Lady Bucs control Signal in 3-0 win
Outcomes of expectedly close competitions that end up lopsided tend to have one thing in common: One participant plays to its capabilities while the other plays far from it.
Such was the case Thursday at Boyd-Buchanan.
The Lady Buccaneers hosted Signal Mountain in a high school volleyball match between programs that finished first and third, respectively, in last year's Class A state tournament. It would not send shockwaves throughout the Chattanooga area if these teams met again in the Region 3 final, as they did last season.
Closer to shocking, Boyd-Buchanan defeated the Lady Eagles 25-17, 25-13, 25-23 and improved to 9-3-2.
"This was the most controlled our team has been this season," Boyd-Buchanan coach Amber Nolen said. "We did a really good job. Even on off-passes, we still did a good job with a term I like to use called 'bettering the ball.' We missed so few serves, there wasn't much of a momentum changer.
"The girls came in the gym ready."
The opposite was true for Signal Mountain (8-2). When asked where things went wrong, coach Jennifer Redman took both index fingers and pointed at her head.
"Right here," she said. "Our momentum stopped as soon as we walked in the gym. We played not to lose. We were timid and not being aggressive."
The Lady Bucs played and defeated Signal Mountain three times last season.
"The difference between this year and last year is we graduated four seniors," said Nolen, noting Signal Mountain lost none to graduation, but one starter did transfer. "I think that motivates the girls and makes them want to work even harder. They want to keep the upper hand."
Boyd-Buchanan scored the first four points of the match and never trailed in the first game.
Signal Mountain twice led by a point in the second game, but the Lady Bucs took the lead for good when they broke the tie at 7. Boyd-Buchanan finished strong,tiffany Pendants sale, scoring seven of the final eight points.
Despite falling behind 3-0,watches, the Lady Eagles led most of the third game. One of Callie Hildebrand's nine kills put them ahead 6-5,tiffany money clip, and the Lady Bucs didn't tie it again until 20.
Rachel Harper topped the Lady Bucs with 18 kills and 22 digs,buy tiffany, and three of her four aces were in succession during the closing stretch in the second game. Redman said she's tried to schedule opponents with strong left-side hitters because she expects to see more of Harper.
"We'll see them again when it counts," Redman said.
Jessica Kirk set for 24 assists in the victory and also had three aces and six digs.
Signal Mountain setter Georgia Paturalski totaled nine assists,shop for tiffany earrings, five digs and two aces, and most of her six kills were off fake sets. Allie Jennings led with 11 digs.
Lady Buffs volleyball team drops pair of matches
Garden City High School volleyball coach Bob Schmitz knew his team's season-opening matches on the road at Salina Central would be an eye-opener for some of his newer varsity players.,tiffany watche
He just didn't know how much until the Buffs headed home Tuesday night on the heels of two losses to Central (25-22, 25-17) and to Top-10 ranked Class 5A Newton (25-12, 25-14).
"It's kind of what I envisioned of how things might go," Schmitz said. "We've got four returners from last year, but two of those are sophomores, so we've got a number of players with not a lot of varsity experience."
To further complicate the Buffs' effort,tiffany key rings sale, senior Haley Harbour missed the season opener as she was serving a one-game suspension for an off-season incident. Harbour did accompany the team on the trip.
In the opening match against Central, Schmitz said he was pleased with the early play of his team, leading by as many as three points when the score got to 17.
"We were playing really well up to that point,tiffany earrings sale," Schmitz said. "I think part of our inexperience showed because we didn't have the mindset of staying tough and getting the winning point to maintain our lead."
Schmitz said Central went on two different three-point runs to eventually take the opening game by three points.
"We're discovering that you've got to stay aggressive to the end of a set," Schmitz said. "Central has a very good team, and Newton is a powerful team. Newton covers everything,tiffany bracelet, and they just seemed to put us on our heels. They block and hit very solidly."
Without Harbour in the lineup, Schmitz utilized a number of different lineups to give himself a chance to evaluate his varsity squad.
