Posts tagged ‘tiffany pendants’

Trial date set for suspect in jewelry store murder

By admin, 8 August, 2010, No Comment

Christopher DiMeo will go on trial Jan. 18 for the fatal shootings of Fairfield jewelers Tim and Kim Donnelly five years ago, a judge ruled Tuesday.

Following a status hearing with the defense lawyers and the prosecutor, Superior Court Judge Robert Devlin set the date for the trial,Charm bracelet, with jury selection set to begin Sept. 20.

Twelve jurors and five alternates will be selected for the trial, which the judge estimated will last three months.

DiMeo, 28, is charged with capital felony and two counts of murder for the Feb. 2, 2005, fatal shooting of the Donnellys during a robbery at their store. If convicted of the capital felony charge,tiffany necklaces, he could get the death penalty.

Jury selection had been scheduled to begin last October when DiMeo’s lead lawyer,Charm pendant, Ronald Gold, abruptly quit the case for health reasons.

DiMeo’s new lawyer, Michael Courtney, then told the judge he would need a year’s continuance to bring himself up to speed on the case.

Senior Assistant State’s Attorney Joseph Corradino told the judge he was ready to go on trial immediately.

At the time Devlin agreed to a delay, but Tuesday he said Jan. 18 is the definite trial date.

During the already lengthy delays one of the state’s witnesses has died and another has retired and moved out of state.

Credit: Connecticut Post,tiffany pendants, Bridgeport

Familiar but fun look at film process

By admin, 7 August, 2010, No Comment

It’s one of the most famous scenes in film history. Audrey Hepburn steps out of a cab in the early morning darkness, looks up at the Tiffany & Co. building on Fifth Avenue, strolls over to a window and begins to nibble on a Danish pastry as she eyes the jewels inside.

Her hair is swept up,Tiffany Watches, her demeanor that of quiet sophistication, her little sleeveless dress is black. Of course.

If only it were that simple.

Much has been written about Truman Capote’s novella Breakfast at Tiffany’s, and just as much has been written about the movie of the same name. Author Sam Wasson is now adding his own take on the classic in Fifth Avenue, 5 A.M.: Audrey Hepburn, Breakfast at Tiffany’s,Tiffany pendants, and the Dawn of the Modern Women.

Anyone even slightly interested in Capote/Hepburn/Breakfast at Tiffany’s will delight in his account, although a lot of it is old news.

Yes, Capote was not happy with the film version, with its possibility of multiple endings. Yes, Marilyn Monroe was Capote’s first choice for Holly Golightly. Yes, Hepburn didn’t even want the part, thinking it was not the image she wanted to project. She didn’t like Danish pastries, either. She wanted to eat ice cream in the opening scene, but director Blake Edwards convinced her that ice cream was not for breakfast.

There were some who didn’t even like the movie’s now-classic theme, Moon River.

But through intensive research and interviews, Wasson is able to tell the story from an insider’s point of view, giving readers a behind-the-scenes look at what it took to make the movie — the egos, the budget restraints, the folks at Tiffany‘s who had never before allowed cameras inside. In short, it’s a good page-turner even if we do know the ending.

There are some surprises, too. Hepburn wasn’t a beauty?

"Her legs were too long, her waist was too small, her feet were too big and so were her eyes, nose and the two gaping nostrils in it,Tiffany rings," writes Wasson. "When she smiled she revealed a mouth that swallowed up her face and a row of jagged teeth that wouldn’t look too good in close-ups."

And then there was Hepburn’s virginal image to deal with. Holly Golightly was anything but chaste, and in the puritanical late ’50s, nice girls did not sleep around. Did the movie set the stage for the free-sex ’60s?

You be the judge. Just remember what Ms. Golightly believed: Nothing bad can ever happen to you at Tiffany’s.

Fifth Avenue,Tiffany bracelets, 5 A.M.:

Audrey Hepburn, Breakfast at Tiffany’s, and the Dawn of the Modern Women

By Sam Wasson

HarperStudio, 231 pp., $19.99

Mad Men And Bad Girls

By admin, 7 August, 2010, 1 Comment

Back in the early ’60s, Holly was the woman we wanted to be. The slender and stylish New York beauty was supported by men, yet she seemed free.

Now, back in the early ’60s on TV, Betty is the woman we don’t want to be. The slender and stylish New York beauty is supported by men, and she seems trapped.

"Breakfast at Tiffany‘s" was cool because of its modern glamour,Tiffany necklaces, ushering in a sexy future. "Mad Men" is cool because of its retro glamour,Tiffany earrings, recalling a sexy past.

Audrey Hepburn’s Holly Golightly, a call girl with a crazy streak, got money from strange men at boites for "trips to the powder room." January Jones’s Betty Draper, a housewife with a crazy streak, cheated on her husband, when she was pregnant, with a strange man at a boite.

The tightly wound Betty is a gilded bird in a cage; she needs to belong to someone, this season to a new, older husband, an adviser to Governor Rockefeller.

