Going against the current, Jordanian singles celebrate Valentine’s Day

While people across the Kingdom bought flowers, exchanged love letters and went out to restaurants to celebrate Valentine’s Day last weekend, a group of Jordanians had a different take on the occasion.

One day after breaking up with his girlfriend, one 19-year-old Jordanian spent the eve of tiffany jewellery Valentine’s Day dancing at a cafe.

The bachelor was one of more than 300 singles attending an “Anti-Valentine’s” party, which organisers said targeted “lonely singles” in the Kingdom at a time when most other establishments restrict entry to couples.

“We ended our relationship yesterday due to certain issues, so I came to this party tonight alone,” he told The Jordan Times, requesting to remain unnamed.

The young man added that although he enjoys being single he wanted to celebrate the holiday.

Not being in a relationship is no reason to shun Valentine’s Day, according to party organiser DJ Flava.

“This party is for singles so they don’t feel lonely on the Valentine’s Day,” he told The Jordan Times silver cufflinks, adding that “all parties on this day are usually designated for couples only,” excluding those who are without a date.

Flava explained that the dance party aimed to celebrate singlehood, hosting black balloons instead of the traditional red ones, in a sign of an anti-Valentine sentiment.

“I don’t celebrate for the sake of Valentine, I celebrate for myself,” said Leen, a 19-year-old party goer.

Also on Friday, youth at the Saint John De La Salle School in Jabal Hussein hosted a silver money clips Valentine’s Day party without restricting entry to couples, an event the organiser said was for all people, regardless of relationship status.

Valentine’s Day is celebrated across the world on February 14.

Although stories vary, some legends state the holiday dates back to the reign of third century Roman Emperor Claudius II who banned marriage for young men as he thought celibacy would make his forces better soldiers.

Despite the ban, Christian preacher Valentine continued to facilitate marriages between young men and women, and was later arrested and executed by the Roman emperor.

Before being executed, one version of the story claims that Saint Valentine passed a letter to a woman he was in love with, the world’s first valentine.

Celebrate Valentine’s Day at Hilton Garden Inn(R) With Value

Don’t break the bank … or any hearts, by celebrating this tiffany jewellery Valentine’s Day, or any other special day, at participating Hilton Garden Inn hotels (see also <http://www.newsrx.com/library/topics/Hilton-Garden-Inn.html> Hilton Garden Inn).

A 2008 U.S. Travel Association survey reveals that four out of 10 Americans feel “more romantic” on vacation, taking the time to reconnect with their loved ones. With couples scrambling for gift ideas this year, a romantic getaway is a great option. In fact, a recent survey by the research firm Synovate revealed that approximately one in every three women (thirty six percent) chose a romantic overnight getaway as the top gift of choice for Valentine’s Day, followed by dinner and jewelry.

“We want to help couples celebrate romance with our value enticing Romance Package,” money clips said Jim Cone, vice president of marketing, Hilton Garden Inn. “In these stressful times, treating each other to a weekend getaway gives our guests time to relax and reconnect … uninterrupted.”

The Hilton Garden Inn Romance Package provides guests with deluxe accommodations for two, an early check-in and late check-out* option (based on availability), sparkling wine* or sparkling cider upon check-in, and complimentary made-to-order breakfast for two at the hotel’s restaurant. And with the Garden Sleep System(R), Hilton Garden Inn hotels also feature one of the most comfortable beds ever designed. For those who want to postpone their romantic getaway and celebrate later in the year to honor an anniversary or other special occasion, the package can be booked year-round at HGI.com.

With Valentine’s Day falling on Saturday this year, the holiday is the perfect time for a short weekend escape, whether at a local Hilton Garden Inn or one of the more than 450 participating Hilton Garden Inn hotels across the country. The package offers couples the flexibility to retreat and enjoy the hotel’s whirlpool and other pendants amenities or to get out and explore the local nightlife and attractions. About Hilton Garden Inn Hilton Garden Inn is the award-winning, mid-priced brand that continually strives to ensure today’s busy travelers have everything they need to be most productive on the road — from complimentary wired and Wi-Fi Internet access in all guestrooms and PrinterOn remote printing to the hotel’s complimentary 24-hour business center to the Garden Sleep System(R).

