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Question of the Day | 11/13/2008 11:00 pm

What is your best beauty tip?

© Shutterstock
Joan Ganz Cooney

Joan Ganz Cooney | 11/13/2008 11:00 pm

Joan Ganz Cooney Is Sleeping Beauty

Get eight hours of sleep a night and stay out of the sun.

Judith Martin

Judith Martin | 11/13/2008 11:00 pm

Judith Martin on How to Optimize Your Beauty

From my grandmother: A beauty is someone who acts like a beauty.

Liz Smith

Liz Smith | 11/13/2008 11:00 pm

Liz Smith's Non-Surgical Facelift Story

 

No kidding, I say eye makeup. When I bother to fool with these old eyes of mine is when I go out and people demand to know if I’ve had a face lift. Visible eyebrows, eyeliner, eye shadow, mascara make a real finishing touch to one’s look. Also, I know it’s old-fashioned but you can’t beat lipstick. And not that black or bright red stuff either if you are over 40.

 

Click here on this text to read my New York Post column.

Read more about: Beauty, Cosmetic Surgery, Lifestyle

127 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

joan larsen
Hi darling Dona, We haven’t crossed paths in a week or more … and then you let me know about your Sara . . . who must have a position in the most beautiful spot in our country, Big Sur. I wonder if she was there for THE FIRE??? On each floor of my home are renditions of the Big Sur coastline, constant reminders of the serenity I feel there — and the need at least once a year to return. Your Sara probably knows but there is a monastery on the mountainside at the south end. People fly by in their cars, not knowing that the best public views of the ocean and mountains are on the road up there — and once there, different as it is, we are always greeted warmly. Do you mind if I look up Sara next time we go?
By joan larsen on 11/14/2008 4:24 pm
Dona Howlett
Joan, That would be lovely, Her name is Howlett also. Yes, she was there during the Fire. She loves her job. She gives Conducted tours of the Park. She also creates and runs the entertainment around the big Bon Fire at night. I have to samefully admit I haven’t been to Big Sur in over 25 years……………shame on me. I need to get my son and his wife to drive me down there and spend a weekend. The Hotels are so expensive………. Did you read my comments about First Movies…………..??????????
By Dona Howlett on 11/14/2008 4:36 pm
joan larsen
Perfect, Dona — maybe we could take her out to lunch. And yes, I agree - it is expensive and naturally, my favorite hotel is big bucks — but I know that if you drop up to Seaside, the price goes down and it is only a couple of miles. All I can say is that if you can go for an overnight, it will lift your heart I would think as you seem to enjoy the beauties of life so much. And then to see your granddaughter, Sara Howlett, giving the talks — wouldn’t that be such a moment of such proudness????? Thanks - let you know when we go for sure!
By joan larsen on 11/14/2008 5:36 pm
Dona Howlett
If you wanted to spend some more time in the area I have a spare bedroom you could use……….. I’m hoping the building on the addition to my house will be finished by the first of the year……….I am really getting sick of the pounding that’s been going on for 7 months now. It’s going to be so nice when finished.
By Dona Howlett on 11/14/2008 5:58 pm
joan larsen
Dona - I know you are in the Bay area but I don’t know what city — but don’t write it if you don’t want to — that’s OK. It would be very wonderful to meet you — I know we would be fast friends — and I am sorry if I have missed a bit on your life also. There is only so much time for me to read - and I know your husband is sadly gone for 7 years, but are you living alone - or close to relatives — I think I missed out on a bit. I like the long version but will settle for anything. You probably have red when I said that I am going up in the new airship at Moffatt Field. The head and I have written back and forth and I think he is willing to have me go up as a journalist (does that mean less money I hope) but do want to do that when we go out.
By joan larsen on 11/14/2008 6:33 pm
Dona Howlett
Joan, Here’s my email……….. Mrsxbabe@aol.com a name my grandson gave to me. write me……….we’ll exchange info.
By Dona Howlett on 11/15/2008 12:05 am
Agyness O
Hey Xbabe Dona, Your place sounds absolutely wonderful and I also remembered that you have a heated pool out back as well. Just so you know, I am adding your name and address to my list of favorite places to stay as I travel across the country. Can’t wait as I know we will have a blast and, just so you know, I am not too too messy. If Joanie happens to be there when I arrive…be sure to exspect a lot of TROUBLE!! But, it will be the funniest trouble that I’m sure you ever had. I am just dying to meet you since I already know you are an incredible lady……….
By Agyness O on 11/15/2008 4:51 pm
Dona Howlett
