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	<title>Observer &#187; Jayson Littman</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Jayson Littman</title>
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		<title>The New York World</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2004/08/the-new-york-world/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 09 Aug 2004 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2004/08/the-new-york-world/</link>
			<dc:creator>NYO Staff</dc:creator>
				
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Like You Read About ….</p>
<p>In order to cover Teresa Heinz Kerry, The New York Times comes up with some polite ways to say "plumb crazy":</p>
<p> "flair"; "unpredictability"; "off-the-cuff"; "lively" (Jim Rutenberg, July 27)</p>
<p> "forthright"; "imperious" (Alessandra Stanley, July 28)</p>
<p> "quirky"; "outspoken" (Joyce Purnick, July 29)</p>
<p> "a centimillionaire heiress to a ketchup-and-pickle fortune" (Todd S. Purdum and David M. Halbfinger, July</p>
<p>29)</p>
<p> "dressed in bridal white" (Alessandra Stanley, July 30)</p>
<p> "penchant for free association" (Damien Cave, Aug. 1)</p>
<p> "a multilingual free spirit" (Ginia Bellafante, Aug. 3)</p>
<p> White Collar Beggar</p>
<p> It was 6:10 p.m. on a recent Thursday, and Jayson Littman was panhandling for a job on the S train.</p>
<p> Dressed in a white-and-orange-striped J. Crew dress shirt and</p>
<p>black Calvin Klein pants, the 27-year-old faced the carload of passengers-their</p>
<p>faces soured by the workday-and gamely launched into a loud speech.</p>
<p> "Ladies and gentleman, my name is Jayson, and I'm not here to ask</p>
<p>you for money or sell you fake batteries for a dollar," he said. "I am looking</p>
<p>for a job. Currently, I work in corporate finance, but am looking to move into</p>
<p>a marketing, advertising or P.R. position. If you are, or are in touch with, a</p>
<p>hiring manager at your company, please take a copy of my résumé. Thank you and</p>
<p>enjoy your day."</p>
<p> Mr. Littman makes $40,000 to $60,000 a year working as a</p>
<p>credit-risk analyst for a major investment bank he declines to name. As he</p>
<p>snaked his way down the crowded subway car, passengers obligingly moved out of</p>
<p>the way, most staring with amusement.</p>
<p> "Any takers?" asked Mr. Littman, holding out a stack of thin</p>
<p>envelopes with his résumé tucked inside. His voice now was lowered and polite,</p>
<p>as if he were passing out smoked salmon hors d'oeuvres. "Any takers?"</p>
<p> "I like your approach," a woman with pink-tinted glasses and</p>
<p>curly hair told him as he passed.</p>
<p> Lydia Schinasi, 39, a</p>
<p>saleswoman at Self magazine, was</p>
<p>sitting wedged between two passengers. She waved him down. "I'll pass it on to</p>
<p>H.R.," she told Mr. Littman, taking a copy of his résumé.</p>
<p> "Condé Nast," Mr. Littman told me with some satisfaction, but he</p>
<p>didn't have time to gloat. Ignoring the "Riding Between Cars Is Dangerous"</p>
<p>sign, he swung open the car door and started his speech again.</p>
<p> Mr. Littman described himself as "very unhappy" with his current</p>
<p>employer. So every day except Fridays, he stumps for a job on the rails. In the</p>
<p>morning, he catches the No. 1/9 train at 96th Street and works it down to 42nd</p>
<p>Street, where he rides the Grand Central shuttle back and forth for about a</p>
<p>half hour. Then it's back on the 1/9 down to his office.</p>
<p> In the evenings it's the same deal, except in the opposite</p>
<p>direction. He varies his schedule by about 10 minutes each day to avoid hitting</p>
<p>the same crowd.</p>
<p> Mr. Littman has television good looks: a wide smile, warm brown</p>
<p>eyes and a neat, cropped haircut. He said he's passed out over 700 résumés in</p>
<p>the one month he's been working the rails. He's landed five interviews, as well</p>
<p>as two job offers, including one from Thomson Media, publisher of American Banker and The Bond Buyer . James MacDonald, a publisher at Thomson, was</p>
<p>riding the 1/9 a couple of weeks ago. Mr. Littman began his speech and Mr.</p>
<p>MacDonald, who was reading The Wall Street Journal , told him to shut up.</p>
<p>People often tell Mr. Littman to shut up.</p>
<p> "I'd kind of had enough of it on the subways," Mr. MacDonald, 56,</p>
<p>recalled. "But then he went on with his speech in kind of a charming fashion</p>
<p>and I thought, 'He's got a good presentation.'"</p>
<p> Mr. Littman went in for an interview but declined the job.</p>
<p>"Cold-call sales," he told me, wrinkling his nose.</p>
<p> We were standing on a platform, taking a break. Mr. Littman had</p>
<p>pulled me off the train after he spotted Steve, who sells the Street News , a</p>
<p>newspaper covering homeless issues.</p>
<p> "I don't want to impede on what he's doing," Mr. Littman said.</p>
<p>"It's just a courtesy."</p>
<p> Mr. Littman grew up in New York near 193rd Street and attended</p>
<p>Brooklyn College, where he majored in psychology and minored in marketing.</p>
<p>Since graduating, he's worked in finance-a career, he said, "that is completely</p>
<p>not my personality."</p>
<p> The idea to look for a job on the M.T.A. came after he watched a</p>
<p>homeless man collect money after performing "Under the Boardwalk" on the 1/9.</p>
<p>"He sang it on key," said Mr. Littman, smiling.</p>
<p> Mr. Littman smiles a lot. Last April, he started a small company</p>
