In a heartwarming Instagram post, the actress shared a video collage of their moments together, affirming that their love is meant to last a lifetime. The caption read, "Happy Sunday, beautiful people. @pauloo2104 forever is the deal." ADVERTISEMENT
This declaration of everlasting love comes after the actress publicly declared her commitment to Paulo on his birthday on April 2, 2023. She posted a video on Instagram, singing his praises and describing him as the love of her life.
Getty Images (2) Jessica Biel’s full wedding look won’t be available until PEOPLE tells all tomorrow, but a heaping pile of hints and a 20/20 mind’s eye can complete most of the picture.
The actress married fiancé Justin Timberlake at Italy’s Borgo Egnazia hotel last week. It’s been confirmed that Timberlake and his groomsmen wore Tom Ford and that Biel changed into a different dress for the reception. The rest is educated speculation.
Kanuri: Bornu's most dominant culture
2024-08-08
What is the Origin of the Kanuri People? Modern-day Kanuri are the descendants of the Sayfawa Dynasty of the Kanem Empire. As a result of civil war, rebellion and outright invasion by the Bulala, the Kanuri people people were forced out of Kanem in the fourteenth century and after nearly ten decades of bitter conflict, the Kanuri established a new empire southwest of Lake Chad. ADVERTISEMENT
Currently, the majority of the Kanuri live in the Borno province of North Eastern Nigeria, where they are the dominant group.
"My parents spanked me, and I did fine in life, and I feel fine about it, and I do that as well," she continued. "That's a tricky thing, when you're out in public, because then people are like, they think that's wrong or something, but I find nothing wrong with a spanking." Kelly says she gives her daughter a warning before she actually does it. "I'm like, 'Hi, I'm going to spank you on your bottom if you don't stop right now, this is ridiculous,' and honestly it's really helped.
Not long ago, the treatment options available to people with metastatic kidney cancer were few and feeble. Surgical removal of the affected tissue was an effective and often durable fix for people with cancer that was confined to the kidneys. But for the roughly 30% to 40% of people with kidney cancer that spreads to other parts of the body, the prognosis was dispiritingly grim.
Fortunately, things are much different today.
June 4, 2014 5:11 PM EDT
Chester Nez, the last surviving member of the original band of Navajo Native Americans whose code helped the Allies win World War II, died Wednesday. He was 93 and suffered from kidney failure, Reuters reports.
Nez was one of the original 29 Navajo recruited by the Marine Corps to develop a secret code based on their native language for use in wartime communication. Because the language is unwritten, spoken only in the American Southwest and known to less than 30 non-Navajo people, Reuters reports, American forces accurately predicted that Japan would be unable to crack the code.
Mindy Kaling is a busy woman. As head of the production company Kaling International, she’s juggling nearly two dozen projects in various stages, including the Netflix hit Never Have I Ever and HBO Max romp The Sex Lives of College Girls. On top of her producing duties, Kaling is also working as a writer on a particularly high-profile project: Legally Blonde 3. To quote its iconic protagonist, the ever-optimistic lawyer Elle Woods played by Reese Witherspoon, “What, like it’s hard?
Letters: Mar. 11, 1966 | TIME
2024-08-08
Anti-Matter Sir: Your truly splendid Essay on American humor [March 4] describes a condition prevalent in the sister arts. If contemporary native humor lacks the comic, it is no less true that poetry has won for itself the name of “antipoetry”; the human portrait in painting and sculpture is a confused mass of cogs and angles; the latest creative hero, Truman Capote, in writing a novel, has disposed of fiction; finally, we have a rising school of theologians who advocate religion without God!
It is because of their hard work that they end up influential, powerful and wealthy. The 19th century businesswoman Madam Efunroye Tinubu exemplifies this belief. In her time she was the wealthiest woman in the Yoruba kingdom. Not only did she have wealth, she was influential and a kingmaker. ADVERTISEMENT
Her story starts circa 1805 when she was born in the heart of Egbaland, Ojokodo. Her father's name was Olumosa and her mother's name was Nijeede.