"I thought our communication got better as the matches went on," he said. "We're just trying to get better with each match and build for the season. I don't think this is the type of team that will have the ups and downs like last year."
Schmitz said his most consistent player in the two matches was junior Kristen Heiman. The 5-11 Heiman recorded 15 kills in the two matches, nine against Central and six against Newton.
"She's our most powerful hitter, and we've got to work on passing to get her better sets,necklaces," Schmitz said. "I think the whole experience (Tuesday) shows the girls the reasons why we're doing certain drills, running certain plays."
The Buffs (0-2) have little time to get ready for their next matches as they host a quadrangular at 4 p.m. Thursday at The Garden. Holcomb, Great Bend and Liberal round out the teams competing.
Credit: The Garden City Telegram, Kan.
UNITED KINGDOM FORESTRY COMMISSION ESTATE CELEBRATES CHRISTMAS AT GRIZEDALE FOREST IN SOUTH CUMBRIA
The Office of Forestry Commission issued the following press release:
Families in Cumbria can escape the hustle and bustle of town and city centre crowds by enjoying a greener, merrier Christmas tiffany on the Forestry Commission estate at Grizedale Forest in south Cumbria.
It will be Grizedale's first Christmas since the launch of its new pounds6m outdoor facilities earlier this year.
Christmas tree sales start on Tuesday 1 December from 10am to 4pm daily. Visitors will be able to choose from Norway Spruce (pounds3.25 per foot), Lodgepole Pine (pounds4.00 per foot) and Nordman Fir (pounds5.50.per foot) varieties. The shop will be closed for Christmas from 24 to 28 December.
On Saturday 5 December, Grizedale will celebrate Tree Dressing Day, a national day that highlights our earrings responsibility for looking after trees and reminds us of their enormous cultural and environmental importance. The event starts at 11am and costs pounds2 per person.
Children will get the chance to make Christmas decorations from natural materials, listen to tree tales, join a lantern walk and take part in dressing a special Grizedale tree. The lantern walk starts at 3pm.
There will be further opportunities to make decorations and lanterns, join a lantern walk and dress the tree with the 'Light Up The Dark' days on 6, 12 and 13 December from 10.30am until 1pm and 1.30pm until 4pm. Families can bring a glass jar which they will transform into a decorative lantern to take on the lantern walk, which begins at 3pm.
Tania Crockett from the Forestry Commission at Grizedale says:
"We're looking forward to our first Grizedale Christmas since the launch of our new outdoor facilities. The seasonal key rings activities we have on offer will hopefully encourage the whole family to interact with the forest in a fun, engaging, and most of all festive way."
During December, the cafe at Grizedale will be serving a Christmas menu, with festive treats such as mulled wine, mince pies and turkey and cranberry sandwiches on offer.
Visitors who have purchased a tree from Grizedale will have an extra incentive to treat themselves at the cafe, as there will be a 10 per cent discount on certain Christmas food on presentation of a valid sales receipt.
Grizedale has something for everyone with a wide range of walking trails, waymarked paths, tracks and bridleways, plus necklaces superb views of Coniston Water, Lake Windermere and the Grizedale Valley.
Fashion Flash: What to buy, see and know this week
Local girl does good: 2006 Fashion!Dallas/Kim Dawson Model Search winner Jessica Cline scores a big break this month. The 18-year-old Murphy native stars in Teen Vogue's lead May fashion spread, photographed by legendary lens man Arthur Elgort. Cline, represented locally by the Kim Dawson Agency, tiffany recently signed with Elite Model Management in New York. Elite also reps Victoria's Secret "angel" Alessandra Ambrosio, runway superstar Coco Rocha and Maybelline face Jessica White.
Today show beauty expert and author Charla Krupp hits Dallas Friday, serving as keynote speaker at the Go Red for Women luncheon at the Ritz-Carlton. If you miss her at the $125 meal, which benefits the American Heart Association, stop by Sephora at NorthPark tonight from 6 to 8. Krupp will be doling out tricks of the trade and copies of her guide to looking young, How Not to Look Old with a $50 purchase. Bonus: You also get a $10 Sephora gift card with that purchase.
