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World News Archives: 

Here are the posts from the blog I created on myspace titled, The Pencil Kissed The Paper. That blog is in the process of deletion. 

Recently, I created a new (The Pencil Kissed The Paper) blog on WordPress but with different content.

Most of the posts from the myspace blog were hard news articles from around the world.

That is why I made the effort to archive them here. At some point the link to his section will find it's way to another blog I created titled "The World Stage" on WordPress. 

Starting in 2013 (The World Stage) will have also International news stories and features. 

Including all the news from the Olympic Games. However, when the Olympics begin no other news items will be posted until the games are other. 

 

 

 

Sunday
Dec302012

March 19, 2012 Louis Vuitton show! Marc Jacobs unveils new collection on steam engine train & the Louvre  

Harking back to a bygone era, Marc Jacobs unveiled an Edwardian-inspired collection for Louis Vuitton on the final day of Paris Fashion Week yesterday. Models took to the catwalk elegantly dressed in classic cuts with ornate silk hats neatly perched, bearing an uncanny resemblance to characters from period dramas such as Downton Abbey. But the real showstopper was the LV express – a fully functioning steam train built specially for the show, branded with navy and gold lettering

See Photos,Videos & Read more: Here

and if you are in Paris don't forget to stop by the Louvre Museum, they have a new American Art Exhibition.

Official Website Louvre Museum

Cupid's Kiss at the Louvre Video

Sunday
Dec302012

New Book: Muslim Women Talk About Love Mar 19, 2012

This is hands down the most electrifying book cover that's come across my desk in my recent memory: the words Love, Inshallah: The Secret Love Lives of American Muslim Women emblazoned over lacy lingerie tantalizingly dropped on an unkempt bed. If Ayesha Mattu and Nura Maznavi, the editors of this intoxicating compilation of 25 personal narratives, are to be believed, Muslim women flirt, date, have sex, and fall in love, just like everyone else. Who knew? by Sarah Khan

Read More @ Travel & Leisure

The essays range from hilarious (a 14-year-old being given a crash course in the birds and the bees by her mom in a movie-theater parking lot) to heart-wrenching (a woman who realizes that her non-Muslim fiancé has an insurmountable disdain for her faith); from chaste (an endearing tale of a girl passing up a chance to make out with her model-hot trainer) to steamy (a bittersweet retelling of a passionate weeklong affair with a Muslim punk rocker). Premarital sex, arranged marriage, online dating, polygamous relationships, date rape, lesbian romances—everything is recounted with refreshing honesty and courage. My favorite section was, unsurprisingly, International Habibti: Love Overseas, full of enticing encounters in the Andes, Sri Lanka, and Cairo—who hasn't fantasized about meeting a mysterious, accented, handsome stranger in an exotic, faraway land? While this anthology is alive with tales that will make you laugh, recoil in shock, or even shed a tear, the most vital thing it does is dispel myths about one of the most misunderstood and stereotyped groups today.

Love, Inshallah simply proves that there is no such thing as a typical Muslim woman. Here, in their own diverse voices, they talk candidly about love in all its many-splendored forms—and what's not to love about that? I'll be hosting a Q&A with Mattu and Maznavi at Columbia University on February 15, so if you're in the New York City area, RSVP here and come by to learn more about Love, Inshallah—or check out their schedule to see when the book tour is headed to your neck of the woods.