The wild-child Holly is terrified someone will put her in a cage — in the Truman Capote novella, she won’t even walk past the Central Park Zoo — and she doesn’t want to belong to anyone. (She also doesn’t want anything to belong to her; that’s why she dumps her cat in a garbage can at the end. In the tacked-on happy ending of the movie, she finds the cat; in the book, which has no leading man to tell her she’s already in a cage of her own making, she doesn’t.)

The alcohol-swigging Betty never calls her blue periods "the mean reds," as the alcohol-swigging Holly did, but the women have their vertiginous moods in common: luminescent looks overlaying dark psyches.

In Georgetown, in the window of a vintage store called Annie Creamcheese, there’s an iconic poster of Audrey Hepburn as Holly, sleek with cigarette holder, long black Givenchy dress and pearls. Right around the corner, in the window of Banana Republic, there’s a huge picture of Jon Hamm, looking sleek with Don Draper’s mysterious, matinee-idol smolder.

Even though many of us grew up not realizing it, Holly’s a hooker. And in the new season of AMC’s "Mad Men," which started last Sunday, Don hires a hooker and wants to be slapped.

Set in the same era, the two Manhattan fantasies are dashing escapes from the prim, airless Eisenhower era. Both feature magnetic characters, smoke rings and, in Capote’s phrase, "martini laughter."

Their gorgeous visual style cloaks strangled emotions,tiffany, and both narratives brim with louche trysts, sexual liberation, bohemian flashes, suppressed demons and reinvented lives.

In "Mad Men," the single Richard Whitman from Pennsylvania coal country morphs into the married Don Draper after an accident in the Korean War. In "Breakfast at Tiffany’s," the married Lulamae Barnes morphs into the single Holly Golightly to get out of the backwater Tulip, Tex.

"In New York you can become anything," Sam Wasson, who wrote the new book "Fifth Avenue, 5 a.m.: Audrey Hepburn, Breakfast at Tiffany’s and the Dawn of the Modern Woman," told Vanity Fair.

Wasson asserts that Holly was the precursor of Carrie and the "Sex and the City" singletons (not to mention TV trailblazers Mary Tyler Moore and Ally McBeal.) Truman Capote had wanted Marilyn Monroe for the role of the teenage hillbilly turned chic prostitute, and it would have been fun to see that version, too.

But when the producers chose the less exhausting Audrey, her real-life good-girl persona helped mask the raciness of her character.

In the 1960 movie of John O’Hara’s "Butterfield 8," Elizabeth Taylor’s call girl had to die in a car crash for her sins, just as 20 years earlier, Vivien Leigh, playing a ballerina-turned-prostitute in "Waterloo Bridge," had to be punished for her wicked ways with a final leap off the bridge.

It would be many years before audiences would embrace overt hookers as heroines: Jamie Lee Curtis in "Trading Places" in 1983, Julia Roberts in "Pretty Woman" in 1990 and Kim Basinger in "L.A. Confidential" in 1997.

Married to the oppressive Mel Ferrer and with a new baby boy, Hepburn’s princess-swan image bled into Holly, making her seem less like a member of the oldest profession and more like a modern, fun-loving single girl.

"In ‘Breakfast at Tiffany’s,’ all of a sudden — because it was Audrey who was doing it — living alone, going out, looking fabulous and getting a little drunk didn’t look so bad anymore," Wasson writes. "Being single actually seemed shame-free. It seemed fun." So, as a haute hooker,Tiffany pendants, Audrey Hepburn was a fairy godmother, not only to feminism but to the prevailing ethos that style and cool trump all.

One-day event offers the latest in foot fashion

By admin, 4 August, 2010, No Comment

Nary a penny loafer or flip-flop was in sight at the H-Town Sneaker Summit on Sunday at the Meridian. Sporting their best in footwear, hundreds of sneaker lovers from across Texas turned out for the one-day event, hoping to leave with a new pair for their collection or to meet their favorite designer.

Clutching a pink Nike shoe box, Umair Qureshi eyed a table stacked with colorful sneakers.

But the 20-year-old wasn’t looking to buy anything. Instead,tiffany, he was patiently waiting on designer Nick Diamond to make an appearance.

"It’s my favorite clothes brand and shoes," he said, pointing to his Nick Diamond black T-shirt and shoes. "I’ve been looking forward to it. I brought the box for him to sign."

Nearly two hours after the summit began outside downtown, the line to the entrance snaked around the building as visitors braved the heat to gain access to more than 25,000 square feet of shoes.

"It’s feeding the frenzy," said Eric Robertson, a representative from Active Athlete. "This has been an explosive subculture since 1999 when Nike started their retro collection."

Hip-hop music blaring, guests weaved in and out of each room, admiring vendor collections, as well as those of other footwear fans.

"Sorry, man," one visitor said, stepping on another visitor’s foot. "Oh, nice shoes," he added.

Robertson said a shoe’s appearance is critical when selecting a new pair.

"You’re looking for explosiveness that no one else has," he said.

Sloane Teagle tagged along with her older brother to the event.

"He drove in from Austin to meet me here for this,Tiffany cuff links," the 17-year-old said. "I’m not so much into names as he is, but I think this is pretty cool.

"I only have like 50 to 60 pairs," she added, looking at her lime green sneakers.