Also benefiting the American Heart Association, the Neiman Marcus Stiletto Strut wraps around the downtown store on Thursday, from 6 to 8 p.m. Throw on your running shoes, er, heels, and sign up for one of seven patron levels, ranging from Sandal for $250 to Super High Stiletto for $25,000. (Those at the $2,500 Slingback level and above get cocktails and dinner at Charlie Palmer afterward.) For more information call 214-712-1307. Don't have time to strut? Neiman's is also partnering with Feeding America for the Good Event. From Thursday through Sunday, the purchase of a $40 donation card at any location gets you 30 percent off full-price merchandise in departments including men's and women's contemporary sportswear.
West 10 jewelry just landed at Bishop Arts District's Indigo 1745 (370 W. Seventh St., 214-948-1745). Crafted locally by Rebecca Wong, the bold, semiprecious collection of necklaces and earrings are all under $100. Also priced less than a Ben Franklin: everything at new store I'm That Grrl (509 N. Bishop Ave., 214-946-4775) just down the street. The pink-washed interior offers white perforated faux leather totes for $15, metallic scarves for $10 and skinny dark denims for $20.
The Nasher Sculpture Center Store is showcasing the locally produced Sabira Collection this month at the NorthPark location. Stop by Thursday from 6 to 9 p.m., grab a glass of wine and check out the handmade goods. Designed by the Rasheed family, works include watercolor paintings, photography, embroidered jewelry and hand-painted pillows, ranging in price from $48 to $3,000.
Gucci, Prada, Fendi -- the Italians will all be at the Ultimate Exchange, a consignment sale Monday and Tuesday at the Texas Star event facility (11621 Reeder Road). Look for American labels, too, including Tory Burch, Seven for All Mankind, Juicy Couture and Trina Turk. Prices range from $1 to $995, but drop to half-price the final two hours on Tuesday. Tickets are $5 in advance, $10 at the door. For more information, go to www.theultimate exchange.com.
In more luxe-for-less news, stop by the Salvation Army Women's Auxiliary Chic Boutique,tiffany & co 1837 at the nonprofit's Harry Hines location. Look for items from the charity's recent fashion show and luncheon (Chanel, Michael Kors and Ferragamo among the labels), priced as low as $10, Wednesday and Thursday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Now that the Project Runway mess is over and the show is scheduled to air on Lifetime in August, Bravo is turning to Isaac Mizrahi (below) to fill Tim Gunn's dapper shoes. Mizrahi -- clearly not camera-shy with 39 professional credits on imdb.com -- serves as host and co-judge on the Fashion Show, premiering Thursday at 9 p.m. The format is fairly PR-like, with 15 designers competing for a chance to have their creations sold at a "major retail outlet." No Saturn sedan to win, no Bluefly.com Accessories Wall, no Heidi Klum, but this show does have, oddly, former Destiny's Child member Kelly Rowland sharing host and judgment duties. Sabira Collection hand-painted pillows, $100 to $125, Nasher Sculpture Center Store, NorthPark CenterChanel purses are among the items available at the Salvation Army Women's Auxiliary Chic Boutique Wednesday and Thursday. Indigo 1745 in the Bishop Arts District now carries locally made West 10 jewelry.Designer Isaac Mizrahi hosts the Fashion Show , premiering Thursday on Bravo.Jerry Szor's $130 Feed the Need pendant necklace, benefiting Hunger BustersWant more style news?
Fashion Flash: What to buy, see and know this week
Local girl does good: 2006 Fashion!Dallas/Kim Dawson Model Search winner Jessica Cline scores a big break this month. The 18-year-old Murphy native stars in Teen Vogue's lead May fashion spread, photographed by legendary lens man Arthur Elgort. Cline, represented locally by the tiffany Kim Dawson Agency, recently signed with Elite Model Management in New York. Elite also reps Victoria's Secret "angel" Alessandra Ambrosio, runway superstar Coco Rocha and Maybelline face Jessica White.