So whether on the road for personal or business reasons, Hilton Garden Inn offers the amenities and services for travelers to sleep deep, stay fit, eat well, work smart and treat themselves while away from home.

Bracelets put fight against cancer in view

Melissa SanMarco and Jennifer Tookoian have been friends since high school, but they have something else in common that led them to start a business they hope will help others.

SanMarco and Tookoian’s mothers are cancer survivors, and Tookoian’s father died from cancer. So to raise money for cancer research, the two friends formed Miss Mantra, a company that combines SanMarco’s jewelry-making talent and Tookoian’s marketing expertise.

They sell bracelets with a handmade silver coin hanging from a pink or brown silk and nylon cord. The front of the coin has the familiar breast cancer ribbon design. The back has the words “Believe in miracles.”

“Jennifer and I wanted to raise money for breast cancer research because this is the generation, money clips we feel, when a cure is going to be found,” says SanMarco, who lives in Los Angeles and visits her Fresno family monthly.

“There’s so much more awareness” of all forms of cancer, Tookoian says. Her mother survived colon cancer, and SanMarco’s mother is a breast-cancer survivor.

“Cancer is just in our families,” she says.

They came up with the bracelet idea over the summer, and it followed a fast track, Tookoian says. It was about eight weeks from idea to design to production and, finally, to the creation of the Miss Mantra Web site (www.missmantra.com).

A message on the Web site says: “These pieces are dedicated to the 202,000 women who will get breast cancer in the U.S. this year and the millions of other women who are beating breast cancer with strength, dignity, courage and faith. The stuff miracles are made of.”

After the mad dash to create the bracelets, things slowed down, Tookoian says. “Then it was hurry up and wait. This has really been a learning year for us, or a learning couple of months.”

The bracelets, which sell for $35 each, are available on the Web site and at She She, a local boutique. “Buyers have been mostly people who are touched by breast cancer,” Tookoian says.

But sales were slow until October, when the California Cancer Center bought 500 tiffany jewellery bracelets.

Alec Beach, manager of the California Cancer Center’s radiation therapy department, said the bracelets have been sold at the recent Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure, the Clovis Women’s Festival, a golf tournament and other events. All of the proceeds will go to education, through outreach, and for research, Beach says.

Pamela Hutton, a marketing consultant for Community Medical Centers, has one of the bracelets.

“I wear mine every day. It’s a conversation piece,” Hutton says. “I have meaningful conversations with people” when they ask about the bracelet, she says.

Hutton especially likes the “Believe in miracles” motto on the back of the coin. “Your attitude helps you fight the fight in any kind of cancer,” she says.

While the original idea was to raise funds for breast cancer, SanMarco and Tookoian say they’re happy to see the money go for research and education about all forms of cancer. And they’re working on more ideas for the holidays to raise even more money.

“Our ultimate goal is to set up grants for women to pay for medical bills who can’t afford to,” SanMarco says.

The reporter can be reached at plloyd@fresnobee.com or or at (559) 441-6756.

Suspect who took girl from Centreville school was wearing electronic-monitoring bracelet

A suspect police believed snatched a young girl from a Centreville tiffany jewelry elementary school Tuesday while wearing an electronic-monitoring bracelet remained in custody Wednesday afternoon.

Police said the man is on parole for another crime, but would not elaborate. After entering the school through a door that had been left ajar, the suspect told the girl, who he’d found drinking from a water fountain, that a teacher wanted to see her outside, police said.

The suspect also is accused of attempting to sexually assault the child. A witness saw him lying on top of the girl on the ground outside the school building near the Dumpsters.

Police were not releasing the identity of the 20-year-old suspect pending charges, Centreville Police Detective Kiwan Guyton said. Police expect to complete their investigation and send the case today to the St. Clair County State’s Attorney, he said.

The girl was kidnapped from Lalumier Elementary School at 6702 Bond Ave. at 2:32 p.m. Tuesday.

The man entered the school through a door off the gym/cafeteria, went through the multi-silver cufflinks purpose room and approached the girl in a hallway, Cahokia School District 187 Superintendent Jana Bechtoldt said.

