`(Exceeds 300 pages)
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`Proceeding] Serial No: 91177192
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`Filed: 12-05-2008
`
`Title: 0pposer’s Notice of Réliance
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`Part 2 of 9
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`Processed by Duane Foster
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`FEATURES IN THE SHADE The Christchurch Press November 7, 2000
`
`Copyright 2000 Financial Times Information
`All rights reserved
`Global News Wire
`
`Copyright 2000 Independent Newspapers Limited
`The Christchurch Press
`
`November 7, 2000
`
`SECTION: 2: Pg. 38
`
`LENGTH: 426 words
`
`HEADLINE: FEATURES IN THE SHADE
`
`BYLINE: CLAUSEN VICTORIA
`
`BODY:
`
`They were originally made famous by General MacArthur during the Korean War. Then Tom Cruise renewed
`their popularity in the movie Top Gun. Just like flares and halter necks, aviator sunglasses are making a
`fashion comeback.
`
`The best dressed will be in frameless aviators, or shields, in lens shades of every hue. Just think of the.
`women in Robbie Wi|liams's Rock DJ video or Anastasia and you've got the picture.
`
`David Bearpark, of Bearpark Optical, says most brands are now doing aviator styles. "Sunglasses have
`become a little bit bigger now. We've done that smaller |ook.“
`
`Overseas, the unisex thing is over and women are going for the more feminine Jackie O-type styles. Light-
`tinted lenses, like pink, blue, yellow, and orange, and graduated lenses, are very much the rage, and it is
`important you have the right sunglasses for your lifestyle. Mixing your Nike shades with your business suit
`is not a good look. The good news is, you can own more than one pair.
`
`Mr Bearpark says there are three basic types of sunglasses: the fashion shape brands like DKNY, Armani,
`Gucci, and Dior; the sports brands like Oakley, Nike, Adidas, and Anarchy; and the fashion styles more
`influenced by lens quality, such as Serengeti and Revo, who claim to make the best lenses in the world.
`
`Leaping out of the fisherman‘s closet is the polarised lens, a surprise option which most brands have begun
`offering in the last six months. All Nautica lenses are polarised.
`
`Of course, with the hole in the ozone layer getting bigger over New Zealand, shades are not a frivolous
`accessory. Protecting your retina from the damaging effects of the sun is important. Luckily, there are
`plenty of options for looking stylie while looking after your vision.
`
`Hot brands for this year include relative newcomers to the New Zealand market —— DKNY, Nike, Oakley,
`Diesel, and Gucci.
`
`Brent Rushworth, of Arthur Cocks and Company, says Dior and Gucci both have new designers who are
`moving the fashion houses into the younger market. Frameless shields are big looks for both this season.
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`Carrera is also looking to rebrand and broaden their appeal to more than the mature man market.
`
`OPSM say its latest collection of ONYX sunglasses have been inspired by European trends -- sleek and
`sculptural wlth modern lines designed to mould the face shape.
`
`Highlight colours include mid-blue, crystal burgundy, antique silver, milk chocolate, several shades of
`tortolseshell, and black. Trims are understated, and sleek chrome temple trims add a designer touch.
`
`JOURNAL-CODE: WTCP
`
`LOAD-DATE: March 17, 2001
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`Contemporary design recalls movie glamour The Houston Chronicle November 09, 2000, Thursday
`
`Copyright 2000 The Houston Chronicle Publishing Company
`The Houston Chronicle
`
`November 09, 2000, Thursday 2 STAR EDITION
`
`SECTION: FASHION; Pg. 1
`
`LENGTH: 630 words
`
`HEADLINE: Contemporary design recalls movie glamour
`
`SOURCE: Staff
`
`BYLINE: MADELEINE MCDERMOTT HAMM, Houston Chronicle Design Editor
`
`DATELINE: HIGH POINT, N.C.
`
`BODY:
`
`HIGH POINT, N.C. — You almost expect Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers to come twirling by in some of the
`market showrooms. Decked out in sleek contemporary furnishings, these pared-down vignettes look like a
`set for one of those classic midcentury movies, in which everyone lives in a streamlined Manhattan
`penthouse.