Christopher "Sleepy" Dixon,Tiffany pendants, who owns House of Shoes in Sugar Land,Tiffany earrings, brought several pairs along with him for his vendor table, showcasing shoes ranging from $100 to $1,500.

"You want something that nobody else has," he said, describing the buying process. "You’re looking at quality and whether it’s a good price."

And although he already has 200 pairs of shoes in his closet, Dixon said he still would check out the other vendors.

"Maybe I’ll find something for myself," he said, grinning.

amanda.casanova@chron.com

Men’s Engagement Rings Proclaim

By admin, 3 August, 2010, No Comment

WHEN, on a snowy February midnight in Central Park, Bennett Konesni, a farmer and musician on Shelter Island, N.Y., proposed to Edith Gawler, a fiddler and architecture student from Maine, he presented her with two gifts.

The first was what he called an Edophone, a Seussian instrument he’d made from an exhaust vent from a clothes dryer and a hanging flowerpot. When a crank was turned, it played a Swedish wedding melody.

The second was a box containing several rings. Among them, simple copper and more ornate brass bands — two for her and two for him. He had asked Ms. Gawler’s father, a metal millworker, for her hand, and then enlisted his help in making the rings. "I didn’t really know that guys weren’t supposed to have rings," Mr. Konesni, 28, admitted of his decision, however inadvertent, to buck tradition and wear an engagement ring himself.

"In this day and age, we have an equal partnership in this relationship — we’re in it together," he said. "It seemed weird to have an imbalance, to say to Edith, ‘You have to wear a ring to keep those guys away, but I get to go around as if I’ve not made a major life commitment.’ "

Ms. Gawler, 22, who also wears a diamond passed down through Mr. Konesni’s family, thought her fiance’s decision to announce his unavailability along with hers was marvelous.

"I love wearing matching rings," she said. "This way everyone knows we’re a duo."

The number of "mengagements," in which men are symbolically declaring themselves off-limits at the same time as their fiancees, is so small, no one seems to be counting. But it bears noting that some men, whether heterosexual or gay, are proudly displaying ring fingers wrapped in plain and engraved bands, gemstones and even diamonds.

A handful of jewelers, eager to promote any marketable niche, have begun trading on this trend. In early 2009, H. Samuel, the British jeweler, unveiled a line of rings called Tioro. One of them, a titanium and diamond model, starts at about $156 and is billed as "an engagement ring for men, allowing women to propose to their man."

Novori, based in Washington State, offers men’s engagement rings ranging from $405, for a braided white gold band, to $2,895 for a diamond-edged sparkler.

"If you’re planning to propose to your boyfriend, try to find out ahead of time if he’d like a men’s engagement ring," the company’s Web site suggests. "But don’t think for a minute that men’s engagement rings are boring or feminine."

For several days, Katherina K. Y. Hauner carried around a custom-designed band of white gold, inlaid with material from a meteorite, from Metamorphosis Design in California, to place on the finger of her fiance, Joel Voss.

One evening in April, 2009, while they vacationed in the Czech Republic, Ms. Hauner, 32, and Mr. Voss, 30, each pulled rings out of their pockets and proposed simultaneously in Prague.

"We didn’t discuss it beforehand in a lot of details," said Ms. Hauner, who, like Mr. Voss, is a postdoctoral neuroscience researcher in the Chicago area. "There was just this idea that when we got engaged, we both wanted to ask one another and tell each other why we wanted to do this. We wanted to participate in the event equally."

That he, too, would wear a ring seemed only natural to Mr. Voss.

"Why would one person wear a ring and the other not?" he said. "It may seem novel now, but I would hope it’s becoming more normal."

While the arrival of men’s engagement rings may not be the next step in gender equality, it is another sign that male infidelity is becoming less and less acceptable, said Stephanie Coontz, a history professor at Evergreen State College in Olympia, Wash., and the author of "Marriage, a History: How Love Conquered Marriage."

"It’s a logical extension of our increasing rejection of the double standard of sexuality," she said. "We talk a lot about infidelity, but actually infidelity was much more highly approved of among men in the past than it is today. The double standard was so extreme that in the late 18th century we have letters from men bragging to their wife’s brother about activities outside the marriage."

Leading up to her first marriage, in 1974, Barbara Risman didn’t wear an engagement ring.

"I was a very serious second-wave feminist, and at that moment in history any marital tradition that seemed gender-specific seemed prima facie oppressive," said Ms. Risman, 54, who is the head of the sociology department at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

That was then.

Ms. Risman,Tiffany Watches, who was divorced in 1998,Tiffany Sets, is set to marry Randall Liss, 56,Tiffany earrings, an options trader, next spring. Not only does she want to wear an engagement ring, she expects her fiance to wear one, too. The couple have chosen rings from Classic Jewelry in Chicago — hers is a diamond clasped in a tension setting; his is a hammered matte white gold band,Tiffany pendants, inlaid with sapphire — and are awaiting their arrival.

"We both made this commitment, and to be quite frank, it’s just fair," Mr. Liss said. "And it makes me feel good."

In Ms. Risman’s eyes, men’s engagement rings are a signifier of an important convergence that’s happening in marriage and heterosexual relationships: the notion that symbols and roles are about being partners, and that what is done for one should be done for the other.