“Obviously we’re very distraught over this situation,” Bechtoldt said. “Our policy is to have all the doors in the school building locked during the school day except for one door by the office. Unfortunately, in this instance, the door was locked but the door was slightly ajar. The last person that had either entered or exited that door did not make sure the door was latched. The door was locked, but it didn’t shut all the way. The doors were apparently out of alignment.”

The door was repaired Wednesday to ensure it will close automatically, Bechtoldt said. All other doors throughout the school building were being checked Wednesday to ensure they all closed fully.

Lalumier has about 370 students in kindergarten through fifth grade.

The suspect approached the girl as she was getting a drink from a water fountain and told her a teacher wanted to see her outside.

“She went outside with him,” Bechtoldt said. “She was just doing what she thought she was supposed to do.”

Guyton said the mother of the 7-year-old girl called police when her daughter came home crying and in silver money clips disarray. He added that the girl did not know her kidnapper.

“We were advised that the young man came into the building and possibly took one student out,” Guyton said. ” We caught him a short time later.”

Police arrested the suspect in the 6900 block of Missouri Avenue.

A man from a nearby apartment complex saw the two and shouted at the man. The man took off on foot, and the girl ran home

“I knew something was wrong when my daughter came home without her coat and book bag. She ran home to me,” the child’s mother said.

The child’s mother is not being identified because her daughter is the victim of a sex crime and identifying the mother could also identify the child. The News-Democrat does not identify victims of sex crimes.

“He took my baby outside. He was lying on her. Somebody saw him lying on her and yelled at him and scared him. He got off of her. The man who saw him told my baby to run home,” the mother said.

The mother said she wants the suspect “to stay in jail so he has no chance of doing what he did again silver pendants. He might harm somebody else’s child,” she said.

The mother said her daughter was so upset she had to calm her down.

The child was not injured during the kidnapping and attempted assault and was not taken to a doctor.

“I just thank God for protecting my baby. God is good. God is always good,” the mother said.

She said she is unsure whether she will allow her child to return to Lalumier.

School officials reviewed security policies and are considering several options to beef up security at the school, Bechtoldt said.

“We are looking at adding 17 new video cameras in the building so all the doors, entrances and hallways can be monitored continuously throughout the day,” Bechtoldt said. “We are also looking at the possibility of having all the doors locked during the day and having everybody buzzed in and out of the school. I know it won’t be very popular with some parents, but it’s something we are looking at to protect our children.”

Social workers were at the school throughout the day to meet with children and parents and discuss any fears or concerns following the incident.

No, Virginia, Christmas Is Not Here Yet

The autumn leaves, red and yellow and brown, are tumbling from the trees, resigned to their fate. Weekends are full of football and the scritching of rakes. Lazy squirrels are still munching on moldering jack o’ lanterns left over from Halloween. In other words, it’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas tiffany jewelry.

Disney released a new version of the Dickens Scrooge story last week, timing it so that “A Christmas Carol” will be lucky to be in distribution past Thanksgiving Day.

Starbucks has already retired its white cups for the duration, replacing them with cranberry-colored, snowflake-flecked seasonal substitutes. Wal-Mart is just one of the retailers already Kringling away like crazy, running television ads with Andy Williams crooning “It’s the most wonderful time of the year!” Who knew that the weeks between Halloween and Thanksgiving were the hap-happiest season of all?

The day after Thanksgiving used to be the official launch of the commercial Christmas season. Now Sears is running “Black Friday” specials all through November.

Given half a chance, retailers would probably try to get their plastic garlands hung just after Labor Day. (Ho-ho-ho, it’s back to school!) But we’ve been spared that particular encroachment, thanks to a holiday that has proved capable of standing athwart the relentless forces of Christmas-creep — Halloween. Once a quaint bit of Americana built around the simple pleasures of costumes, candy-grabbing and petty vandalism, Halloween has become a marketable and profitable holiday, putting many official holidays to shame. If only Presidents Day had some sort of free-candy angle.

In contrast to Halloween’s stalwart ability to keep Christmas from jumping the queue, Thanksgiving has lost its cultural muscle. The early advent of the Santa season may have less to do with the red-and-green imperative than with the weakness of Turkey Day. What happened to this quintessential American holiday cufflinks?

