數千人示威索還藏人精神領袖遺體
09:10
被中國政府關押的丹增德勒仁波切死於獄中後,四川雅江縣發生暴力示威,抗議者要求官方把死者遺體交還親屬。據悉警方毆打抗議者致多人受傷。
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人权活动人士周一称, |
Tenzin Delek was sentenced to death with a two-year reprieve in 2002, according to Students for a Free Tibet, a rights group that has campaigned for his release. The sentence was later commuted to life imprisonment and reduced to a term of 20 years.
The Boss
Farewell, Aching Feet
By ANYI LU
Published: August 20, 2011
WHEN I was 15, I moved from Taipei, Taiwan, where I was born, to live in the United States. Education was very important to my parents, so they sent my sister and brother and me to Wilmington, Del., to live with my grandparents and attend school there.
John Lee Pictures
AGE 37
HOBBY Ballroom dancing
RECENTLY READ "Freedom in Exile: The Autobiography of the Dalai Lama"
My first engineering job was with DuPont. I was assigned to its chemical plant in Plaquemine, La., near Baton Rouge. After a year, I wanted to be nearer to my family, including my grandfather, who was ill.
When I returned to Wilmington in 1998, Chevron hired me as a saleswoman, and my assigned territory was Delaware, Maryland and Pennsylvania. For fun, I competed in regional ballroom dancing contests. My favorite is the rumba, the dance of love and passion.
After several years, the company moved me to San Francisco, where I worked in sales and, later, in marketing. There I met David Spatz, who was a business manager. He left the company in 2000 and I left in 2002, and we married the same year. While I was trying to decide what work to do next, I took several courses in painting and design.
One day, I stopped in at Arthur Beren, a shoe store in San Francisco, and met the designer Taryn Rose at a promotional event for her shoes. On the basis of that chance conversation, she offered me a job in marketing in her Los Angeles office. I worked for a year to learn the business and to see if I wanted to commit to shoemaking.
That same year, 2003, my sister called me two days before her wedding for help with her shoes. She had chosen a pair of stilettos for the ceremony but wanted me to find her some comfortable shoes to wear for the dancing afterward. I bought her a pair of ballroom dancing shoes, and she wore them right through the evening.
Her request made me realize it was time to strike out on my own, and to use my engineering background to create shoes that were comfortable — with great cushioning and arch support — and stylish. I recalled that while I was working in the oil industry, I wore pumps to look professional, but that my feet were always killing me.
I also wanted to create some smaller sizes because, with size 3 feet, I usually had a hard time finding high-fashion shoes that fit. Just as I was starting my company, I found out that I was pregnant, so David pitched in to help me. (Our daughter was born in 2005.)
After I found a factory in Italy to make what I call “couture comfort,” I introduced 12 styles. At my first trade show, Nordstrom gave me orders for five stores in the Chicago area. It is still a big customer, along with Bloomingdale’s and independent sellers.
My husband and I operate the business, which took in $6 million last year and will grow further this year. We now have 75 styles. I still travel quite a bit. I go to Italy eight times a year to oversee manufacturing. I also make many personal appearances because I like to talk to my customers and hear what they have to say about wearing my shoes and their lifestyle and footwear needs.
And I love to work with Dress for Success, the nonprofit organization that provides disadvantaged women with clothes, shoes and the support they need to enter the workplace.
I know how lucky I was to have support from David when I stepped away from a secure career to do something completely new.
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