`
`West Coast designer Barbara Barry jump—started the trend in the '90s with her ongoing Hollywood-inspired
`collection for Baker. Now at the fall International Home Furnishings Market the dominant mood in modem
`is sophisticated and smooth, dark woods accented with jewelrylike hardware.
`
`In fact, at Drexel Heritage, the First Avenue Collection features pulls and handles that bring to mind David
`Yurman's stylish sterling and gold jewelry. The chunky pulls would make killer earrings, and every fashion-
`minded woman visiting the showroom coveted the twisted silver cable handles for bracelets.
`
`Vicki Solada, vice president of product at Drexel Heritage, compared the exquisite hardware on the gently
`curved walnut drawer fronts to "the perfect piece of jewelry adorning the perfect black dress."
`
`Following up his smashingly successful debut collection for Hickory Chair a year ago, New York designer
`Thomas O'Brien added the Greenwich Studio group this market. Clean lines and understated detail
`characterize most of the pieces. One of the stars of the collection, the oval Darlington Desk with open side
`shelves, features dark flamed mahogany veneer polished to a mirror shine.
`
`At John Widdicomb, Larry Laslo, another New Yorker known for modern designs reminiscent of the 1930s,
`'40s and '50s, turned to the neoclassics for inspiration. He called his Novecento Collection "traditional with
`modern touches."
`
`Predicting a return to ornamentation and detail, but not in a heavy-handed manner, Laslo said, "We
`simplified ourselves into oblivion in the '90s." His ellipticai—shaped cocktail table is adapted from a 1929
`design by Italian architect Gio Ponti and looks quite modern. The striking sideboard with brass overlay
`detailing, inspired by a 1931 Ponti design, would add refreshing decoration to a room full of no-frills
`contemporary furnishings.
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`David Chu's good-looking Nautica Home Horizons group for Lexington has a more clean-lined,
`cosmopolitan style than the earlier Nautica Home West-Indies-influenced designs. The dark cherry veneers
`are accented, but not upstaged, by woven rattan inserts, leather or metal. The four-poster bed with grid-
`style headboard would add drama to any bedroom.
`
`Several new twists turned up at this market with the popular ottomans used as cocktail tables. At Baker,
`the Barbara Barry introductions included a big, flat ottoman - 45 inches by 34 inches - upholstered in
`stitched leather squares, with a lower slatted shelf that can hold many magazines, books and newspapers.
`
`Most cocktail ottomans are shown with a tray on top holding glasses and other items that would normally
`sit on a table. Barry included a handsome, oversized wood tray with her ottoman, an idea that also showed
`up in several other showrooms.
`
`At Thayer Coggin, the boxy upholstered ottoman in the Metropolitan Collection is available with either
`simple cast aluminum legs to match the sofa or big rubber casters with a wood-look center. Those wheels
`can come in handy when relocating an ottoman 48 inches square or 28 inches wide by 70 inches long.
`
`Another handy Metropolitan feature comes with the tete-a-tete, a sofa with backrests on opposite sides at
`each end, originally designed so two people could face each other to talk. This version, however, provides
`removable pivoting computer tables on the armrests (attachable cuphoiders optional), for computer-
`oriented types who prefer checking e-mall on a laptop to conversation.
`
`GRAPHIC: Photos: 1. Drawer pulls on the contemporary First Avenue Collection at Drexel Heritage look
`like stylish silver and gold jewelry (color); 2. Thomas O'Brien's oval-shaped mahogany-veneer desk for
`Hickory Chair gleams with a highly polished finish (color, p. 4); 3. Barbara Barry's big leather
`ottoman/cocktail table for Baker comes with a slatted lower shelf and an oversized tray (color, p. 4); 4.
