a regal look to the wedding at night and looks like you spent a million dollars for a whole lot less."
BLOWOUT: "For brides looking to splurge, I love using antique silver plated urns, chaliced pitchers and vases for table decor. Fill them with white roses for an understated but stately look. These designs will make your table have a royal look and the urns and chalices are great floral keepsakes. Uber class, mega style!"
-- MIchael Gaffney, celebrity florist and founder of the <a href="http://www.newyorkflowerdesign.com/" target="_hplink">New York School of Flower Design</a>.
NEW?ORLEANS?- The busiest high school marching band during Mardi Gras will now showcase its talents in one of the premier national parades in the country.
The St. Aug 'Marching 100' has been selected as one of 18 bands from across the country to participate in the Tournament of Roses Parade in Pasadena on New Year's Day.
St. Aug's band headlines many New Orleans-area parades during Carnival, including at least one instance where they march in two parades in the same day on the busy Carnival weekend.
The Tournament of Roses Parade sent out a news release stating that it selects its bands based on: "A variety of criteria including musicianship, marching ability and entertainment or special interest value. In order to be considered, band representatives submitted detailed applications, which included photos, video footage and letters of recommendation. Bands are required to raise all necessary funds for travel and accommodations. In addition to marching in the 5 1/2 mile long Rose Parade on New Year?s Day, bands also perform in one of three Bandfest events scheduled for Dec. 29 and 30, 2013, at Pasadena City College."
And here we thought marrying a yoga instructor had made Alec Baldwin more peaceful! The former 30 Rock star is accused of getting hostile with a New York Post reporter and photographer on Sunday, allegedly using racial slurs and violent threats against them.
Perceptions of health improve with pension receipt, researcher saysPublic release date: 20-Feb-2013 [ | E-mail | Share ]
Contact: Jesslyn Chew ChewJ@missouri.edu 573-882-8353 University of Missouri-Columbia
Personal assessments of well-being vary by gender and fade over time
COLUMBIA, Mo. After retirement, pensions provide consistent income to aging individuals. Although the details of pension eligibility and implementation vary by country, receiving pensions can represent a new life stage for individuals. Now, a University of Missouri researcher has studied how older men and women view their health before and after receiving fixed incomes. South African men and women in the study viewed their health more positively when they began receiving their pensions, but the heightened sense of well-being faded over time.
"We looked at individuals' perceptions of their own health. Did they worry less? Were they less sad and more satisfied with life now that they were receiving pensions?" said Enid Schatz, associate professor of health science in the School of Health Professions. "People perceive their lives and well-being as better after they start receiving their pensions because they're getting money that they didn't used to get, so they're able to do more for others and more for themselves. When they are first able to do that, it feels good. Ten years later, their feelings of progress are not as great."
Schatz, who also teaches women's and gender studies in the MU College of Arts and Science, analyzed data previously collected as part of the WHO-INDEPTH Study of Global Ageing (sic) and Adult Health Survey of men and women in rural South Africa. Women reported poorer well-being than men, although women reported feeling less worried and more satisfied after they started receiving their pensions. Conversely, men reported lower well-being in the years leading up to receiving their pensions and, after receiving the pensions, men's well-being improved for five years and then declined.
"Women get a greater benefit in those first five years from having the money in their households," Schatz said. "Women are doing more of the caregiving, and pensions give them the comfort that they have a resource to do so. South Africa is a society where, traditionally, men have been the wage earners while women have stayed at home. For some women, the pensions might be their first incomes or their first consistent incomes."
The pension system in South Africa differs from Social Security in the United States. In South Africa, individuals do not need to have worked to receive pensions. Men and women qualify for pensions if they earn less than a certain amount and are age 60 or older. When Schatz conducted the study, men qualified at age 65 and women qualified at age 60. Although Schatz studied individuals from rural South Africa, she said her study may give researchers and policymakers an idea of how aging adults in the U.S. might feel about receiving fixed incomes after retirement, particularly in the current tough economic climate.
"Pensions and government assistance more generally are important sources of income for households and a way of making individuals feel better about themselves and their abilities to take care of themselves and their families," Schatz said. "Many people complain about social safety nets because they don't think they do what they're supposed to do. The data from my study indicate that people who do not have access to other sources of income because they are too old or sick to work, or they have retired are still supporting other people. Pensions affect the economic well-being of entire households."
Social Science & Medicine published the article, "The impact of pensions on health and wellbeing in rural South Africa: Does gender matter?" Schatz's co-authors included Margaret Ralston, a doctoral student in the Department of Sociology in the MU College of Arts and Science, and researchers from the University of Colorado and the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa.
