Month: November 2010

  • Vettel dominant in Brazilian GP Friday practices

    Racing series  F1
    Date 2010-11-05

    By Motorsport.com staff writers


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    For the second Formula One race weekend in a row, the Red Bull team who are currently at the top in the Constructors’ Standings, have taken an early lead at the end of the Brazilian Grand Prix’s Friday practice day.

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    Sebastian Vettel, Red Bull Racing. Photo by

    Copyright.Motorsport Magazine.2010.

    The tables turned to favour Sebastian Vettel on this occasion, who took the stop spot in practice; unlike in South Korea where his Australian team mate, Mark Webber was streets ahead. The German driver pipped Webber in both sessions, but especially picked up speed in second practice, with a final lap time of 1:11.968s.

    Vettel seemed pleased with the car’s performance in today’s practice, but recognizes that tomorrow’s qualifying is where the final position for the race counts.

    “I think it was pretty good today-of course it’s not the most important thing to be at the top of the timing list today, it’s more important tomorrow and Sunday – but it’s a good start,” said the German. “The car feels alright, I’m not one hundred percent happy with the balance and think we can improve it, but it’s looking okay. I think it’s likely to rain tomorrow”.

    Fernando Alonso who leads the fight for the drivers’ title, ended the second session in third position. Before the first part of the day came to a close, the Ferrari driver was faced with a few technical difficulties. Although the team were due to change the old engine for a new one, between the end of that session and the start of the second, the engine blew sooner than they anticipated. Once into the afternoon practice, the Spaniard started a fresh with a new engine, and followed closely behind his Championship rivals.

    However, his team mate Felipe Massa, who will take to the track for his home race on Sunday, did not experience quite as good a day as he would have liked. The Brazilian driver in the sister Ferrari, suffered with hydraulic failure, due to a suspected gearbox or drive shaft problem. Nevertheless, the start to his special weekend did not go too well, and he finished a little further down than the other title contenders, and ended up in fifth position.

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    Felipe Massa, Scuderia Ferrari, Rob Smedly, Scuderia Ferrari, Chief Engineer of Felipe Massa with Fernando Alonso in the background. Copyright. Motorsport Magazine. 2010

    Massa explained the problems he had in practice, “I ran wide at Turn two and went over the kerb quite heavily: I immediately noticed that the clutch had disengaged and I was unable to select any gear to try and get back to the pits. Nothing like that has ever happened to me before: it was only when the car was brought back to the garage that we discovered it was an electrical problem…Overall, I feel we can be competitive this weekend. Sure, the Red Bulls are very strong, as are the McLarens. It is meant to rain tomorrow and, on a wet track, anything could happen.”

    Lewis Hamilton made steady progress throughout the day, and put himself in fourth position, just behind his three closest rivals battling for the Drivers’ Championship. The 2008 World Champion’s McLaren team mate, and fellow Brit, Jenson Button, did not quite manage to beat the Renault of Robert Kubica, and finished in seventh position. The Defending World Champion was struggling to find grip at the rear of his car, which prevented him from possibly going one place better. However, Kubica had luck on his side, allowing him to secure the higher position of the two drivers.

    The Pole’s Renault team mate, Vitaly Petrov had a rather disastrous start to his race weekend in Brazil, as he had a heavy crash at Turn seven, where his car made a swift exit from the track and into some barriers. This meant the Russian could not really improve his position later in the day, and he ended up in 15th place, but he did get in front of the Force India driver, Vitantonio Liuzzi.

    Nick Heidfeld seems to be impressing with his performance for the Sauber team, as he continues to drive in Pedro de la Rosa’s former seat. The German finished in a top ten position, to take eighth place, and he got ahead of both Mercedes drivers. The in team battle there saw youth win and Nico Rosberg landed himself a ninth place finish, leaving his team mate Michael Schumacher in tenth position. During second practice, Schumacher showed that even with his winning track record, even a seven time champion can still slip up. The German had a coming together with the Toro Rosso driver, Jaime Alguersuari as they were tackling Turn 1 on the Interlagos circuit. Nonetheless, both drivers had a lucky escape and avoided any damage to their cars. Alguersuari ended the session quite a bit further down the field though, in 18th position, with his Swiss team mate, Sebastian Buemi ahead in 17th place.