`Intriguing brass overlay detailing decorates a sculpted John Widdicomb sideboard inspired by a 1931 Gio
`Ponti design (color, p. 4); 5. Larry Laslo's elliptical cocktail table for John Widdicomb was adapted from a
`1929 design (color, p. 4); 6. Thayer Coggln's Metropolitan tete-a—tete features removable pivoting
`computer - or snack - tables on the armrests (color, p. 4); 2-3, 5. Betty Tichlch / Chronicle
`
`TYPE: -l_INKS—
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`LOAD-DATE: November 10, 2000
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`DO IT FRIDAY NOVEMBER 10 The Miami Herald November 10, 2000 Friday FINAL EDI7TON
`
`Copyright 2000 The Miami Herald
`All Rights Reserved
`
`fine iilfiiami E-Ieraib
`Found on iulinmiucom
`
`The Miami Herald
`
`November 10, 2000 Friday FINAL EDITION
`
`SECTION: STREET; Pg. 48MS
`
`LENGTH: 1117 words
`
`HEADLINE: DO IT FRIDAY NOVEMBER 10
`
`BYLINE: PHOEBE FLOWERS, Street Staff
`
`BODY:
`
`* This weekend, the 13th Annual MAKA 11:11 International Conference descends upon the Miccosul<ee
`Resort & Convention Center. The event, in its first incarnation in the eastern United States, is composed of
`three full days of lectures by more than 21 speakers on subjects including UFO phenomenon,
`"mediumnity" (which neither you nor the dictionary probably knew was even a word), Native American
`magical traditions, holistic medicine and hypnotherapy. Plus, you won't want to miss Chief Standing Elk,
`sacred pipe carrier and spiritual leader of the Dakota Nation, who will share his interpretation of the 11:11
`symbols "Macah Wlcahpe Wicohan.“ (A fun fact: "MAKA" means "earth.") Lectures run from 8 a.m. to 9
`p.m. Friday, Saturday and Sunday at the convention center, 500 SW 177th Ave., Miami. Call 305-374-
`3692.
`
`* The FIU Music Festival 2000 is still going on, and Friday marks Polish Night, which is being touted as one
`of the festival highlights. The evening will feature Polish art, chamber music, delicacies, displays and a
`visiting entourage of musicians from Krakow. Poland, in case you were wondering, is a country about the
`size of New Mexico, and it has given birth to thousands of folk songs, a thousand folk dances and piano
`master Chopin. If you're worried about getting an authentic Polish experience, rest assured that Miami's
`American Institute of Polish Culture will be there to keep it real. Along with every other event of the
`festival, which runs through Nov. 17, Polish Night takes place at the Herbert and Nicole Wertheim
`Performing Arts Center, FIU University Park Campus, Miami. Call 305-348-1998 or visit
`www.fiumusicfestivai.com.
`
`* Not to be outdone by their academic neighbors, the University of Miami's First French Theatre Festival
`continues to rage on with an English-language adaptation of Antigone by Jean Anouilh, crazy French
`existential playwright. The updated version of a Greek tragedy about a heroine who chooses death over
`dishonor was first performed in 1944 Nazi—occupled Paris. There'are ample opportunities to see the play: It
`shows Friday, Saturday and Tuesday - Nov. 18. Tickets are $12-$14 for adults, $10-$12 for students and
`seniors. It's at the Jerry Herman Ring Theatre, 1380 Miller Dr., Coral Gables. Call 305-284-3355.
`SATURDAY
`NOVEMBER 11
`
`* The Streets of Mayfair of Coconut Grove launches a thrilling new farmers market Saturday. Buy fruits,
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`vegetables, flowers, baked goods, nuts or candy, and check out art by local artisans. It's free, and it's a
`good excuse to wander outside in the lovely November weather. Check it out from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
`outdoors on the Mayfair Promenade in the center of Coconut Grove. Call 305-448-1700 for more
`information.
`
`* The Sixth Annual FLA/BRA (Florida/Brazil) Festival of Tigertall Productions winds down this weekend;
`come commemorate the final days with Change of Skin, a nine-minute interactive dance work at the
`Museum of Contemporary Art. The performance features Brazilian dancer-choreographer Vera Sala and
`Miami musician/composer Alfredo Triff, along with a 15-foot reticulated snake-like wooden sculpture by
`Brazilian artist Ricardo Ribenboim. In case you didn't catch it the first time - this involves a giant wooden
`snake, and thus cannot be missed. See it at 11:30 a.m., 1 p.m. or 3 p.m. Saturday; 1 p.m. or 3 p.m.