Lydia Maria Child’s ode to going over the river and through the woods to grandmother’s house is a good place to start in decoding Thanksgiving’s decline. First, there is the anachronistic attention given to grandmother. Thanksgiving is one of the few occasions left, in our fanatically kinder-centric culture, to honor the elderly. Picture the famous Norman Rockwell illustration “Freedom From Want” — at the Thanksgiving table grandpa and grandma have pride of place. No wonder the day gets short shrift.

And then there is all that over-the-river-and-through-the-woods business, which in our day means a choice between stripping for the nice TSA agent or creeping along I-95. Thanksgiving is the official holiday of planes, trains and automobiles. What the modern travel experience lacks in charm it makes up for with sheer ordeal. And what’s the payoff for all this effort? A chance to make small talk with in-laws.

The Food Network may be the only institution in America unapologetically boosting the holiday. For weeks, the cable channel’s programming is packed with turkey tutorials, stuffing suggestions and investigations into the mysteries of cranberry sauce. But Food Network’s programming is less an indication of popular enthusiasm for Thanksgiving than a measure of the fear the holiday engenders. Hostesses know that they will be judged on the juiciness of their turkey, the cooking of which is an exotic undertaking chanced but once a year. And the result must be achieved while juggling a half-dozen side dishes, all the while making the above-mentioned small talk.

None of which would be so daunting if the day meant more to us. Could it be we’ve lost our capacity for gratitude? A successful harvest occasioned thanks back when it was all that stood between us and a long, cold, hungry winter. But now we’re divorced from the seasonal rhythms of the farm, where the harvest is celebrated as the payoff of all the year’s labors. Even in the midst of this Great Repression we enjoy perpetual plenty. What resonance does a cornucopia have to people who have come to expect ripe blackberries in February? If anything,money clips we should be more grateful, but that’s not our nature. Anything we struggle for, we hold dear; anything that comes easy, we take for granted.

Not only don’t we celebrate the astonishing abundance that is our good fortune, we whine and moan about how it makes us fat. Lydia Maria Child’s poem ends, appropriately enough, with dessert: “Is the pudding done? / Hurrah for the pumpkin pie!” A version for our time would read, “Is the pudding sugar-free?” And if that weren’t enough to squeeze the pleasure from the day, no modern Thanksgiving is complete without a college student home from school, lecturing the family on the cruelty of meat. (To which the only appropriate response is: “Does that mean you don’t want the drumstick?”) That same sophomore is also likely to bemoan the grim fate of the Native Americans who made the strategic mistake of helping the Pilgrims avoid starvation. In some circles, Thanksgiving is second only to Columbus Day as an occasion for grieving.

There will be plenty of time next month for all the secular manifestations of Christmas: shopping, trimming the tree, shopping, mugs of frothing Tom & Jerry, shopping, and watching Ralphie get his Red Ryder BB-gun and Clarence get his wings. Oh, and yes, shopping. But before we break out the ornaments and dust off the Vince Guaraldi soundtrack, let’s make the most of autumn and its particular pleasures. Jump in a pile of leaves. Savor the waning daylight. And go ahead. Week after next, eat that second slice of pumpkin pie –pendants just be thankful for it.

INSTEAD OF CHRISTMAS ORNAMENTS, CUSTOMS AND BORDER PROTECTION OFFICIALS IN LOS ANGELES DISCOVER DRUG PARAPHERNALIA

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s U.S. Customs and Border Protection christmas gift issued the following press release:

U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials at Los Angeles/Long Beach seaport complex seized 860 boxes of drug paraphernalia arriving from China in a sea container. The domestic value of the shipment is estimated to be more than $2.6 million.

It is illegal to import, export or sale any type of drug paraphernalia in the United States. On November 17, CBP officers seized 316,068 pieces of drug paraphernalia, which were being imported to the United States.

“CBP is devoted to prevent the entry of drugs and drug paraphernalia from entering the money clips United States,” said Jeannette Lewis, CBP acting director of Field Operations. “These are 316,068 pieces of drug paraphernalia which will not make it to the streets,” Lewis added.

CBP has a multi-layer approach to target containers inbound to the United States.

