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Today the fur business has rebounded, and J. Mendel still sells minks that would make a Romanov swoon, but most people who stop by the store aren't there for the coats. Spotted by nighttime window shoppers, the diversionary dresses soon became a main attraction, and in the late 1990s, Mendel began designing feminine skirts and pantsuits for day and drop-dead dresses for night, many trimmed with a fur collar or hem. In January 2004, he showed his first ready-to-wear collection in New York City. The show drew raves and marked the successful repositioning of the brand...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Making It Real | 11/29/2005 | See Source »

...points to a larger desire to leave open the possibility for God in the universe.However, like Edwards and Moore, Powell says evolution and belief in God are not mutually exclusive. “In general I would allow for the possibility that God chose to use evolution for his main means of developing the world,” Powell says. “One should read the Genesis creation accounts in a largely figurative manner.”Edwards has a simpler explanation for the persistence of a contentious dialogue between science and religion.“One quarter...

Author: By Sarah E.F. Milov, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: INTELLECTUAL CURRENTS: Intelligent Design Finds Few Sympathizers at HDS | 11/29/2005 | See Source »

...centers of Tamworth and Dubbo; in recent weeks new AES shop fronts have appeared in inner-Sydney's Glebe, Blacktown in the city's western suburbs and Maitland in the Hunter Valley. The offices are decorated in brash reds and yellows, and are located amid the bustle of the main street, so people know "we're here and we belong. It lifts the spirits of Aboriginal people," says Estens. About 100 towns have requested the AES, which is itself still being fitted out and road-tested, to set up camp. As Farmer Estens has learnt, sustainable progress needs the right...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Jobs For Our Mob | 11/28/2005 | See Source »

...Caf? 2400, on the town's tree-lined main drag, waitress Janice Wager, 16, is convinced she did the right thing in leaving school in August to work as a trainee at the upmarket caf?. "Some of my friends and cousins, who just hang around doing nothing, said to me, Why do you want to work? Others believed I thought I was now better than them because I had a job and money." Bright-eyed and polite, Wager is contemplating further hospitality training, modeling, obtaining her driver's license and buying a car. At the nearby Moree Panel Works...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Jobs For Our Mob | 11/28/2005 | See Source »

...Manhattan—or that anybody who thinks otherwise is yuppie scum. The trouble with “Rent” is the face it puts on poverty. Poverty is a serious problem, not a lifestyle choice. But “Rent”’s main characters accept poverty as both a necessary byproduct of refusing to sell out and a hip way to spend one’s youth. The characters live their bohemian lives right next to a massive homeless community, but the homeless enter the film—with one exception—only...

Author: By Samuel M. Simon, | Title: Politics for Rent | 11/28/2005 | See Source »

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