Today show beauty expert and author Charla Krupp hits Dallas Friday, serving as keynote speaker at the Go Red for Women luncheon at the Ritz-Carlton. If you miss her at the $125 meal, which benefits the American Heart Association, stop by Sephora at NorthPark tonight from 6 to 8. Krupp will be doling out tricks of the trade and copies of her guide to looking young, How Not to Look Old with a $50 purchase. Bonus: You also get a $10 Sephora gift card with that purchase.
Also benefiting the American Heart Association, the Neiman Marcus Stiletto Strut wraps around the downtown store on Thursday, from 6 to 8 p.m. Throw on your running shoes, er, heels, and sign up for one of seven patron levels, ranging from Sandal for $250 to Super High Stiletto for $25,000. (Those at the $2,500 Slingback level and above get cocktails and dinner at Charlie Palmer afterward.) For more information call 214-712-1307. Don't have time to strut? Neiman's is also partnering with Feeding America for the Good Event. From Thursday through Sunday, the purchase of a $40 donation card at any location gets you 30 percent off full-price merchandise in departments including men's and women's contemporary sportswear.
West 10 jewelry just landed at Bishop Arts District's Indigo 1745 (370 W. Seventh St., 214-948-1745). Crafted locally by Rebecca Wong, the bold, semiprecious collection of necklaces and earrings are all under $100. Also priced less than a Ben Franklin: everything at new store I'm That Grrl (509 N. Bishop Ave., 214-946-4775) just down the street. The pink-washed interior offers white perforated faux leather totes for $15, metallic scarves for $10 and skinny dark denims for $20.
The Nasher Sculpture Center Store is showcasing the locally produced Sabira Collection this month at the NorthPark location. Stop by Thursday from 6 to 9 p.m., grab a glass of wine and check out the handmade goods. Designed by the Rasheed family, works include watercolor paintings, photography,earrings embroidered jewelry and hand-painted pillows, ranging in price from $48 to $3,000.
Gucci, Prada, Fendi -- the Italians will all be at the Ultimate Exchange, a consignment sale Monday and Tuesday at the Texas Star event facility (11621 Reeder Road). Look for American labels, too, including Tory Burch, Seven for All Mankind, Juicy Couture and Trina Turk. Prices range from $1 to $995, but drop to half-price the final two hours on Tuesday. Tickets are $5 in advance, $10 at the door. For more information, go to www.theultimate exchange.com.
In more luxe-for-less news, stop by the Salvation Army Women's Auxiliary Chic Boutique, at the nonprofit's Harry Hines location. Look for items from the charity's recent fashion show and luncheon (Chanel, Michael Kors and Ferragamo among the labels), priced as low as $10, Wednesday and Thursday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Now that the Project Runway mess is over and the show is scheduled to air on Lifetime in August, Bravo is turning to Isaac Mizrahi (below) to fill Tim Gunn's dapper shoes. Mizrahi -- clearly not camera-shy with 39 professional credits on imdb.com -- serves as host and co-judge on the Fashion Show, premiering Thursday at 9 p.m. The format is fairly PR-like, with 15 designers competing for a chance to have their creations sold at a "major retail outlet." No Saturn sedan to win, no Bluefly.com Accessories Wall, no Heidi Klum, but this show does have, oddly, former key rings Destiny's Child member Kelly Rowland sharing host and judgment duties. Sabira Collection hand-painted pillows, $100 to $125, Nasher Sculpture Center Store, NorthPark CenterChanel purses are among the items available at the Salvation Army Women's Auxiliary Chic Boutique Wednesday and Thursday. Indigo 1745 in the Bishop Arts District now carries locally made West 10 jewelry.Designer Isaac Mizrahi hosts the Fashion Show , premiering Thursday on Bravo.Jerry Szor's $130 Feed the Need pendant necklace, benefiting Hunger BustersWant more style news?
Tri-Cities becoming fashion-friendly
Women shoppers now have a range of choices in the Tri-Cities. An array of new stores dedicated to cheap tiffany women's clothing and accessories are helping change the way local fashionistas shop, and the trend shows no signs of slowing despite a sluggish economy.