"The feminist movement and I have matured," she said. "Now there’s a sense that we should look carefully at what the traditions are and reinvent them so that we keep the good part of it and share it."

And, she said, "to me an engagement ring says out loud, in a culturally symbolic way, ‘I found a life partner, I’m happy and I’m connected to another human being.’ And that’s a pretty cool thing to proclaim."

UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO EXTENSION WINS COMMUNITY ENGAG

By admin, 1 August, 2010, No Comment

The University of Idaho issued the following news release:,Charm bracelet

The Northwest Area Foundation will continue its support for the Idaho Horizons program with a $200,000 grant to the University of Idaho and its partners to work with communities to build economic prosperity.

Nearly 50 small towns across rural Idaho have participated in Horizons since the program began in 2003. Their successes are impressive. Local residents have created new businesses, food banks, community foundations, youth councils, farmers’ markets, and downtown clean-up projects, to name just a few. They have also secured public and private grants to achieve their community and economic development goals.

"At first I was skeptical about Horizons – I thought it was just another gimmick, another meeting I had to go to,tiffany," Cascade Mayor Dick Carter said. "It turned out to be the best thing that’s ever happened in our community."

In Riggins, the Canyon Area Bus Service grew from a recognized community need to reality through Horizons and now provides a vital transportation option for communities along the Salmon River and for residents seeking medical care in McCall. The bus service fills a public transportation gap along the U.

S. Highway 95 corridor from Grangeville to McCall.

"We’ve been talking about this stuff for years and now it’s finally getting done," said Horizons participant Linda Hieter of Riggins. "Horizons did that by handing us the tools and providing support without interference."

The new grant from the Northwest Area Foundation will support a wide variety of asset and wealth building strategies for Horizons communities. Working with partners such as the Idaho Department of Commerce, Small Business Development Center, and Idaho Community Foundation, the university will provide workshops, technical assistance, and opportunities for communities to learn from each other.

One of the first events will be a youth retreat focusing on financial literacy, leadership development, and options for post secondary education. In July 2011, the university will host "Expanding Idaho’s Horizons," a statewide conference for rural communities n Boise.

"Rural Idaho faces a host of challenges, including a serious lack of educational and job opportunities," said Priscilla Salant, the university’s coordinator for outreach and engagement and the statewide Horizons lead.

"We are proud to work alongside Horizons community members as they build a prosperous future,tiffany pendants," Salant said. "Our goal is to engage them wherever possible. We’ll invite them to join us, for example,tiffany earrings, in the university’s new initiative to strengthen K-12 education in science, technology, engineering and math, thanks to a recent grant from the Micron Foundation."

The University of Idaho recently won national recognition for its partnership with the Coeur d’Alene Reservation communities, which completed the Horizons program in 2006. The Association of Public and Land-grant Universities announced in May that the University won the Outreach Scholarship/W.

K. Kellogg Foundation Engagement Award for the western U.

S. region.

The award, which included a $9,500 prize, honors the partnerships of a single university that has redesigned its teaching, research and outreach functions to become more involved with communities. The university also is one of five finalists for the national C. Peter Magrath University/Community Engagement Award.

The University of Idaho joins six other land grant universities receiving Horizons grants totaling $1.9 million from the Northwest Area Foundation. More information about Idaho Horizons is available online at http://extension.ag.uidaho.edu/horizons. For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

Suffolk woman struck boyfriend twice with car, pol

By admin, 31 July, 2010, 1 Comment

Police say a woman was traveling with her young daughter when she struck her boyfriend twice with her car.,Charm bracelet

The woman, 19, and her boyfriend, 29, had been arguing at Joyner’s Motel when he tried to leave about 8:30 Tuesday morning, according to a city news release. She chased him in her car,tiffany pendants, hitting him twice and knocking him down once, police said. The woman tried to block her boyfriend when he got up and at one point was blocking traffic, police said.

The man’s injuries were minor, the news release says.

The couple’s 2-year-old daughter was in the car at the time, police said.

Police charged Stephanie A. Williams, 19, of the 5600 block of Plummer Blvd., with attempted malicious wounding and child endangerment.

Williams was taken to Western Tidewater Regional Jail and released on a $5,000 bond, police said. Child Protective Services is investigating.

Police say the 1-year-old boy who was found dead Tuesday at his home had visible signs of trauma on his body.

Medical examiners are trying to determine how the boy died. An autopsy was being conducted Wednesday as police continue to investigate the boy’s "suspicious" death while in the care of his mother’s boyfriend.

Authorities received a call at 4:34 p.m. about an unresponsive child at Aqua Vista apartments. The boy,tiffany bangles, who was found in a bedroom, was pronounced dead shortly after police arrived, according to Holly McPherson, a spokeswoman for Newport News Police Department. The boy’s 5-year-old sister was also in the apartment but unharmed. McPherson said the mother of the children was at work Tuesday and her boyfriend was caring for them. The apartment complex is located in the Southeast Community behind King-Lincoln Park.

The woman’s boyfriend, who has not been charged in the boy’s death, was questioned by police Tuesday evening.

Calvin Sneed says he was passing out fliers Tuesday around 9 a.m. when he saw the woman’s boyfriend with the boy.