This particular shipment was selected for inspection before the shipment arrived from overseas. The commodity was described as glass figures and Christmas ornaments but the highly decorated glass pipes did not fool CBP officials. Drug pipes and bongs tend to be very decorative with bright colors and designs to attract young people.

The term paraphernalia refers to any equipment, product or material of any kind, which is pendants primarily intended or designed for use in introducing into the human body a controlled substance. The items will be destroyed.For more information please contact: Sarabjit Jagirdar, Email:- htsyndication@hindustantimes.com.

HICKORY MAYOR WRIGHT INVITES ENTIRE COMMUNITY TO CHRISTMAS LIGHTING CELEBRATION ON NOV. 20

The city of Hickory issued the following press release:

The holiday season in Hickory will officially begin tiffany and co on Friday, November 20 at 6:30 p.m. when the festive and illuminating Christmas decorations are officially turned on during the Hickory Christmas Lighting Celebration in Downtown Hickory.

Hickory Mayor Rudy Wright will turn on the “official light switch” in the Flag Court on Union Square that will light up the trees and poles throughout the Downtown Hickory area. The festivities begin at 6:30 p.m., and Mayor Wright will turn on the lights about 7 p.m. Festivities on Union Square will continue until 8 p.m. Santa Claus will be at the entire event greeting kids of all ages and the CVCC Brass Ensemble will perform Christmas Carols after the lights have been turned on. Many of Downtown Hickory’s businesses will be open and all the restaurants welcome citizens to enjoy a delicious dinner in the heart of the city.

“We are excited to hold the second annual Christmas Lighting Celebration in Downtown bracelets Hickory and encourage everyone to come out and enjoy the Christmas lights and carols that will brighten our city during the holidays,” said Mayor Wright. “Additional lights were added this year on Union Square and on the streets that surround the center of the city.”

In addition to the Hickory Christmas Lighting Celebration in Downtown Hickory, the Hickory Jaycees Holiday Parade will be held in Downtown Hickory on Saturday, December 5, at 4 p.m. Downtown Hickory Development Association will hold festivities on December 10 between 5:30 – 7:30 p.m. Wagon rides, entertainment, and Santa cufflinks Claus will be on Union Square for “A Hickory Holiday.” Visit unique shops, dine in great restaurants, and make Downtown Hickory your holiday destination.

For more information, go to www.downtownhickory.com.For more information please money clips contact: Sarabjit Jagirdar, Email:- htsyndication@hindustantimes.com.

Online Retailers Fear a Quiet Christmas Because of Postal Strikes

“However Christmas is obviously a very busy period for retailers, so we do tiffany advise customers to not leave purchases till the last minute.”

When purchasing online, people are entitled to a refund if goods are not provided by the agreed date.

If no date was agreed then they can claim a refund if goods and services are not provided within 30 days.

Nadeem added: “The Office of Fair Trading offers fantastic protection to shoppers so there is a greater incentive for retailers to ensure that purchased items are delivered within the agreed time period.”

eDealsUK.com now has 600,000 members across its network of 200 sites, buying from 2,000 mainstream retailers.

Cashback is a very simple concept that is experiencing extraordinary growth tiffany money clips during the recession.

Customers log into the cashback site before visiting any of 2,000 mainstream retailers and buying goods and services as normal.

A portion of the referral fee paid by online retailers is returned to the consumer – this is the cashback.

Because it can monitor purchases from more than 2,000 retailers, eDealsUK.com has access to more UK online sales information than any single retailer.

The network is operated by V A C Media, the biggest operator of customer loyalty websites in the UK.

Keywords: Advertising, Marketing, V A C Media.

This article was prepared by Marketing Weekly News editors from staff and other reports. Copyright 2009 tiffany pendants, Marketing Weekly News via VerticalNews.com.

Selfridges Christmas Windows

“We’d sort of given up on Father Christmas,” admits Creative Windows manager Rebecca tiffany jewelry Bateman. Poor old Santa hadn’t seen the inside of a Selfridges window for 40 years. He’d even taken a six-year sabbatical from his legendary grotto inside the store. But there’s something truly magical about The Fat Man that refuses to lose its twinkle. It was just up to the creative team to make his 2008 comeback tour perfectly Selfridges; the rest would come.