`Sunday. Also, 1:30 p.m. Saturday you can check out a panel discussion called Cultural Comparisons
`Regarding "New" in Latin America and South Florida, whatever that means. Everything is free with MoCA
`admission. The museum is located at 770 NE 125th St. in North Miami. Call 305-893-6211.
`
`* 50, Books Bi Books on the Beach is hosting an event featuring James Spada, who created the book Black
`& White Men. It's full of pictures of naked men. Young men. They're not professional models, but you can
`bet they're plenty pretty anyway. At Saturday's book discussion, Spada is going to do some talking about
`light and shadow, but you can just smile vacantiy and stare at the pictures. Of the young, attractive, naked
`men. Books & Books is at 933 Lincoln Rd., Miami Beach. The evening begins at 7, but you might want to
`get there early. Call 305-532-3222 or e—mail info@bool<sandbooks.com.
`
`* Saturday night marks the second Full Moon Party at Baraboo Restaurant, 7300 Ocean Terr., Miami Beach.
`This is an event that was inspired by Iemenja, the Brazilian goddess of the waters. Brazilian chef Paolo
`Barroso de Barros is going to create a three-course prix flxe menu (that includes a wondrous Caipirinha) for
`$35 per person. The full-moon madness gets under way with seatings at 7 and 9:30 p.m., and concludes
`after dinner with a drum procession to the beach, where each guest has to throw a white rose into the
`ocean. Reservations and a sense of your own importance in the universe are recommended. Call 305-867-
`4242.
`SUNDAY
`NOVEMBER 12
`
`* If you skipped Saturday's farmers market at Mayfair, then clearly you'll need to atone for your sins by
`attending the Antique and Collectibles Market from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Lincoln Road, Miami Beach. Art,
`jewelry, statuary, china, furnishings, household items, unusual vintage clothing, collectibles and more will
`all be offered for your perusal and potential purchase. It happens at Washington Avenue and Lincoln Road
`(the 400 block), and it's free. Call 305-673-4991.
`WEDNESDAY
`NOVEMBER 15
`
`* Modernist Karel Teige, leader of the 20th Century Czech avant-garde, has his work showcased at the
`exhibition Dreams and Disillusionment: Karel Teige and the Czech Avant-Garde. The event, opening
`Wednesday with a reception and lecture, includes a full-scale model of Teige's landmark minimalist
`dwelling, Surrealist collages, and typographic experiments and graphic design. The slide lecture is at 6
`p.m.; the reception at 7. The Wolfsonian-FIU, 1001 Washington Ave., Miami Beach, hosts the opening. It's
`free for members and FIU faculty/students, and $10 for others. Call 305-535-2645.
`THURSDAY
`NOVEMBER 16
`
`* Miami Art Museum's Fourth Birthday Bash takes place in conjunction with JAM at MAM, fortuitously
`enough. From 5 to 9 p.m. check out the unveiling of Converge, the new MAM publication; a Nautica
`fashion show; performances by saxophone great James Carter; a birthday cake; a donation bar featuring
`some sort of special martinis not yet named; and docent-led gallery tours of Selections from the Collection.
`No cover. 101 W. Flagler St., Miami. Call 305-375-3000 or visit .
`- PHOEBE FLOWERS
`
`Send items for Do It at least 10 days before event to Phoebe Flowers c/o Street, P.O. Box 011029, Miami,
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`FL, 33101; fax to 305-376-2202; or e-mail Qflowers@streetmiamI.com.