"The kid was running behind him. He was like, ‘This kid is so [expletive] spoiled. I told you to come on.’" Sneed said the tiny boy struggled to keep up. The boy was barefoot and only wearing a diaper, Sneed said.

Later that day Sneed heard a little boy was dead. Sneed says he realized it was the same boy from earlier when he saw police questioning the boy’s caretaker from that morning.

"When I saw the man sitting on the steps I said, ‘I know that boy.’"

Police are still investigating how the boy died and how long he had been dead when they responded.

About 100 people Tuesday evening stood on doorsteps, in stairwells and on sidewalks watching police detectives go in and out of building 668.

"It’s really sad to know that a little kid died out here," said resident Karen Brown-Harris. "A little baby that doesn’t even know what life is all about."

Carmen Craighead, who says she is a friend of the mother, said the child, as well as his 5-year-old sister,tiffany key rings, usually attended daycare with her two sons. Craighead said a daycare worker told her that the children had not been coming lately. The last time they had seen the boy, he had bruises.

In today’s economy, looking good is no longer some

By admin, 28 July, 2010, No Comment

Most of us have heard the story of Debrahlee Lorenzana, the 33-year-old Queens, N.Y., woman who sued Citibank last month, claiming that, in pencil skirts, turtlenecks, and peep-toe stilettos, she was fired from her desk job for being "too hot." We’ve also watched Lorenzana’s credibility come into question, as vintage clips of her appearance on a reality-TV show about plastic surgery portray a rambling, attention-obsessed twit, stuffed to the brim with implants and collagen. ("I love plastic surgery," she coos. "I think it’s the best thing that ever happened.") Creepy, yes. But for all the talk about this woman’s motives-and whether or not she was indeed fired for her looks-there’s one question nobody seems to want to ask: isn’t it possible Lorenzana’s looks got her the job in the first place?

Not all employers are that shallow-but it’s no secret we are a culture consumed by image. Economists have long recognized what’s been dubbed the "beauty premium"-the idea that pretty people, whatever their aspirations, tend to do better in, well, almost everything. Handsome men earn, on average, 5Â percent more than their less-attractive counterparts (good-looking women earn 4Â percent more); pretty people get more attention from teachers, bosses, and mentors; even babies stare longer at good-looking faces (and we stare longer at good-looking babies). A couple of decades ago, when the economy was thriving-and it was a makeup-less Kate Moss, not a plastic-surgery-plumped Paris Hilton, who was considered the beauty ideal-we might have brushed off those statistics as superficial. But in 2010, when Heidi Montag’s bloated lips plaster every magazine in town, when little girls lust after an airbrushed, unattainable body ideal, there’s a growing bundle of research to show that our bias against the unattractive-our "beauty bias," as a new book calls it-is more pervasive than ever. And when it comes to the workplace, it’s looks, not merit, that all too often rule.

Consider the following: over his career, a good-looking man will make some $250,000 more than his least-attractive counterpart, according to economist Daniel Hamermesh; 13Â percent of women, according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (and 10Â percent of men, according to a new NEWSWEEK survey), say they’d consider cosmetic surgery if it made them more competitive at work. Both points are disturbing, certainly. But in the current economy, when employers have more hiring options than ever, looks, it seems, aren’t just important; they’re critical. NEWSWEEK surveyed 202 corporate hiring managers, from human-resources staff to senior-level vice presidents, as well as 964 members of the public, only to confirm what no qualified (or unqualified) employee wants to admit: from hiring to office politics to promotions, even, looking good is no longer something we can dismiss as frivolous or vain.

Fifty-seven percent of hiring managers told NEWSWEEK that qualified but unattractive candidates are likely to have a harder time landing a job, while more than half advised spending as much time and money on "making sure they look attractive" as on perfecting a résumé. When it comes to women, apparently, flaunting our assets works: 61Â percent of managers (the majority of them men) said it would be an advantage for a woman to wear clothing showing off her figure at work. (Ouch.) Asked to rank employee attributes in order of importance, meanwhile, managers placed looks above education: of nine character traits, it came in third, below experience (No. 1) and confidence (No. 2) but above "where a candidate went to school" (No. 4). Does that mean you should drop out of Harvard and invest in a nose job? Probably not. But a state school might be just as marketable. "This is the new reality of the job market," says one New York recruiter, who asked to have her name withheld because she advises job candidates for a living. "It’s better to be average and good- looking than brilliant and unattractive."

Remember the story about the 1960 Nixon-Kennedy debate? It goes to show our beauty bias is nothing novel. At the time, radio listeners thought Nixon had won, but those watching Kennedy’s tanned, chiseled face on TV, next to a worn-down, 5 o’clock-shadowed Nixon, were sure it was the junior senator. There are various explanations for some of this. Plato wrote of the "golden proportions,tiffany earrings," which dubbed the width of an ideal face an exact two thirds its length, a nose no longer than the distance between the eyes. Biologically speaking, humans are attracted to symmetrical faces and curvy women for a reason: it’s those shapes that are believed to produce the healthiest offspring. As the thinking goes, symmetrical faces are then deemed beautiful; beauty is linked to confidence; and it’s a combination of looks and confidence that we often equate with smarts. Perhaps there’s some evidence to that: if handsome kids get more attention from teachers, then, sure, maybe they do better in school and, ultimately, at work. But the more likely scenario is what scientists dub the "halo effect"-that, like a pack of untrained puppies, we are mesmerized by beauty, blindly ascribing intelligent traits to go along with it.