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    Michael Schumacher, Mercedes GP. Copyright.Motorsport Magazine.2010

    Not for the first time this season, during practice, qualifying or even a race, Schumacher has battled with his former Ferrari team mate, Rubens Barrichello. It was the same story when practice came to an end this afternoon. Unfortunately, like the other Brazilian drivers in Formula One, Barrichello did not set out in the best way for his home race, as he finished in 11th position. Despite this he did still complete the session one place better than the other Sauber, of Kamui Kobayashi. The Japanese driver seems to have been quite fearless; with some of the driving styles he has demonstrated this season. Although he managed to avoid what could have been, a very nasty accident in practice today. He lost control of his car at the point on the track known as Ferra Dura, which was the same place Petrov left the circuit. Kobayashi was able to complete the day and finished in 12th place.

    Barrichello also had one over on his Williams team mate, Nico Hulkenberg. It appeared to be a mixed session of results among the German drivers in the field. However, Hulkenberg was not quite as successful, in securing a higher finish as some of the others. He was not able to match his team mate either, but did end the day in 13th position, to put himself ahead of the other Force India of Adrian Sutil, who finished alongside his fellow countryman in 14th place. After recent speculation that he is likely to stay with Force India seat next year, sadly Sutil could not follow up the news with as quite a positive outcome in final practice, as he demonstrated in the morning run.

    “Today was a reasonable start to the weekend with no major problems and some solid running in both sessions. We ran through our usual programme of long and shorter runs and tyre work and got lots of information to work on tonight,” commented Sutil.

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    Adrian Sutil, Force India F1 Team. Copyright. Motorsport Magazine. 2010

    On the other hand, Sutil did pull out the ninth fastest time in first practice, but his lap times were not quite as fast in the later session. By the end of the morning session, Sutil set a lap time of 1:13.918, and in second practice his final lap was a bit off the pace with a time of 1:13.741. With the results from today’s practice, Sutil will still have a fair bit of work ahead tomorrow. He still faces the five-place grid penalty from the race in South Korea. The stewards issued the punishment after he collided with Kobayashi, and that was because he was aware his car was having brake problems; thus the incident could have been avoided. Buemi also faces the same fate wherever he qualifies for the race, after he too caused an avoidable incident. He collided with Timo Glock during the race, which the stewards were less than impressed at.

    After having the best debut season of the new teams in Formula One, Lotus continued to impress throughout the day in practice. Once again they beat their rivals to the higher positions in the field. Of the two drivers, it was Jarno Trulli who managed to secure the better place, as he ended the afternoon in 19th position. His Finnish team mate, Heikki Kovalainen was trailing in 20th place.

    Lucas Di Grassi followed next in 21st place, after the reserve driver for Virgin Racing, Jerome D’Ambrosio put in a few laps in his place during first practice. Glock and his Brazilian team mate, were split by the Hispania Racing drivers, for the last few places in the final practice. Bruno Senna, who joins the other Brazilian contingents in the field, had a good result as he got in front of his Austrian team mate, Christian Klien, who lined up next in 23rd position. Glock had to settle for 24th place at the back of the field, as he failed to catch the two drivers in the rival team and his own team mate.

    With the possibility that the Drivers’ Championship could be decided this weekend, all of the top five contenders will be gunning for that pole position grid slot. However, there is the chance that rain could change the conditions tomorrow, which the drivers will have to face, as they battle against their rivals for the highest position they can get.


    Photos for Brazili

    Copyright. motorsport.com 2010. All Rights Reserved

     

  • Dancing School Gives Children a Taste of the Elite

    Béatrice de Géa for The New York Times

    Children line up for dancing school at the Barclay Classes on the Upper East Side, a tradition upheld by a small number of families from the upper, and now upper-middle, echelons of New York. More Photos »

    November 4, 2010

    Dancing School Gives Children a Taste of the Elite

    Clad in a sharp navy blue jacket over matching culottes, André Altherr stepped into the center of the ballroom and placed his left hand firmly on Isabel Stitt’s waist. With his right, he clasped one of her white-gloved hands, his red tie highlighted by her scarlet dress and matching headband.

    The piano tinkled; the pair began to waltz, straight-backed and expressionless. Their expertise belied their youth and that of the 40 or so other couples box-stepping around them at the dance lesson held by the Barclay Classes on the Upper East Side in Manhattan last month — André is 10 years old, Isabel is 9.