There’s no doubt that Selfridges and Christmas go together. For exactly 100 years, the Oxford Street institution has been a yearround focus for window shoppers, but the festive season is the bighitter. On a regular day, 125,000 people will see a Selfridges window, but you can add 30 percent to that estimate at Christmas. “People still bring their families to see them,” says Bruno Barba from the marketing team, which works closely with the display department. “Selfridges windows have been a draw from the start.”

When Harry Gordon SeI fridge brought his fresh new department store concept over from Chicago in 1909, he brought with him not just a new form of shopping, but the American way of celebrating Christmas. Those new traditions were so taken to heart by the English that many of us now believe they’re home-grown.

Every inch of the shop was decorated for the celebrations that first Selfridges Christmas in London cufflinks. Customers were given mince pies, choirs sang, Father Christmas distributed gifts and the staff got a bonus, plus a card from Mr. Selfridge himself. The “information bureau” offered a gift advice service and the store’s own “supermodel,” Gloria, ran men-only shopping sessions on what to buy for wives, mothers and difficult aunts.

But it was the windows that were the real draw. From the very beginning, Gordon Selfridge, a natural risk taker, had been more interested in creating a buzz than shoving as many products in to the window as possible. His firstever window display didn’t feature any goods at all. The blinds lifted to reveal windows inspired by the fabulous paintings of Watteau and Fragonard (perhaps a link between the store and the Wallace Collection, which had opened just nine years earlier a street away?) “The thinking was,” says Barba, “people would say ‘This is so beautiful that inside the store it must be even better!’” Selfridge was also the first shop owner to leave the window lights on after the store closed – to the shock, then emulation, of his commercial contemporaries.

The freedom to experiment remains with the company today, and has resulted in some controversial window designs – not least a live naked model in 2008 (for a very limited period only). And a set of five panes at the west end of the store has recently been defined as “Wonder Windows.” These work independently from the normal displays, as works of art in their own right. Often they feature famous or hip new artists creating staggering showcases a combination of retail haven and art gallery.

“It’s never one person that comes up with all the ideas,” says Rebecca Bateman. “It’s always a collective decision. We set a theme, something we do for every project, though more people get involved at Christmas. We look at the catwalk shows, what’s happening around town – and what people are talking about.” Even when a traditional theme is chosen, the team is encouraged to find ways of subverting expectations, as Father Christmas discovered last year.

People had missed the jolly old man in the red suit, and there was huge rejoicing when his famous grotto returned in-store in 2006 (though sadly there was no sign of his cheery friend from the 1930s and 40s, the bewhiskered Uncle Holly). With a Santa Express train ride last year, it seemed a mere formality to bring him back to the windows for 2008 in a spectacular called The More The Merrier. “We used layers and abundance,” Bateman continues, “but as usual we wanted to tum traditions on their heads. We don’t actively realize we are doing it; it’s just ingrained in us.”

Bruno Barba chuckles. “We fancied him as a ‘naughty Santa’ a single man about town.” The finished windows money clips depicted a neontinged Santa enjoying London’s great contemporary tourist sights, though the one everyone remembers is him travelling on the London Underground and getting his enormous belly stuck in some closing tube doors.

Selfridges’ Christmas is the Forth Bridge of Window Design. Almost as soon as the blinds go up on one year’s Christmas display, the team of 12 sits down to look at the next year’s extravaganza. At this stage, there are many fingers in the pie – a lot of people in a lot of departments want their say.

The team is divided into three groups. Creative works out the practicalities of concepts, Production turns those ideas into reality and Styling adds the finishing touches. More money is spent on Christmas than any of the other displays throughout the year, though no one will admit exactly how much it all costs. “A lot,” is the best I can get from Bruno Barba. There are no short cuts to be taken either – whereas displays during the rest of the year go “on tour” to Manchester and Birmingham, the Christmas windows are the same in every branch simultaneously.

Even during the five other window promotions each year, one eye is always kept on The Big One. Once the theme is decided upon, the team collects images and ideas together and creates a template-pack to be used as inspiration. The theme will run throughout the store. In-store visualiser Michael Ryley creates mock-ups of the windows using a variety of graphics packages that could be taken for photographs of the real thing. By June or July the basics are finalized, and the main work starts, taking around three months to produce a masterpiece. At the same time, rather more mundane-sounding boxes need to be checked. “We have to book-out from stock any products we’ll be displaying, so that we can ensure they will be available,” says Rebecca Bateman.