There are various forces to blame for much of this, from an economy that allows pickiness to a plastic-surgery industry that encourages superficial notions of beauty. In reality, it’s a confluence of cultural forces that has left us clutching,tiffany pendants, desperately, to an ever-evolving beauty ideal. Today’s young workers were reared on the kind of reality TV and pop culture that screams, again and again, that everything is a candidate for upgrade. We’ve watched bodies transformed on Extreme Makeover, faces taken apart and pieced back together on I Want a Famous Face . We compare ourselves with the airbrushed images in advertisements and magazines, and read surveys-like this one-that confirm our worst fears. We are a culture more sexualized than ever ( Mad Men notwithstanding), with technology that’s made it easier than ever to "better" ourselves, warping our standards for what’s normal. Plastic surgery used to be for the rich and famous; today we’ve leveled the playing field with cheap boob jobs, tummy tucks, and outpatient procedures you can get on your lunch break. Where that leads us is running to stand still: taught that good looks are no longer a gift but a ceaseless pursuit.

Deborah Rhode, a Stanford law professor and author of The Beauty Bias, is herself an interesting case study. During her term as chair of the American Bar Association’s commission on working women, she was struck by how often the nation’s most powerful females were stranded in cab lines and late for meetings because, in heels, walking any distance was out of the question. These were working, powerful, leading women, she writes. Why did they insist on wearing heels? Sure, some women just like heels (and still others probably know their bosses like them). But there is also the reality that however hard men have it-and, from an economic perspective, their "beauty premium" is higher, say economists-women will always face a double bind, expected to conform to the beauty standards of the day, yet simultaneously condemned for doing so. Recruiters may think women like Lorenzana can get ahead for showing off their looks,tiffany necklaces, but 47Â percent also believe it’s possible for a woman to be penalized for being "too good-looking." Whether or not any of it pays off, there’s something terribly wrong when 6-year-olds are using makeup, while their mothers spend the equivalent of a college education just keeping their faces intact. "All of this is happening against a backdrop of more women in the workplace,tiffany bracelets, in all kinds of jobs, striving toward wage equality," says Harvard psychologist Nancy Etcoff. "So we’re surprised-but we shouldn’t be-how this [beauty curse] continues to haunt us."

Forty years ago, when feminists threw their bras into the "Freedom Trash Can" outside the 1968 Miss America pageant (no, they didn’t really burn them!), it was to protest the idea that women had become "enslaved by ludicrous beauty standards," as the organizers put it. At the time, women still made up just a fraction of the workforce, and yet they were rejecting the notion that, in work or play, they had to be confined to the role of busty secretary-a mere office toy. A decade later, as women entered the workforce in droves, it was boxy suits, not bustiers, that defined their dress. But today’s working women have achieved "equality" (or so we’re led to believe): they dominate the workforce, they are household breadwinners, and so they balk at having to subvert their sexuality, whether in the boardroom or on the beach. Yet while the outside-work milieu might accept the empowered yet feminine ideal, the workplace surely doesn’t. Studies show that unattractive women remain at a disadvantage in low-level positions like secretary, while in upper-level fields that are historically male-dominated, good-looking women can suffer a so-called bimbo effect. They are viewed as too feminine, less intelligent, and, ultimately, less competent-not only by men but also by their female peers.

To add an extra layer of complexity, there’s the conundrum of aging in a culture where younger workers are more tech-savvy, cheaper, and, well, nicer on the eyes. Eighty-four percent of managers told NEWSWEEK they believe a qualified but visibly older candidate would make some employers hesitate, and while ageism affects men, too, it’s particularly tough for women. As Rhode puts it, silver hair and furrowed brows may make aging men look "distinguished," but aging women risk marginalization or ridicule for their efforts to pass as young. "This double standard," Rhode writes, "leaves women not only perpetually worried about their appearance-but also worried about worrying."

A Thanksgiving Meal, Then Charges of Jihad

By admin, 27 July, 2010, No Comment

In the photograph from last November, Ramy Zamzam, 22, is a proud first-year dental student in his new white jacket, framed by his beaming parents.

A few weeks later, he and four American friends would disappear, resurfacing in Pakistan, accused by United States and Pakistani law enforcement officials of seeking to join the jihad against American forces in Afghanistan.

At a time of new concern about radicalization of Muslims in the United States, Mr. Zamzam’s story is a baffling tale and a tragedy for parents who from all appearances are loyal and law-abiding Muslim immigrants living in the Virginia suburbs of Washington.

In an interview on Friday, as the men’s trial resumed in Pakistan, Mr. Zamzam’s mother, Amal Khalifa, described a harrowing visit she and her husband made early this month to the eldest of her three children. The confident student, she said, the "multitasker" who had excelled as a student and community volunteer through high school and college, was shattered by four months in a Pakistani jail.