A handful of new stores catering to women have opened in the Tri-Cities this year. And on Friday, Apricot Lane Boutique will open at Columbia Center mall, bringing the latest big city women's fashion to the Tri-Cities, say Bill and Jenny Ackerman of Kennewick.
It's a specialty franchise retail store -- the first one in Washington, Oregon and Idaho -- that'll offer hand-selected designer wear and accessories, Jenny Ackerman said. The corporate franchise provides help with infrastructure, support and access to established business relationships, while allowing the Ackermans the flexibility to buy merchandise they think Tri-Citians will like.
Tri-Citians won't have to travel anymore to Seattle or Portland to buy the latest in fashion apparel, jewelry, handbags, accessories and gifts, said Bill Ackerman, because his store "will bring it to them."
Shoppers will be able to get a pair of $200 designer jeans or an $8 pair of earrings, he said, as the store will have a "price point for everyone."
Apricot Lane will have merchandise for all ages, but the Ackermans hope to attract what they call "soccer mom and daughter" demographics, anyone in their 30s and 40s with a teenage daughter as their core customers. And Jenny Ackerman said the couple also plans to do fashion parties at the store with a hostess to buy tiffany accessories provide a more personal shopping experience for invited guests.
Specialty stores selling women's clothing are doing well in medium-sized metro areas, said Jenifer Roberts, assistant professor in fashion merchandising at Missouri State University. They are a better alternative to buying clothes online, and they offer eclectic selection and personal service, Roberts said.
In the Tri-Cities, Twist, an upscale discount women's clothing store, opened in May in the strip mall near Costco and Olive Garden in Kennewick, and Milania -- House of Style opened in late March on Keene Road in Richland.
Bloomingdeals, a boutique offering designer clothes and collectibles, opened for business in February in downtown Kennewick. It recently moved to a bigger location on Cascade Street and Kennewick Avenue, said store owner Laura Culbertson, who was in Los Angeles last week to pick up merchandise for the store.
She said she offers "trendy and affordable" goods to women of all ages.
"It's a good time to be in the Tri-Cities," said Craig Richards, one of three co-owners of Twist, which offers both "classic and contemporary" fashions to women ages 20 to 70. The store's broad selection is helping draw customers, he said.
There's a demand for trendy and unique women's apparel, said Jenna Cadwell, owner of Milania. About a year ago, she started doing private shopping events at local restaurants and wineries and launched an online boutique after she heard a lot of women complain there weren't enough designer choices available locally.
Roberts said small boutiques provide trendy casual and formal wear that fit nicely, she said.
Specialty women's clothing stores generally cater to women 25 and up, Roberts said. Women in that age group usually have the money and appreciate different styles they see in magazines and on TV, she said.
Young women, in the 15 to 21 age-group, generally tend to wear what their friends have, and generally they have less disposable income, Roberts said.
Soccer moms, who may not be working full-time, also want to look trendy, she said. "They might not like to wear strapless tops, but they would go for spaghetti straps," she said.
Women tend to buy more clothes, typically four tops to a pair of pants, she said. Since the trend of small, specialty boutique went into high gear in the last decade or so, women have educated themselves.
"Quality concerns override the price tag," Roberts said.
Sizes vary by vendors, explained Lee Boman, manager of JCPenney at Columbia Center mall buy tiffany pendants . Boman said he sees the opening of Apricot Lane in the mall as a plus for the community, mall and his store.
"It will enrich the fashionability of the mall," Boman said.
Women's clothes and accessories are a priority for JCPenney, Boman said. That's why his store has dedicated about 44,000 square feet -- of the store's approximately 173,000-square-foot selling area -- to display and sell women's merchandise, he said.
For customers, the joy of visiting a boutique lies in finding treasures that are not mass-produced, said Cadwell of Milania. Apparel sold at specialty stores is made of better quality fabric and constructed better, she said. Boutiques offer great variety, yet carry limited editions of items they sell, making each item a unique piece, Cadwell said.