Agyness, I’d love to meet you. My house should be finished by the end of Feb………..hopefully. Right now I have my furniture out in the patio My antiques in boxes……….I laughingly tell everyone I’m living in a warehouse…….. By Spring things should be back to normal. I would love company. The Pool is only heated during the summer months………I have solar heat.
By Dona Howlett on 11/16/2008 10:59 pm
Delete This
Joan, No, am not from Carmel, I’ve lived in Santa Barbara/Montecito/Carmel/San Francisco. Love SF but needed a change since brother’s death so went to Shell Beach for a month and now here for a month, but decide feel so at home am staying indefinitely….first time in 6 months have felt can breathe. Maybe you should do a Craigslist ad for a house swap Camel/Pacific Grove for Portland….don’t you live in Portland? Lots of people love Portland. I’m not the most fortunate of wOwers…I just do what I want to do which isn’t the smartest way to manage $$.
By Delete This on 11/14/2008 9:09 pm
joan larsen
And no, I am not from Portland — though I find it unbelievable that I actually have 2 grandchildren old enough to be in college in Portland - though I have not ever mentioned that before on the site. Early in my marriage my husband - just a kid it seemed - was a 2nd Lt. in the Army so we travelled a bit - Colorado Springs being my favorite of the many choices. But since then, back to the Chicago area where I have always lived — but we are the ones that seem to travel more extensively to the faraway places. As I said, in this country Carmel and Big Sur top our choices, but after loving the sun and sand early in the marriage and going to Bora Bora and Virgin Gorda and all sorts of undersea choices, we grew out of our love for the warm — and then decided the ends of the earth were going to be set foot on by us before any others got there. We are in love with The Ice, and have a major expedition planned for January again for all those little islands at the southern part of the globe that you have to crack lots of ice to get into. We are pretty much daredevils as to what we will attempt — and always have to sign a long sheet that says “YOu may never get back but you agree that is OK”. And we do. A few times it has been close calls, but it is also “living life” and we aren’t going to miss a bet. Enough.
By joan larsen on 11/14/2008 9:36 pm
Delete This
This will keep me up tonight which is the un-beauty, fire in my old community of Montecito next to Santa Barbara destroys 70 homes thus far….they say in this piece pop. of 10,000 then has grown a lot since I lived there and next door to Arianna Huffington on Riven Rock Rd. Such a great place, very sad that 70 homes lost and hope soon contained. Wind whips down the canyons and very difficult. ———— SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – An explosive wildfire destroyed about 70 homes in the ritzy community of Montecito, injured four people and forced thousands to flee wind-whipped flames in the longtime hideaway for celebrities such as Oprah Winfrey and Rob Lowe. The fire started around 6 p.m. Thursday and quickly spread to about 800 acres — more than a square mile — destroying dozens of homes in less than five hours in the foothills of Montecito, just southeast of Santa Barbara. Several fire departments were battling the flames as thick plumes of smoke hovered overhead. “It looked like lava coming down a volcano,” Leslie Hollis Lopez said as she gathered belongings from her house. Montecito fire spokeswoman Geri Ventura said about a quarter of the community of 10,000 people was evacuated and more could be moved out if the fire spreads. Students at Westmont College holed up in the school’s gym as flames burned a dormitory and several buildings containing classrooms. The college said on its Web site it was considering moving the students to a Red Cross shelter if they can get safely through the fire. The injuries included two people who suffered smoke inhalation and two others taken to Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital with substantial burns, said Janet O’Neil, the hospital’s director of public affairs. Thousands of feet above the flames, footage shot from television helicopters showed what initially looked like a massive campfire with dozens of glowing embers. When cameras zoomed in, however, what appeared to be flaring coals were actually houses gutted by flame. Many of the homes were sprawling estates. “You can just hear the explosions … of vehicles, homes,” Michaelo Rosso told KCAL- TV as he prepared to leave his home. “It sounds like the Fourth of July out here.” About 125 engines and three water-dropping helicopters were en route or at the scene, said Xenia Tihomirova, a spokeswoman for Santa Barbara County. Firefighters faced wind gusts as high as 70 mph Thursday night. Gusts were expected to remain strong through early Friday, according to the National Weather Service in Oxnard. The fierce winds known locally as “sundowners” blow from land to sea in the evening, reversing the normal onshore flow of cool, moist sea breezes. They are caused by