    The pair are among the latest generation of children engaged in an antiquated rite: dancing school, a tradition upheld by a small number of families from the upper, and now upper-middle, echelons of New York.

    “In the late 19th century, so many of the Gilded Age robber baron types were looking for a sense of sophistication to place themselves in a kind of aristocracy,” said Valerie Paley, 49, a historian at the New-York Historical Society who studies social elites and whose own children attended one of the city’s remaining dancing schools with upper-crust throwbacks, the Knickerbocker Cotillion. “This is the kind of thing they did, or had their children do.”

    Dancing schools still proliferate in high society in many American cities, where they are training grounds for debutante balls. In New York, debutantes have dwindled; a coming-out party usually means something other than being paraded in a white dress.

    “It’s the parents who seem to enjoy that sense of being elite,” Ms. Paley said. “You also get the feeling that parents are checking out each other and even each other’s children . Gilded Age competition, if you will.”

    Of the most prominent dancing schools, Knickerbocker is an institution with the exclusivity of Mrs. Astor’s list, whose invitations are both coveted and rarefied. Only a couple of hundred children nab an invitation to the classes, held about once a month at the Cosmopolitan Club on East 66th Street.

    Margaret Gordon, an organizer of the classes, declined to be interviewed about how the students are chosen. The classes are not open for public view, and even parents cannot watch except at certain times.

    A family striving to win a spot can call Knickerbocker’s phone number and leave a message. A few days later, an application arrives in the mail on crisp stationery, asking, among other things, if siblings or family have attended the school.

    Without family connections, entree is gained by being introduced by a parent with an enrolled child, or who is connected to the board of the school, according to several people who have sent children to the school or attended themselves. Susannah Gora, 33, an author, attended from fourth to sixth grade, and said she was sponsored by the mother of a classmate at the Dalton School.

    References to the Knickerbocker Cotillion in the society pages of local newspapers stretch back over 100 years. Since then, its student body has diversified somewhat, including some Jewish and other students from a non-WASP background, said Ms. Paley, who is half Asian. “I’ve always felt like an outsider” growing up, she said, explaining her decision to send her children to the class (she asked a connected mother to wrangle an invitation). “So I just wanted to see what it was like on the inside.”

    For those who cannot get through the Knickerbocker ballroom’s double doors, or for whom the snootiness goes a sniff too far, there is Barclay, with a comparatively egalitarian admission requirement — the ability to pay the $295 fee, which covers once-monthly classes from October to May.

    Barclay, which has been around since 1930, once had as selective an admissions process as its competitor, but in the mid-1970s, said Lois Thompson, who runs the classes, she opened the doors to all students. The school has since expanded to about 20 sites in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Connecticut and Ohio.

    While texting may be more of an essential skill than dancing for an elementary schooler, Pierre Dulaine, a retired Knickerbocker instructor, said the classes offered the children — many of whom are educated in single-sex private schools — the chance to interact with the opposite sex and learn to treat one another courteously.

    For example, boys must always escort girls to their seats. But in a concession to modernity, girls now get a turn to ask boys to dance, said Mr. Dulaine, who starred in the documentary “Mad Hot Ballroom,” about teaching ballroom dancing to public school children.

    On a recent Monday evening, a motorcade of chauffeured sport utility vehicles lined East 61st Street in front of the two-century-old Mount Vernon Hotel Museum and Garden, where Barclay’s classes are held, dispensing legions of blazer-clad boys and girls in Tory Burch flats.

    For some boys, said Gloria Altherr, André’s mother, “when it comes to getting them to dance class, and getting their molars removed, I think they’d opt for the latter.” Girls, she said, seemed to enjoy the opportunity to play dress-up.

    Boys must wear jackets and ties, and the girls must wear party dresses and white gloves, which are bought from places like the children’s store Magic Windows on Madison Avenue at 87th Street for $14. (“We can’t keep them in stock!” said Carole French, the store’s owner.)

    Children learn to tango, rumba, waltz and foxtrot and are taught the elements of the Lindy Hop and swing moves, switching partners every few moments. In between twirling, and avoiding eye contact with their dance partners, they learn a smattering of manners. At a recent Barclay session, children tried the Mexican hat dance, and then were seated (girls with legs akimbo were urged to “mind their sitting positions”) before the class was briefed on how to answer the telephone politely.