She said Apricot Lane probably will help educate customers about the latest fashion trends, adding her business has been good despite limited advertising. She plans to have a grand opening ceremony at Milania 475 Keene Road, on Saturday. Hours are 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Martha Colter of Kennewick loves to shop at Celia's Boutique on Clearwater Avenue and Union Street in Kennewick. It has everything she wants: Clothes, purses, scarves jewelry and it's unique and reasonably priced for the quality, Colter said.
She said she visits other stores, but often ends up returning to Celia's. "Her collection is chic and feminine," she said.
Celia Farnkoff, who opened Celia's Boutique in 1975, said she, like other boutique owners, regularly visits fashion bazaars in New York and Los Angeles, and occasionally travels to Europe, to buy a variety of merchandise that includes clothes, hats, bags, belts and other accessories. She also carries apparel by French and Canadian designers, she said.
Farnkoff said her business has been as steady as ever and she thinks there's room for new women's stores in the Tri-Cities because the area is growing.
"Competition is always good for customers," she said.
Jewelry Shops Get Heirloom Queries
A concerned customer called Chicago jeweler Tobina Kahn last week to sell a tiffany necklaces inherited from her late mother and made from six ounces of gold, plus two carats of diamonds. Her worry: Had the 50-year-old heirloom's worth diminished literally overnight?
Ms. Kahn said no -- that just doesn't happen to vintage designer jewelry. But Ms. Kahn received several such calls last week after the Bank of England's auction of 25 tons of gold slashed the metal's price on world commodity markets.
Flash to San Antonio: Portfolio manager Gil Atzmon is scratching his head. He has followed precious metals for 15 years, and can't understand the concern over the auction either, considering that 25 tons isn't much compared with the total volume of gold traded daily.
"What's been going on with gold leading up to, and since, the auction just goes against the fundamental principles of what makes markets," says Mr. Atzmon, chief investment strategist for U.S. Global Investors Inc. "But maybe the problem with me is that I've just been at this for too long. I might understand things better if I had no experience to influence the way I see things."
Put mildly, gold has an image problem right now. But it is not just because of the notoriously bearish outlook for the metal's asset value. Rather, investors and consumers alike are struggling to make sense of the economics surrounding gold, which some say have deviated from the trend lines the metal has conventionally followed.
World gold demand is increasing; but its commodity value continues to plummet. Shoppers expect bargains on products made from gold, or they flock to sell the pieces they already own. Yet there hasn't been any change in those objects' worth.
Gold futures have hit several new 20-year lows in recent weeks, and the August contract closed at $254.80 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange yesterday.
The metal, which traded above $600 early in the 1980s, is way past those heady days and has been declining for several years now. But the latest $34 slide began just after the Bank of England announced on May 7 its plans to eventually sell 415 tons of gold, beginning with the recent auction as its first installment.
Low inflation, gold's declining role as a monetary standard, and central-bank sales such as the British auction have generally been blamed for the falling value. However, nuggets of good news are to be found in the landslide of gold selling.
Asian gold demand, which fell sharply during that continent's financial crisis, has begun to improve over the past month or so, analysts say. American jewelry-manufacturers' demand, which had increased 13% last year, is measuring strong gains again, as is consumer buying of gold coins. In the first half of the year, the U.S. Mint sold almost 39 tons of gold American Eagle bullion coins -- one of the more convenient ways for small investors to own gold -- more than twice the total for the year-earlier half.
Because of those demand trends, plus the fact that the British announcement had all of June to finish pummeling gold prices, market watchers' expectations going into last week's auction were split. Ultimately, the sale was interpreted as a bearish development as much because of what it symbolized as its fundamental effect on the gold market, said analyst Philip Klapwijk of Gold Fields Mineral Services Ltd., a London metals-research firm.
"I think it's the signaling effect that's most important here, as much as anything," Mr. Klapwijk said. "The 25 tons certainly isn't a huge amount, but the fact that someone's decided to go from having 17% of their reserves to 7% is significant. This isn't a Mickey Mouse bank, after all. It's the Bank of England."