###
[ | E-mail | Share ]
?
AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.
Perceptions of health improve with pension receipt, researcher saysPublic release date: 20-Feb-2013 [ | E-mail | Share ]
Contact: Jesslyn Chew ChewJ@missouri.edu 573-882-8353 University of Missouri-Columbia
Personal assessments of well-being vary by gender and fade over time
COLUMBIA, Mo. After retirement, pensions provide consistent income to aging individuals. Although the details of pension eligibility and implementation vary by country, receiving pensions can represent a new life stage for individuals. Now, a University of Missouri researcher has studied how older men and women view their health before and after receiving fixed incomes. South African men and women in the study viewed their health more positively when they began receiving their pensions, but the heightened sense of well-being faded over time.
"We looked at individuals' perceptions of their own health. Did they worry less? Were they less sad and more satisfied with life now that they were receiving pensions?" said Enid Schatz, associate professor of health science in the School of Health Professions. "People perceive their lives and well-being as better after they start receiving their pensions because they're getting money that they didn't used to get, so they're able to do more for others and more for themselves. When they are first able to do that, it feels good. Ten years later, their feelings of progress are not as great."
Schatz, who also teaches women's and gender studies in the MU College of Arts and Science, analyzed data previously collected as part of the WHO-INDEPTH Study of Global Ageing (sic) and Adult Health Survey of men and women in rural South Africa. Women reported poorer well-being than men, although women reported feeling less worried and more satisfied after they started receiving their pensions. Conversely, men reported lower well-being in the years leading up to receiving their pensions and, after receiving the pensions, men's well-being improved for five years and then declined.
"Women get a greater benefit in those first five years from having the money in their households," Schatz said. "Women are doing more of the caregiving, and pensions give them the comfort that they have a resource to do so. South Africa is a society where, traditionally, men have been the wage earners while women have stayed at home. For some women, the pensions might be their first incomes or their first consistent incomes."
The pension system in South Africa differs from Social Security in the United States. In South Africa, individuals do not need to have worked to receive pensions. Men and women qualify for pensions if they earn less than a certain amount and are age 60 or older. When Schatz conducted the study, men qualified at age 65 and women qualified at age 60. Although Schatz studied individuals from rural South Africa, she said her study may give researchers and policymakers an idea of how aging adults in the U.S. might feel about receiving fixed incomes after retirement, particularly in the current tough economic climate.
"Pensions and government assistance more generally are important sources of income for households and a way of making individuals feel better about themselves and their abilities to take care of themselves and their families," Schatz said. "Many people complain about social safety nets because they don't think they do what they're supposed to do. The data from my study indicate that people who do not have access to other sources of income because they are too old or sick to work, or they have retired are still supporting other people. Pensions affect the economic well-being of entire households."
Social Science & Medicine published the article, "The impact of pensions on health and wellbeing in rural South Africa: Does gender matter?" Schatz's co-authors included Margaret Ralston, a doctoral student in the Department of Sociology in the MU College of Arts and Science, and researchers from the University of Colorado and the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa.
###
[ | E-mail | Share ]
?
AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.
Laura is currently reading: Still Alice by Lisa Genova (Goodreads Author)
Clear rating
3 hours, 25 min ago
Laura gave to: Night (The Night Trilogy #1) by Elie Wiesel
Clear rating
3 hours, 25 min ago
Laura marked as to-read: Two-Way Street by Lauren Barnholdt (Goodreads Author)
Clear rating
Apr 20, 2012 08:44pm
Laura marked as to-read: Slightly Single (Slightly, #1) by Wendy Markham
Clear rating
Apr 20, 2012 08:44pm
Laura marked as to-read: Twenty Boy Summer by Sarah Ockler (Goodreads Author)
Clear rating
Apr 20, 2012 09:14am
Laura gave to: Lauren Conrad Style by Lauren Conrad
read in April, 2012
Clear rating
While she offers good tips on the basic clothes you should have in your closet and how to pack a suitcase for traveling, I found the sections on hair and make up slightly boring and skimmed through them.
Apr 20, 2012 09:12am ???see review
Laura added: The Faerie Queene by Edmund Spenser
Clear rating
Apr 14, 2012 09:06pm
Laura added: Beowulf: A New Verse Translation by Unknown
Clear rating
Apr 14, 2012 09:06pm
Laura added: Along for the Ride by Sarah Dessen (Goodreads Author)
Clear rating
Apr 14, 2012 09:06pm
Laura added: Moonglass by Jessi Kirby (Goodreads Author)