    If Barclay is the safety school, few will say as much. Gloria Stitt, Isabel’s mother, said she preferred that her daughter went to Barclay, even though several of her friends left this year after receiving invitations to Knickerbocker. “I was a little worried that it would be too much that type of disparity,” she said, “that it’s for the haves.”

    For most students, status and exclusivity do not register. “At first I didn’t really know how to handle myself dancing with a boy,” said Isabel, who is in her second year at Barclay, “but now I feel better than I used to.”

    Ms. Gora, the author and Knickerbocker alumna, loved the escape. “At Dalton dances we’d be doing the Roger Rabbit and the running man,” she said. Knickerbocker class “was a beautiful little glimpse into almost another time.”

    Copyright. 2010. New York Times Company. All Rights Reserved

  • Lewis Hamilton happy to chase world title or Formula 1

    Lewis Hamilton happy to chase fworld title or Formula 1

    Lewis Hamilton
    Hamilton won the Formula 1 world championship in 2008

    McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton believes having to come from behind in the title race could work to his advantage.

    Hamilton trails leader Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso by 21 points with two races of the season remaining.

    “We are excited, we have everything to gain and not too much to lose,” Hamilton told BBC Breakfast.

    “Generally in any sport, and even in football if you are running up the field and you have the ball, it’s worse being chased than it is to chase.”

    One of the most exciting seasons in Formula 1 history continues on Sunday with the Brazilian Grand Prix at Interlagos.

    Five drivers still have a mathematical chance of winning the title, with defending champion Jenson Button of McLaren the furthest adrift at 42 points behind leader Alonso.

    Red Bull driver Mark Webber lies second, 11 points behind the Spaniard, while his team-mate Sebastian Vettel is fourth, 25 points off the lead.

    606: DEBATE
    LongChop

    Third-placed Hamilton ended a disappointing run with second place at the Korean Grand Prix on 24 October and still believes he can land his second title.

    “I’m going into these last two to give it my all and I do believe I can win it,” added Hamilton. “If I didn’t then I shouldn’t be sitting here, I’d be at home sitting with my legs up.

    “My team know that I never give up and I feel that transcends through the whole team. We are still in the fight for the last two races. It’s still possible.”

    Hamilton thanked his fans for supporting him through thick and thin in a topsy-turvy season.

    The Briton’s aggressive driving style attracted criticism after he crashed out of the Italian and Singapore Grands Prix in September.

    “The support that I’ve had is incredible,” he said. “They can never know just how much I appreciate it. I’m out there giving it all.

    “I know I’ve had some odd races and not the best results but that’s life, we all make mistakes.”

    Fernando Alonso of Ferrari drives during the Korean Formula One Grand Prix

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    Copyright. 2010. BBCSport.com

  • Great Unwashed. Personal Hygiene Behavoir

    The Great Unwashed

    Joshua Bright for The New York Times

    Tara Freymoyer and Matt Merkel of Birdsboro, Pa., have both given up deodorant, to mixed reviews from friends and family.

    Ryan Collerd for The New York Times

    John Wesley Wilder Jr., a salesman at an eyeglass store in Philadelphia, is a convert to natural deodorants and unwashed hair — he shampoos only once a month with Head & Shoulders out of “laziness,” he said.

    Kevin Scanlon for The New York Times

    Jenefer Palmer, who owns an organic skin-care line in Malibu, Calif., has given up daily showers. A wipe with lemon fills in for deodorant.

    evin Scanlon for The New York Times

    Todd Felix, an actor in Los Angeles, doesn’t believe in deodorant; he takes a daily shower with unscented Dove body wash, usually after the gym. He doesn’t tell his dates this.

    Great Unwashed

    A DAILY shower is a deeply ingrained American habit. Most people would no sooner disclose they had not showered in days than admit infidelity. But Jenefer Palmer, 55, of Malibu, Calif., cheerfully acknowledged recently that she doesn’t shower or shampoo daily and doesn’t use deodorant. Ever.

