Product Description
DC The Jules Hooded Bomber in Brown,Winter Coats & Jackets for Women: Model is wearing a size Small

Twill puffer style bomber jacket with removable faux-fur lined hood; two pockets; snap button placket over zipper; silky red printed inner lining; 100% cotton.





Product Description
Time Magazine Award Winner - Best Inventions 2006! ActiveForever.com is delighted to offer the Wovel as an effective snow removal tool. At first glance, the Wovel might appear to the layperson to be a novel-looking device counterintuitive to effective snow removal. In fact, the Wovel is an elegant and efficient design based on two of the oldest and most commonplace scientific principles ever put into use: the wheel and the lever. It's wheel size, handle height, overall length, and the double-width blade are all perfectly proportioned to maximize the lever action and to capture the greatest amount of snow in one pass. This is the Wovel-The Snow Shovel on a Wheel(1484)






Product Description
Also available is the Mini Mitt Chair?. At half the size of the regular Mitt Chair?, the Mini is perfect for toddlers or as a bed for your favorite pet! The Mini Mitt Chair? is available in the colors listed, and also Blue Denim and Green. 17? W. x 21? H.


This cable-television biography about the life of Illinois senator Barack Obama was made before he began campaigning to be the Democratic party's candidate for the 2008 presidential race. Still, the program suggests Obama has one or another kind of profound, Anerican destiny as a mixed-race activist who never comfortably fit into one or another group, and had to look deep into his own roots to understand his identity. The son of a white American mother and black Kenyan father, Obama was abandoned by the latter when he returned to his native country to work for its improvement. Raised by his mother--whom Obama credits with teaching him many of his values--and his grandmother, Obama lived in Hawaii as a child but moved to Indonesia for a few years when his mom remarried. There, Obama saw cyclical poverty and the underlying factors that perpetuate it before returning to Hawaii. Interviews with childhood friends and his sister describe Obama's restlessness before attending Harvard law school and propelling himself into a life of public service and community activism. Often accused of lacking enough political experience to qualify him for the White House, Obama comes across in this show as a visionary and experienced consensus-builder who can reach across opposing points of view. The program ends with details about Obama's entry into the U.S. Senate and his rise in the Democratic party, but a post-program coda catches us up with the history of his recent campaign. --Tom Keogh


When he called himself "a skinny kid with a funny name" at the 2004 Democratic National Convention, his political star was already on the rise. By the time he decimated the competition in 2004 race for the Illinois Senate, he was the bona fide golden child of a Democratic party desperately in need of a winner. In many ways, the story of Barack Obama is a uniquely American tale of the 21st century, where racial lines are blurry and the most interesting chapter is just beginning.