"He cried and clung to me," Ms. Khalifa said, choking up. "When I saw him like that, it broke my heart."

By her account, Mr. Zamzam asked about his two younger brothers and denied that he had had any plans to join militants. "He said: ‘Mom, I love my country. I want to go back to my country. Why do the Pakistanis want to do this to us?’ " Ms. Khalifa said in the interview, at the Washington offices of the Council on American Islamic Relations, an advocacy group that has assisted the parents.

The Pakistani authorities have lodged terrorism charges against Mr. Zamzam and his four friends, all American citizens — Ahmed Abdullah Minni, Aman Hassan Yemer, Waqar Khan and Umer Farooq — alleging that the Americans sought to connect with militant groups and that they also plotted attacks against Pakistani targets. The men have denied the charges.

Their trial, which after a recess formally began on Saturday in a prison in the Pakistani city of Sargodha, opened with testimony presented by police officers, and the presentation of maps the men were allegedly carrying when they were arrested and print-outs of e-mail. A lawyer for the men, Hassan Katchela, said his clients had been "excited, neat and tidy," during the session. The next hearing was set for April 27.

American law enforcement officials have said there is considerable evidence suggesting that the men had been radicalized and planned violence, notably a video Mr. Zamzam left behind that appeared to reflect his plans to join the jihad.

Ms. Khalifa declined to discuss the video, which Mr. Zamzam left with a Virginia friend on a thumb drive. She said the Federal Bureau of Investigation had asked her not to speak publicly about its contents.

During the visit with his parents, she said, Mr. Zamzam, told them he and the other men disappeared two days after Thanksgiving to travel to Pakistan to attend Mr. Farooq’s wedding. They chose not to tell their parents about their plans,tiffany, Mr. Zamzam said, because they were afraid they would be forbidden from taking an expensive trip to a possibly dangerous place.

After they arrived, according to Mr. Zamzam, armed men,tiffany bangles, not wearing uniforms, burst into the house where they were staying and drove off with them. They were held for 36 hours without food or water and beaten constantly by interrogators who demanded that they admit to being terrorists, Mr. Zamzam told his parents.

Pakistani officials have denied that the Americans were mistreated and disputed the wedding story.

Mr. Zamzam’s family immigrated from Egypt in 1990,tiffany pendants, when he was 2 years old, after receiving residence status in the so-called green card lottery operated by the United States. Ms. Khalifa has worked as a secretary for the Navy and as a receptionist at a Washington condominium, she said; her husband, Said Zamzam, has worked in the financial aid office at Howard University and also as a receptionist at the same condominium.

The family was not especially religious, Ms. Khalifa said, rarely visiting the mosque except at Muslim holidays. For Ramy and his teenage friends at West Potomac High School, she said, the small neighborhood mosque was "a club."

"They’d order pizza, play computer games and play basketball in the parking lot,tiffany key rings," she said.

A biology major on full scholarship to Howard University in Washington, he decided on a dental career and studied day and night the summer after his junior year for the Dental Admission Test. He rarely came home during his first semester at Howard’s dental school last fall, but appeared to be his usual joking self when he came home for Thanksgiving week, she said.

"I cooked 100 percent American food on Thanksgiving — turkey, mashed potatoes, corn," she said.

The following Saturday, she said, he announced that he was going to go to a conference in Baltimore and needed two sets of clothes and a suitcase. She did not ask him what the conference was about.

On Sunday evening, Ahmed Minni’s younger brother appeared and said "the five boys have disappeared." Ms. Khalifa did not believe it, and they called her son’s cellphone. He answered and told them not to worry, he would be home soon.

At 2 a.m. Monday, Mr. Minni’s father, brother and two friends came to the house and told Ms. Khalifa and her husband that the young men were in Pakistan. She said she had not had a peaceful moment in the nightmarish four months since that night.

Men who marry women with kids take on additional l

By admin, 26 July, 2010, No Comment

How does a happily single, child-free guy become an instant dad?

Easy, offers Dan McElhattan III. "Just add life and stress."

All joking aside, instant fathers — men who marry a woman who already has kids — are a unique subset of the parental universe.

Instant dads experience the marital equivalent of going from zero to 60 in six seconds flat. And while fatherhood never comes with an instruction manual, they, unlike standard-issue fathers, never had a chance to enjoy that transitional married-but-childless honeymoon period most dads do.

But instant dads are, by necessity, adaptable guys. And, when push comes to shove, an instant dad is as authentic a dad as any other guy who’ll be unwrapping a new tie or enjoying breakfast in bed this morning.

McElhattan, 40, hadn’t planned on becoming an instant dad, although he had dated a few single moms. But when he met Mary, now his wife of six years, the portrait of her kids that she had behind her desk signaled that he might be facing the prospect sooner rather than later.

Not long afterward, when Mary’s boss invited Mary and McElhattan to a barbecue, they started dating.

McElhattan married into a family with four children , now ages 13 to 23, and he and Mary since have added to their family a 3 1/2-year-old daughter.

That’s "the way it goes when you find the love of your life. Kids are a factor, but not the factor. The fact is, you love your wife,tiffany key rings," he says.