    No, she does not work from home in pajamas. In fact, Ms. Palmer, the chief executive of Osea, an organic skin-care line, often travels to meet business contacts at the five-star luxury hotels where her line is sold. They might be surprised to read that Ms. Palmer, a petite, put-together brunette, showers “no more than three times a week,” she said, and less if she hasn’t been “working out vigorously.”

    She contends that a soapy washcloth under her arms, between her legs and under her feet is all she needs to get “really clean.” On the go, underarm odor is wiped away with a sliced lemon.

    Defying a culture of clean that has prevailed at least since the 1940s, a contingent of renegades deliberately forgoes daily bathing and other gold standards of personal hygiene, like frequent shampooing and deodorant use.

    To the converted, there are many reasons to cleanse less and smell more like yourself. “We don’t need to wash the way we did when we were farmers,” said Katherine Ashenburg, 65, the author of “The Dirt on Clean: An Unsanitized History.” Since the advent of cars and labor-saving machines, she continued, “we have never needed to wash less, and we have never done it more.”

    “I’m going to sound like dirty Katherine in this article,” she said, “but it doesn’t matter. I’m still invited to dinner parties.”

    Retention of the skin’s natural oils and water conservation are two reasons Ms. Palmer and others cite for skipping a daily shower. Some have concluded that deodorant is unnecessary after forgetting it once with no social repercussions, or are concerned about antiperspirants containing aluminum, even though both the National Cancer Institute and the Alzheimer’s Association don’t share those concerns. Shampooing as little as possible can help retain moisture in dry locks and enhance curl shape, argue adherents of the practice; for some men, it’s about looking fashionably unkempt.

    Resist the urge to recoil at this swath of society: They may be on to something. Of late, researchers have discovered that just as the gut contains good bacteria that help it run more efficiently, so does our skin brim with beneficial germs that we might not want to wash down the drain. “Good bacteria are educating your own skin cells to make your own antibiotics,” said Dr. Richard Gallo, chief of the dermatology division at the University of California, San Diego, and “they produce their own antibiotics that kills off bad bacteria.”

    Some people have long complained that showering too much makes their skin drier or more prone to flare-ups of, say, eczema, and Dr. Gallo said that scientists are just beginning to understand why. “It’s not just removing the lipids and oils on your skin that’s drying it out,” he said. It could be “removing some of the good bacteria that help maintain a healthy balance of skin.”

    But Elaine Larson, a professor at the Columbia University School of Nursing with a Ph.D. in epidemiology, cautioned that subway riders, gymgoers and others who come into contact with many strangers should consider soaping up. “If it’s cold and flu season, you want to get rid of the stuff that isn’t a part of your own normal germs,” she said.

    WHATEVER the motivation, personal cleanliness in the United States has long been big business. Widespread advertisements address (and arguably generate) anxiety about body odor, from the classic spots ordering consumers to “Raise your hand if you’re Sure!” to recent popular commercials with the actor Isaiah Mustafa hawking Old Spice body wash.

    They seem to work: Adults younger than 24 use deodorant and antiperspirant more than nine times a week, but even for older age groups, usage never falls below an average of once a day, according to Mintel, a market research firm. Ninety-three percent of the country’s adults shampoo almost daily, the firm said. Reliable statistics for how often Americans shower are hard to come by, said Regina Corso, a senior vice president of the Harris Poll. “People are going to be hesitant to say they’re not showering every day,” she said.

    But Todd Felix, a clean-cut-looking actor and online producer at Sony who lives in Los Angeles, was happy to report that he finds deodorant unnecessary and antiperspirants absurd. (To his mind, the latter is akin to covering your pores in Saran Wrap.)

    To keep his body odor in check, he takes a daily shower with an unscented Dove body wash, usually after the gym. But Mr. Felix, who is in his early 30s and doesn’t want to be taken for a hippie, is cautious about disclosing that he doesn’t wear underarm protection to people he dates. “When you tell a person you don’t wear deodorant, you come across as, ‘Oh, how European, how natural, how funky,’ ” he said.

    The few times Mr. Felix has mentioned on a date that he goes without deodorant, he said, things have quickly turned, well, sour. “It’s weird, but I don’t smell,” Mr. Felix will announce. Then, he said, “the comment is always, ‘You think you don’t smell.’ ” (Mr. Felix admitted that he lives in horror of having the rare fetid day.)