`
`NOTES: DO IT
`
`GRAPHIC: color photo: Vera Sala making art with a wooden snakelike
`sculpture (a)
`
`LOAD-DATE: February 4, 2002
`
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`Destination Shoppers Newsweek November 13, 2000,
`
`Copyright 2000 Newsweek
`Newsweek
`
`November 13, 2000, Atlantic Edition
`
`SECTION: ASIA; Pg. 44
`
`LENGTH: 645 words
`
`HEADLINE: Destination Shoppers
`
`BYLINE: By George Wehrfritz; With Kay Itoi in Tokyo
`
`HIGHLIGHT:
`
`They come from all over Japan to reach this factory outlet
`
`BODY:
`
`As typhoon Xangsane bore down on Japan last Wednesday, wine wholesaler Kenichi Sotohira packed his
`wife and young son into the family car and drove more than 100 kilometers——to go shopping. Their
`destination: a picturesque resort town at the base of Mount Fuji where American entrepreneurs have turned
`a rusty amusement park into Japan's hottest discount mail. The sprawling complex, called Gotemba
`Premium Outlets, sits in a forest beneath a huge Ferris wheel. Seventy-eight stores, including outlets for
`Nike, Lands‘ End, North Face and the Gap, line an open-air Main Street filled rain or shine with bargain
`hunters. Each day cars and tour buses jam eight muddy parking lots. "I'm buying ties and sweaters," says
`Sotohira as he waits for his wife outside the Nautica store. "Everything is 20, 30, even 40 percent cheaper
`than retail."
`
`Japanese discovered outlet malls at overseas vacation destinations like Hawaii, Florida and New York. Yet
`only now, thanks to cheaper land and looser regulations, is the concept taking root on their native soil.
`Developers hope to reinvigorate Japan's bleak shopping landscape, where according to official statistics
`retail sales have fallen for 42 consecutive months. Thanks to a decade-long recession, Japanese households
`are earning less and saving more. That means they're spending a whole lot less. "They don't always need
`to buy the newest thing," says Motomu Oniyanagi, a marketing executive at Chelsea Japan Co., creators of
`the Gotemba mall. "We're seeing what we call ‘smart shopping'."
`
`Gotemba has been swamped since it opened for business in July. Over the first two weeks it attracted some
`800,000 visitors, or nearly half Chelsea's expected first-year business. During October alone more than
`1,000 tour buses disgorged eager shoppers. Huge crowds have snarled traffic and, on two occasions,
`overloaded Gotemba's sewage-treatment system. (Banks of chemical toilets were shipped in to prevent
`further waste problems.) To avoid gridlock on the Tomei Expressway, a major transportation artery, the
`mall's Web site now discourages shoppers from visiting on weekends. "It's crowded all day, every day,"
`says a woman who staffs a tourist desk set up in the mall to promote local beer and sake breweries.
`"People come here from all over Japan."
`
`Gotemba's main appeal is its vast array of "red tag" discounts. Mujl, Japan's no-name fashion sensation,
`offers $8 cotton-shirts and cheap candles. At Nike's outlet store, running shoes start at about $40. At
`Coach, the American handbag designer, one of the hottest products is a $180 doggie raincoat. At the
`center of it all sits a vast food bazaar that offers burgers, noodles, beer and sake. Shoppers dine in a ski-
`lodge-like hall with an open-beam ceiling, a crackling central fire pit and moose heads mounted on one
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`wall.
`
`Chelsea, which operates 21 outlet malls in the United States, invested $46 million to get the Gotemba
`complex built and running. With 35,000 to 50,000 shoppers now visiting daily, flrst-year sales are expected
`to exceed the company's pre-opening target of $140 million. Local officials forecast that the mall will draw
`6 million visitors and inject $500 million into the local economy annually.
`
`The outlet-mall concept is catching. In Makuhari, a convention-center district located near Tokyo
`Disneyland, a new outlet mall called Garden Walk opened last month to huge crowds. Later this month
`Chelsea will open its second mall in Japan, called the Rinku Premium Outlets, near Osaka. will outlets
`change retail? pondered a Yomiuri Shimbun headline last week. The article concluded that “consumers are
`willing to spend their money on luxury items that are discounted and quality items that are inexpenslve."
`They've been doing that for years at malls across America. Now, finally, they can shop a bit closer to home.