In the past there was a vast in-house workshop in the subbasement of the store, responsible for wonders such as the iconic 1948 Carnival Christmas. The displays were so famous they were even turned into collectable postcards. “We outsource most of the jobs these days,” says Bateman, “though we still make some things. We use all kinds of techniques such as vac-form which are better done by experts,” she explains. “We go to people who normally work in TV, film or other media and ask them to turn their craft to our purpose. That way we get the best. ”

Also unlike olden days, although some classic props are kept, it is impractical to keep much stuff in storage. Notwithstanding escalating warehouse costs, after being on tour around the other stores, many items just aren’t fresh enough to be used again. “Besides,” she admits, “we sometimes forget what we’ve got and accidentally buy things again anyway.” Display items are recycled in a number of ingenious ways – props from Selfridges windows have turned up in school productions, at charity events and even the odd individual’s house.

In-store Week is the Windows department’s equivalent of a West End show’s Production Week. The blinds go down, and behind them, 24 hours a day, people are beavering away to create design perfection. Staff work in shifts, leaving notes for the group clockingon as they leave, bleary-eyed, for bed in the mornings. Clothes must be pinned properly; there can be no wrinkles or dirt specks. It doesn’t help that the team are like Ginger Rogers to the public’s Fred Astaire – they have to do everything backwards as, of course, they can’t see the view shoppers will see. My suggestion of putting mirrors onto the back of the blinds is only half-laughed at.

Sight problems are just as much of a problem as they are in the theater. Authences don’t want to see the joins – something particularly challenging when Selfridges hosted one of its simplest but most memorable-ever windows – completely made from mirrors. “They reflected everything,” shudders Bateman. “Up, down, sides… but it was wonderful when it finally worked.”

In the early hours before the morning of the launch, the blinds go up and the final touches are added. Windows are cleaned, lights focussed, last-minute adjustments made. The whole team is present. “I do a final walk-round and hope to God everything is okay,” admits Bateman. “It’s nerve-wracking.”

Gordon Selfridge used to send examples of the store’s famous Christmas hampers to his favorite newspaper and pendants magazine editors; it’s interesting to look at the contents of hampers from years gone by, sent to tempt the media to carry favorable reviews. In 1940, for example, the hamper contained biscuits, cheeses, chocolates, oranges – and a dressed boar’s head.

These days the decorations need to speak for themselves. But the unveiling of a Selfridges Christmas window is still front-page news. TV, newspapers and magazines all have their two-penn’orth to say about each year’s marvels, but they have now been joined by a new generation of bloggers, e-writers and fashion opinionsetters twittering and tweeting the second those blinds go up. Gordon Selfridge, that great Prophet of the New would have wholeheartedly approved.

And this year? How will Selfridges be celebrating 100 years of cutting-edge window design now that Santa’s out of the bag? Lips are sealed, but Rebecca Bateman is confident. “This year,” she says, “we’ve cracked it…”

Selfridges holiday windows are revealed in mid-October.

Operation Christmas Child collections start

National Collection Week for Operation Christmas silver jewellery Child begins Monday.

Operation Christmas Child, the world’s largest Christmas project for kids, is a ministry of Samaritan’s Purse, the international relief organization run by Franklin Graham.

In this effort, OCC asks residents to fill a shoebox with items that a child money clips would enjoy.

Things like toys, school supplies, toiletry items and hard candy and gum bring lots of joy to a child who lives in poverty or is suffering from disease, famine or the harmful effects of war.

If you’d like to participate, determine whether your gift will be for a boy or a girl and the child’s age category: ages 2-4, 5-9 or 10-14. Mark the top of your box with a label identifying your choices.

Bring the box to the collection site at Jonesboro Heights Baptist Church at 316 W. Main St. during pendants National Collection Week. The hours for collection are 2-6 p.m. Nov. 16, 17, 18, 19 and 20, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Nov. 21 and 1-5 p.m. Nov. 22.