“IT FEELS GOOD TO BE IN OHIO,” BOB DOLE SAID last Tuesday. “Good to be among friends.” “It feels good to be in Dallas,” Dole said last Wednesday. “Good to be among friends.” Don’t worry. Sooner or later the G.O.P. front runner will visit your state and feel good about being there too. That’s what running to lead the world’s most powerful nation is all about. And for the third time, that is what Bob Dole is trying to do.
- Kikundi cha wanawake wa chama cha ODM kimetishia kuandaa maandamano baada ya Naibu Rais kumuita Raila tapeli
-Wanawake hao walimtaka Ruto kuacha kumchafulia Raila jina na kumtaja ovyo ovyo katika siasa zake
- Awali, gavana wa Mombasa Hassan Joho alidai kuwa Ruto hayuko katika ligi moja na Raila kisiasa na hivyo anapaswa kumheshimu
Kikundi maarufu cha wanawake kinachotambulika kama 'ODM Women League' kimetishia kuandaa maandamano kufuatia matamshi alotoa Naibu Rais William Ruto dhidi ya kiongozi wao Raila Odinga.
The first installment of Charmed came out in 1998 and followed 3 sister-witches who’d fight evil as they conquered the hearts of teenagers all over the world. Thanks to its popularity, 8 seasons of the series were released, and countless actors took part in it.
Today at Bright Side, we want to recall our favorite characters 23 years after the first season was released. Prue Halliwell — Shannen Doherty
After Charmed, Shannen produced some television shows, starred in a handful of sitcoms, and appeared on several reality shows. In 2015, together with Holly Marie Combs, her colleague from Charmed, they starred in a 6-episode reality show, in which they traveled across the South-East part of the United States and described the places they visited.
In most states, aspiring barbers have to spend 1,000 hours or more in training before they get a license. To drive a 40,000-pound truck, though, there’s no minimum behind-the-wheel driving time required, no proof of ability to navigate through mountains, snow, or rain. There’s just a medical exam, a multiple-choice written exam, and a brief driving test—which in some states can be administered by the school that drivers paid to train them.
The White Witches Association of Nigeria (WWAN) has warned of dire consequences if the killings by Boko Haram, bandits, and Fulani herdsmen are not brought to an end. The association disclosed this through the association’s former spokesman, Dr. Iboi Okhue, in an interview with Independent on Saturday.
According to the witches, the country may break up into four or six independent nations if nothing is done.
Okhue stated that after two meetings held in Bakassi, Cross River State, and Kakuri, in Kaduna state, on February and April, respectively, to seek solution to the bloodbath ravaging Nigeria, it was discovered that except something was done urgently, Nigeria might break up.