`
`GRAPHIC: PHOTO: Neither wind nor rain could keep shoppers away from Gotemba
`
`LOAD-DATE: November 10, 2000
`
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`ORANGE BLOSSOMS Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL) November 16, 2000, Thursday,
`
`Copyright 2000 Sun-Sentinel Company
`Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL)
`
`November 16, 2000, Thursday, Broward Metro EDITION
`
`SECTION: LIFESTYLE, Pg. 1E
`
`LENGTH: 270 words
`
`HEADLINE: ORANGE BLOSSOMS
`
`BYLINE: by; rod stafford hagwood
`
`i BODY:
`
`After extensive research (I glanced through a Florida Almanac while klbltzlng with some librarians I know) I
`have discovered a tragedy: Florida has no state color.
`
`(
`
`Sure, we have an official bird (mockingbird) and, yes, there's a song (Swanee River by Stephen Foster),
`but they reflect the rebel/redneck part of the state rather than the cool Caribbean-infused portion we call
`home.
`
`We need a state color, and it needs to be orange. Orange says it all for Florida. Sure, the state flower is the
`orange blossom, but when's the last time you saw an orange blossom? They look white to me (all things in
`Florida are not what they appear to be).
`
`Anyway, back to orange. I'm notjust pimping the hue cuz I look fabulous and fierce in it —— y'know I do
`(see above) —- it's also fashionable for this fall/holiday season.
`
`Everyone from Anna Sui (more pumpkin, really) and Angel Sanchez to Diana Von Furstenberg and Carmen
`Marc Valvo have groves of orange in their ready-to-wear collections for this season. David Rodriguez has
`"paprika," which is orange with an inferiority complex, and James Purcell has "sunset," which is an uppity
`orange. Nicole Miller uses orange to add warmth to her high-tech fabrics for fall, while Randolph Duke
`adopted "Tang orange" for his glam line, a favorite around Hollywood's red-carpet season.
`
`And it's not only the pricey stuff. The Limited, The Gap, Mecca, Nike and Nautica all have the happy hue
`prominent in collections. Nautica calls it "safety orange" while Mecca goes for the more erudite "adobe
`orange."
`
`Just be careful when you wear it in Northern Ireland.
`
`GRAPHIC: PHOTOS 3, AP photos/Timothy Clary; (color) Appealing Orange: The sunny shade of citrus
`made a splash at this year's Fall/Winter 2000 shows in New York. From left are designs by Han Feng, Angel
`Sanchez and Caroline Herrera.
`
`TYPE: next by rod stafford hagwood
`
`LOAD-DATE: November 17, 2000
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`
`NO HEADLINE Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (Pennsylvania) November 19, 2000, Sunday,
`
`Copyright 2000 P.G. Publishing Co.
`Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (Pennsylvania)
`
`November 19, 2000, Sunday, ONE STAR EDITION
`
`SECTION: ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT, Pg. G-14
`
`LENGTH: 196 words
`
`HEADLINE: NO HEADLINE
`
`BODY:
`
`Merrily they shopped and did good deeds
`
`Downtown traffic was grldlocked Wednesday evening as some motorists tried to get home while many
`others headed for Kaufmann's, site of a huge event intended to raise funds for nonprofit organizations and
`needy families. "A Very Merry Evening" had food, fashion and entertainment on nine floors of the store, and
`nearly 4,800 people took it all in. The planners‘ goal was to raise $ 50,000, but they finished the night with
`more than $ 70,000, thanks in part to donations from about 20 vendors, including Nautica and Estee
`Lauder, and 48 local nonprofits that sold $ 10 tickets.
`
`There was a Regis Philbin look-alike contest, a women's holiday fashion show, a Godiva chocolate sampling
`on the ninth floor and a "dressing your table for the holidays" presentation on the sixth floor.
`
`And on the second floor, Claiborne Menswear design director Paul La Fontaine emceed a men's fashion
`show and talked about fashion and Claiborne 2.0, a lifestyle-driven urban sportswear line he recently
`developed and introduced.
`
`Kaufmann's called the first—time event a huge success and said it will be presented again next year.