    But Matt Merkel, an engineer from Birdsboro, Pa., is sure he smells just fine. How? Recently, Mr. Merkel, 29, told his mother and sister that he gave up the old Speed Stick as a teenager, and they were shocked. “I was like, ‘Smell me, I don’t care!’ ” he told them, adding, “They probably just thought I was still 13 or 14, and doing that because somebody told me to.”

    America’s custom of rigorous cleanliness was in full swing by World War II, at which point most homes had acquired a full bathroom, said Ms. Ashenburg, the author of “The Dirt on Clean,” and intensified with postwar marketing efforts. But standards are relaxing, at least in some corners. An article in Parenting magazine’s November issue suggests that stressed mothers need not shower daily, stating reassuringly: “The air is drier in the winter, which means you need your skin’s natural lubricants.”

    More boldly, on a Facebook fan page for the book “Run Like a Mother,” a bible for active parents, Bethany Hoffmann Becker, a 32-year-old paralegal from Hutto, Tex., posted this week: “I get a lot of my runs in on my lunch break at work so I am all about the baby wipes :) I just shower before going to bed.”

    Meanwhile, sales of dry shampoo — a spray used to prolong the time between wet lathers (and perhaps) showers — “more than doubled” from 2007 to 2009, according to the NPD Group, a market research firm.

    Recently, the Investment Banking Club board, whose membership is made up of 20 percent of the students at Columbia University’s business school, sent a “friendly reminder” of some “personal hygiene basics” to members seeking jobs. One commandment: “Carry anti-perspirant with you if you are worried about sweating.”

    But some young would-be professionals are blithely unconcerned about sweat or odor. “I don’t feel I’m stinkier than the next guy, and I know a lot of people who say the same thing,” said Blake Johnson, 25, a law-school applicant who just moved to Norman, Okla. “I never get told I stink. When I tell people I don’t wear deodorant, they are surprised to hear it.”

    As if arguing his case in court, Mr. Johnson went on: “When I was working in San Francisco, in an office in the middle of a prestigious law firm, I had to wear a shirt and tie all the time, and I think at some point my boss would have been like, ‘There’s something I’ve got to talk to you about … everybody in the office is noticing.’ ”

    But no “talk” ever happened. Mr. Johnson, an every-other-day bather who resembles the late singer Elliott Smith, also confessed he lets his shaggy hair get oily so he can style it the way he wants. “Right now it’s cool to appear like you don’t care about what you look like,” he said. “You have to invest time, and often money, into making it look like you’ve done neither, or you can take the easy route, and just don’t wash your hair for a week and a half.”

    John Wesley Wilder Jr., 30, a salesman at an eyeglass store in Philadelphia, is not only a convert to unwashed hair — he shampoos only once a month with Head & Shoulders to reduce frizz, he said — but also to what one might call his personal perfume.

    “I was getting used to not smelling like Old Spice, and smelling like myself,” said Mr. Wilder, who forwent underarm protection for three years. However, this past summer’s heat wave forced him to reconsider. “The moment I didn’t shower, it was terrible,” he said. Now he occasionally uses a natural deodorant.

    “It’s a little different, but not bad,” he said of his experiment, inspired by his concern about the aluminum in antiperspirant, but also by several roommates who went without. This “wasn’t a terrible thing,” Mr. Wilder said, though, he added with a laugh, “A couple of them definitely should wear deodorant or shower more.”

    Indeed, those who try laissez-faire hygiene need to brace themselves for negative feedback. Tara Freymoyer, 26, a property manager in Birdsboro, gave up underarm protection after she started dating Mr. Merkel, an abstainer. She has friends who “wrinkle their nose and say, ‘You’re gross.’ ” But Ms. Freymoyer, who shampoos with Herbal Essences, persists, at least in part because of her fear that antiperspirant may cause cancer. “Just for my pure health,” she said, “who cares if I stink a little?”

    Alice Feiring, a wine writer in Manhattan, joked that autumn is her “season of nonbathing” (she actually bathes four times weekly). “ ‘Didn’t I bring you up differently?’ ” she said her mother asks. “ ‘What will people think?’ ”

    But Ms. Feiring, 52, is resolute. “I don’t like to over-dry my skin,” she said. “It’s a myth that people need a deep cleaning everyday.”

    Copyright 2010. The New York Times Company. All Rights Reserved