But retailing analysts say those falling commodity prices have not yet resulted in similar cuts for jewelry buyers, and most likely won't for at least three months. Frequently, they say, manufacturers simply substitute higher-quality gold -- for example 18 karats instead of 14 karats -- when commodity prices fall, thereby justifying similar prices for their jewelry.
Ms. Kahn says the effect of gold's commodity price is even more negligible on the type of designer items that her small estate-jewelry company, the House of Kahn, purchases. Nevertheless, she says she gets three to four calls from concerned sellers on any day there's significant bearish gold-commodity news, such as that of the British auction.
One of her recent customers, retired accountant Claire Fischer, said many older Americans view jewelry as an investment asset, a philosophy Ms. Khan discourages, since jewelry pieces don't appreciate much in value over time. Craftsmanship and collectible value mostly determines the worth of such bracelets jewelry.
"People my age lived through a time when money wasn't worth anything and banks were no good. For them gold -- even their jewelry -- was always something they could sell for value if they needed to," said Ms. Fischer, 75 years old, who says she has tripled the money gained from her jewelry sales on the stock market.
"This is a different time now, though. Money is better than gold," she continued. "The times have changed. Unfortunately, some people haven't."
Indeed, a recent poll taken by the mining-industry trade group World Gold Council showed that citizens in most industrialized countries still view gold as a valuable asset, even if their governments are busy selling it off. In the survey, 67% of British respondents and 76% of Americans said gold reserves are important to national economic strength.
Similar percentages in both countries said gold reserves are important to maintaining a strong currency.
Gold Council research has also shown public sentiment about gold to be largely uninformed, however. A 1997 poll by the organization, for example, showed that only about 7% of Americans can correctly quote the price of gold on any given day.
Jewelry: Give it a swirl
Diamonds take a twirl in light, feminine designs. Clockwise from top left: Provocante necklace ($50,000), by VICTOIRE DE CASTELLANE FOR DIOR FINE JEWELRY, at Dior Joaillerie, NYC, 212-2078448; Beverly Hills, 310859-2050. VAN CLEEF & ARPELS Soliflore pin ($15,000), 800-VCA-5797. DORIS PANOS Escargot earrings ($3,520), 888-30PANOS. ERICA COURTNEY platinum and diamond Swirl Pendant on a diamond chain ($25,200), at Erica Courtney, L.A., 323938-2373; Michael Eigen, NYC, 212-966-0281; Stanley Korshak, Dallas, 214-871-3625. VANCOX 18k-white-gold and diamond ring ($3,600), at Soho Gem, NYC, 212-6253004. MIA & LIZZIE 14kwhite-gold and diamond necklace ($1,100), at Neiman Marcus, L.A., 310-550-5900; Bergdorf Goodman, NYC, 800-5581855. Tiffany & Co . Swirl earrings with diamonds set in platinum ($11,000), 800-526-0649. FRED PARIS Serpentine ring ($5,200), 800-655-2280.
“W JEWELRY” WILL HAVE AN ITALIAN–NOT A “TOWN & COUNTRY”–ACCENT
The news of the W spinoff's April 2003 launch (as a 75,000-paid- circulation quarterly, with bimonthly plans in 2004) suggested a Town & Country lookalike, as the jewelry/ watch category is key to the 154-year-old Hearst Magazines monthly. "Not at all," says W vp/ publisher (since August 2000) Alyce Alston. "T&C does an excellent job, but we weren't thinking of them. Our inspiration came from Italian Vogue Jewelry (bimonthly spinoff of Italian Vogue), which brilliantly serves the consumer and retailer. IVG has some popularity in the U.S., and W cheap jewelry being English language can build on that. Using lists from Cond Nast, Fairchild, and several jewelers (Tiffany/Tourneau, etc.) we are targeting people who spent $30,000-plus on jewelry during the past year."
* W cufflinks Jewelry, like its parent, will be tabloid-size, and, Alston hopes it will start a "launch a year" pattern. Looking to the March 2003 "W" ("Spring Preview"): "We'll close the issue up in ad pages" (versus 284 in March 2002). It will be very strong." Similar morning-line March optimism comes from Vogue vp/publisher Tom Florio.