`
`LOAD-DATE: November 19, 2000
`
`Source: News 8. Business > Combined Sources > News, All (English, Full Text) El
`Terms: nautica and date(geq (1/1I2D00) and leq (12I31I20DO)) (Ed'l Sea c
`| Su
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`EARLY BIRDS GET THE BEST BUY The Record (Bergen County, NJ) November 21, 2000, TUESDAY; ALL
`EDITIONS
`
`Copyright 2000 North Jersey Media Group Inc., All Rights Reserved
`The Record (Bergen County, NJ)
`
`November 21, 2000, TUESDAY; ALL EDITIONS
`
`SECTION: YOUR TIME; Pg. Y1
`
`LENGTH: 307 words
`
`HEADLINE: EARLY BIRDS GET THE BEST BUY
`
`BYLINE: JOAN VERDON, Staff Writer
`
`BODY:
`
`On the day after Thanksgiving, the early birds get the bargains and
`the stores get the boost, three or four extra hours of selling time to
`inflate their sales figures and the free publicity that comes from the
`image of shoppers lined up outside at 5 a.m.. The early birds swear that predawn shopping is the way to
`go. They
`scour the ads on Wednesday and Thursday for the early specials, set the
`alarm for 4 a.rn., and hit the stores in order of the respective opening
`times. Then they head back home with the bulk of their holiday shopping
`done before the rest of the family is awake.
`
`But put a reminder note on those alarm clocks: No stores in Paramus
`open before 7 a.m. It doesn't matter what the ads say. If K—B Toys, Toys
`R Us, or Kohl's is in Paramus, the borough's blue law enforces the
`opening time.
`
`Here are some of the early—blrd openings for Friday. (Opening times
`are subject to iast—minute marketing changes.). 5 a.m. K—B Toy stores in Elmwood Park, Englewood,
`Ramsey, Palisades
`Center mall, and everywhere else except Paramus.
`
`6 a.m. All Toys R Us stores except Paramus. Kohl's stores in West
`Paterson and Secaucus. Nine stores at Woodbury Common including Donna
`Karan, all Polo stores, Nautica, Delia's, and Guess. American Eagle
`Outfitters at Palisades Center.
`
`7 a.m. All other stores at Woodbury Common. Stern's and Value City
`at Bergen Mall. All J.C. Penney, Lord &Taylor, Macy's, and Sears
`stores. Target, Best Buy, and Fi|ene‘s at Palisades Center. Target in
`Edgewater.
`
`8 a.m. Nordstrom at Garden State Plaza. Most stores at Bergen Mall,
`Garden State Plaza, and Palisades Center.
`
`9 a.m. All stores at Paramus Park and Riverside Square mails.
`
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`Neiman Marcus at Garden State Plaza.
`
`Staff Writer Joan Verdon's e-mail 1 address Is verdon(at)shopwatch.com
`
`GRAPHIC: COLOR ILLUSTRATION BY BOB REBACH / STAFF ARTIST
`
`LOAD-DATE: November 21, 2000
`
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`
`SMELL TEST: Following the Scent Las Vegas Review-Journal (Nevada) November 26, 2000 Sunday
`
`Copyright 2000 DR Partners d/b Las Vegas Review-Journal
`Las Vegas Review-Journal (Nevada)
`
`November 26, 2000 Sunday FINAL EDITION
`
`SECTION: J; Pg. 1J
`
`LENGTH: 1984 words
`
`HEADLINE: SMELL TEST: Following the Scent
`
`BYLINE: Joan Whitely
`
`BODY:
`
`By JOAN WHITELY
`REVIEW—JOURNAL
`
`,
`
`For a gift that lingers, consider a gift of fragrance. It lingers after its wearer walks by. It can linger for
`years in memory, long after a relationship or era ends.
`
`Just beware that the route to selecting the ‘right’ fragrance _ for oneself or another _ is fraught with peril.
`
`The staff of Living learned that the hard way.
`
`‘The nose knows‘ may be a statement of common wisdom. But in fact, our collective 12 noses failed to
`reach a consensus on which commercially available perfumes smell best.
`
`We held a ‘sniff’ test of 24 fragrances _ admittedly a small sample __ to identify the most popular for men
`and women, figuring our nostrils were just as qualified as those of the next consumer.
`
`The re