"I never expected to jump into the prepackaged deal," he adds. "But when you’ve found the right woman … ."

Before meeting his future wife, Gerald Chin, 30, says his dating partners tended to be "single women, no strings attached."

When Chin, a chef, met Maureen — they dated for three years before marrying in 2008 — "we just got along real well," he recalls. But he didn’t know until a few days after they started dating that she had a son, now 11,tiffany pendants, and a daughter, now 15.

"I’ve always liked kids — I’ve always been like a kid myself — and she was really nervous about introducing her kids to me, because she didn’t want to confuse the kids or want me to be afraid of the kids," Chin says.

The meeting took place at a salon where both Chin and Maureen used to get haircuts. Chin recalls that Maureen didn’t introduce him as a boyfriend but as "my friend."

"The girl, she kind of knew what was going on at the time," he adds. "Girls are always more mature than boys. Her radar picked it up."

But the meeting went well. "I thought they were cute kids," Chin says, and the kids seemed to get along well with him, too.

A few weeks later, Chin even soloed with the kids for the first time, taking them on an outing to Madame Tussaud’s wax museum. "We all got along," he says. "It’s crazy."

Dating Maureen, and getting to know her children, had a surprising effect on Chin. Not only was he thinking that dating a woman with kids might work out, but, he says, "it kind of made me think about what I was doing in my dating life, like maybe it is time for me to grow up."

Nick Cusumano met his future wife, Tanya, about six years ago while vacationing in Las Vegas. Cusumano, a New Yorker, and Tanya stayed in touch after his return home, having an occasionally up-and-down long-distance relationship.

When things turned serious and "it came to the point where one of us needed to make a move," that decision fell to Cusumano, because Tanya had a then-9-year-old son.

Cusumano had to adjust not only to instant fatherhood but life in a place very different from the Bronx.

He had met Anthony before moving here. "During the couple of trips I had made here previously to making the big move, we met and we’d done movies and all that good stuff," he says.

They got along great. Anthony’s dad "was in Las Vegas at that point,tiffany, but he wasn’t really in the picture," Cusumano explains, "so I think he really adapted to me fast."

Cusumano and Tanya married three years ago and, in addition to Anthony, their family includes a year-and-a-half-old daughter named Emma.

While the three dads all are convinced that they’ve made the right decision, they concede that the road to instant fatherhood wasn’t always smooth.

McElhattan, for example, discovered that some of Mary’s children were more accepting of mom dating, and perhaps marrying, a new guy — a guy who wasn’t their biological dad — than others. There were occasional anger issues, he says, and some "challenging" times.

Objections to jumping into a premade family came from other directions, too. McElhattan says his own parents’ initial reaction to the news that he was dating a woman with four kids was "are you nuts? Are you serious? What are you getting into?"

But, when they met Mary, "she connected with them so fast," he says.

Some of Chin’s friends gave him a hard time. "My friends are all single and young, and they’re like, ‘Are you stupid? What are you doing? She’s got kids.’ Basically: Watch out."

For guys who are used to living alone, simply moving into a home filled with other people — a home in which they are, in effect, the outsider — can be difficult.

That was "a little bit strange," Chin says, adding that the adjustment was even more weird because he, Maureen and the kids were living with her parents at the time.

"But the good thing was I got to see the kids every morning when I woke up," he continues. "I think it built up a real strong relationship."

Cusumano and Anthony had an easier time adapting to their new living arrangements, probably, Cusumano suspects, because "he was really looking for someone to have that (father-son relationship) with."

Still, Cusumano says, it was odd, "without a doubt, to wake up one morning and there’s a little 9-year-old boy looking to hang out with you."

It did take Cusumano a bit of time to figure out the parameters of his newly assumed parental role. If Anthony needed discipline, for example, "I didn’t really know what my position was on that, and I didn’t really plan for that," he says.

Yet, Cusumano adds, Anthony never once aimed the sharpest arrow in the stepkid’s quiver — "You’re not my father" — his way.

"I have always been waiting for that, up until this day, and it has never been said," Cusumano says. "And I really love him for that, because I always feared that would come, and that would really hurt."

Chin also learned early on that fatherhood can be about decidedly nonabstract concerns. Once, while he was still living with his roommate, the kids came by for a sleepover and one "got sick and just threw up everywhere," he says.

The lesson he learned: Fatherhood is "not all playing video games and skateboarding."

Chin says there were moments before he and Maureen married when he wondered whether he was doing the right thing.

"Maybe right in the beginning," he says,tiffany money clips, "just because anyone would be like this. Is this the right thing for me? But, after a few months, it was all good."

In fact, looking back at how completely his life has changed during the past several years, Chin is convinced that marriage and fatherhood have been good for him.

"It’s not just me thinking about myself now," he explains. "When I make decisions … I make them for the family. And I see kids come into the restaurant now and I understand if they don’t want to eat something. It completely gives me a different perspective when it comes to kids and life in general."

And if further proof that instant dads are just like regular dads is needed, there’s this: Chin already is freaking out over the prospect of daughter Bella driving.

"It’s like, oh man, I’m getting old," he says, laughing.

Contact reporter John Przybys at jprzybys@ reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0280.