the area’s unique topography. The fire temporarily knocked out power to more than 20,000 homes in Santa Barbara, said Southern California Edison spokesman Paul Klein. He said only scattered pockets of homes were without power by late Thursday. Montecito and its multimillion-dollar homes with ocean views have long attracted celebrities such as Michael Douglas, Lowe and Winfrey, who owns a 42-acre estate there. The landmark Montecito Inn was built in the 1920s by Charlie Chaplin and Fatty Arbuckle, and the nearby San Ysidro Ranch was the honeymoon site of John F. Kennedy in 1953. Publicists for Lowe and Winfrey told the AP the celebrities’ homes had not been destroyed and that neither was staying in the area Thursday night. Montecito suffered a major fire in 1977, when more than 200 homes burned. A fire in 1964 burned about 67,000 acres — nearly 105 square miles — and damaged 150 houses and buildings.
By Delete This on 11/14/2008 3:51 am
phyllis Doyle Pepe
Thanks for that information. Poor Californians––––or in this case poor rich people–––it’s dangerous territory––beautiful, but dangerous like some women.
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 11/14/2008 8:17 am
Elizabeth Bennett
This is such a shame. Montecito is so lovely. Here is a map of the fire I found online: http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=1176312929610567… The evacuation center is in Goleta, which burned in July. We need some RAIN in California.l So far it looks like the fire is in the hills, has not come toward the ocean. But it looked like it was headed into the Santa Barbara riviera and maybe even downtown Santa Barbara. I remember the 1977 fire; it was devastating. Let us hope the weather changes soon.
By Elizabeth Bennett on 11/14/2008 11:25 am
Delete This
In Carmel today it’s in the 80s like a summer day, at least the wind has died down. So much has been destroyed in the “Tea House” fire from Mission Canyon through the gorgeous Riviera area over past Coyote Canyon…that is a huge, hilly, hard to access area. After my son left home I moved from the beach to an incredibly charming place at the top of Coyote Canyon with a deck over the canyon and looking to the ocean. To get there is a long drive through up Hot Springs Road…Sycamore Canyon Rd. then to a one lane bumpy road up Coyote Canyon that is a mix of estates, artists cottages, and a small development at the bottom. It must be dangerous and next to impossible to get fire trucks up there. I’m sure the entire area where I used to live is gone..The historic Tea House where the fire started, a beautiful old Benedictine Monastary…large parts of gorgeous Westmount College including faculty housing….many of the places built in the 1920s in that gorgeous Mission style adobe. And all those beautiful trees and wildlife. I know so many people in SB/Montecito as was VP of events on the board of the Symphony, and in several other big clubs, Cultural Arts Chair of the Newcomers Club when first moved there and over 500 in that group, know many writers who live in Mission Canyon etc. While the news focuses on the celebrities and mansions… plenty of artist cottages too for example know the professor emeritus at UCSB who started the theatre and dance program there….he and his wife have a craftsman style home on the edge of Riveria filled with finds from their travels all over the world…they are such nice people and he painted an absolutely amazing stage backdrop for a symphony ball I chaired at the Four Seasons Biltmore…his home is undoubtedly gone given its location, and another writer who lives near him who’s published over 60 children’s books…SB is filled with artists of every stripe and so many live in fairytale settings in those hills….and all that amazing mix of vegatation that is why it is so beautiful. That’s California….fires, quakes, and mudslides….and when they rebuild it (as after the Berkeley Hills fire) throw up ugly McMansions and many of those gorgeous old places with their fabulous old craftsmanship are gone. Too bad..but that’s the facts of life if live in the forested areas/hills.
By Delete This on 11/15/2008 3:11 pm
Delete This
Found an intresting history…love how they report on how generations of Montecito residents have battled Santa Barbara, developers, and the state to remain small. http://www.theziagroup.com/MontecitoHistory.php When Cal Trans widened the freeway through Goletta and parts of Santa Barbara they also intended to widen the picturesque east portal entry that where arrive up from LA/Ventura/Summerland. All the heritage trees and flowers would have been destroyed. I was on the committee that included Mrs. Ambercrombie determined to stop the widening and we succeeded….wonder if the residents have been able to retain it as it was…hope succeeding generations fight that as it would ruin Montecito/Santa Barbara. Destroying that entry would be a crime. When drive up from LA through there leave another world behind.
By Delete This on 11/15/2008 3:25 pm