<p>called Free Hugs. Every Sunday he runs a booth in Washington Square Park, where</p>
<p>he gives out free hugs to strangers.</p>
<p> The train pulled in and we got back on. Mr. Littman started up</p>
<p>again. A tall, tired-looking man leaning against the door introduced himself.</p>
<p>He worked at Bloomberg L.P., he said, and asked for Mr. Littman's e-mail</p>
<p>address. Two blond women from Revlon also offered to take his résumé, as did a</p>
<p>young woman in a silver spaghetti top who worked at Trent &amp; Co., a P.R.</p>
<p>firm.</p>
<p> All told, almost 40 people had taken his resume in 45 minutes.</p>
<p> "Anyone who has the balls to do this deserves a job," said Leslie</p>
<p>Biddle, 35, an executive assistant in public relations at designer Carlos</p>
<p>Falchi, tucking Mr. Littman's résumé in her purse.</p>
<p> A heavy-set woman in a wrinkled T-shirt stopped him and asked him</p>
<p>for a résumé. Mr. Littman paused. "What's the company?" he asked. She said it</p>
<p>involved housing. "Thanks, but that's O.K.," he said politely.</p>
<p> Mr. Littman's face was shiny and flushed by now. He gave his</p>
<p>speech a half dozen more times, at one point straining to be heard over a</p>
<p>screeching toddler.</p>
<p> We emerged at 96th Street, and Mr. Littman checked his cell</p>
<p>phone. There was a message from the recruitment advertising agency McFrank</p>
<p>&amp; Williams.</p>
<p> He said he believes he will land a job soon, though he may be</p>
<p>forced to take one he isn't wild about: Things at his present job are getting a</p>
<p>little dicey.</p>
<p> A few weeks ago, he was in the middle of his spiel when he felt</p>
<p>someone kick his leg. It was one of his co-workers, 23-year-old Tara Pullen, a</p>
<p>fellow credit-risk analyst.</p>
<p> "She was like, 'What are you doing, Jayson?'" said Mr. Littman.</p>
<p>"I told her to wait a minute and I continued my speech."</p>
<p> He swore Ms. Pullen to secrecy, but another co-worker spotted him</p>
<p>on the subway and ratted him out to his office manager.</p>
<p> "My manager called me into her office and said, 'Jayson, I know</p>
<p>you are actively looking for another job,'" he said. "I told her I was</p>
<p>passively looking for a new job."</p>
<p> -Dakota Smith</p>
<p> Oh, Daddy !</p>
<p> On Thursday, July 29, Vanessa Kerry strode onto the stage of the</p>
<p>Fleet Center in Boston and, with a sparkle in her eye and a slight toss of her</p>
<p>wavy blond hair, proceeded to deliver one of the raciest public displays of</p>
<p>affection ever to cross the lips of a candidate's daughter.</p>
<p> "As someone who knows all 6-foot-4 inches of my dad best-6-foot-6</p>
<p>if you count the hair-I'm here to share some secrets," Ms. Kerry began, with</p>
<p>words that all but silenced the raucous hall and which, had Chelsea Clinton</p>
<p>ever uttered them, would surely have drawn gasps across the globe. "Over the</p>
<p>years, I've come to know him in many ways," said the 27-year-old Ms. Kerry.</p>
<p>"Through the silly moments, when he laughs with his head thrown back and his</p>
<p>shoulders rocking, and through sad moments, such as when my grandmother lay</p>
<p>dying, and also through warm moments when he enveloped me in that dad hug that</p>
<p>overwhelmed me with a feeling of safety." Later, Ms. Kerry told how her father</p>
<p>fashioned a tiny tree for his mother using fall foliage and "teasing out" the branches</p>
<p>from copper wire.</p>
<p> You don't need to be a Freudian to comprehend what Ms. Kerry's</p>
<p>speech was about: not death and taxes, but sex and death. Consider the choice</p>
<p>of words: sharing secrets. Shoulders rocking. Lay dying. Warm moments.</p>
<p>Enveloped. Overwhelmed. Teasing out. In a one-page speech, Ms. Kerry mentioned</p>
<p>her father's 6-foot-4 height twice, used the word "love" seven times and "gut"</p>
<p>two. What became apparent on Thursday was that Vanessa Kerry's role in this</p>
<p>campaign is to lend a sexual dimension to her cold, New England patrician</p>
<p>father, to make it clear that Dad wears the pants, no matter how brash or</p>
<p>ballsy his billionaire wife happens to be. Even her name, Vanessa, with its</p>
<p>seductive hiss of S's, helps.</p>
<p> Women on the Upper West Side are already sporting buttons that</p>
<p>say "Shove It"-Ms. Heinz Kerry's instructions to a journalist last week-but in</p>
<p>many other parts of the country, Ms. Heinz Kerry's nonscheduled persona isn't</p>
<p>exactly seen as a virtue. Laura Bush, meanwhile, comes across as completely</p>
<p>nonthreatening, almost medicated. Then again, any woman who claims her favorite</p>
<p>book is Dostoyevsky's The Brothers</p>
<p>Karamazov is sure to have a dark side. Lurking in the background, of</p>
<p>course, is the specter of Al Gore's sloppy lip lock with Tipper before his</p>
<p>speech at the 2000 convention, and no one wants to repeat that.</p>
<p> And so it's up to the Kerry daughters to toughen-yet also</p>
<p>soften-their father, to make him seem manly when their stepmother makes him</p>
<p>seem cowed.</p>
<p> It's an act that requires careful costuming and scripting.</p>
<p>Whereas Ms. Heinz Kerry favors dark pants suits and spread collars, for her</p>
<p>convention speech Vanessa Kerry-who took time off from Harvard Medical School</p>
<p>to campaign for her father-was dressed in a powder blue silk dress.</p>
<p>Knee-length, sleeveless and tasteful, it had one twist: An ever-so-tiny slit</p>
<p>ran from a hidden clasp at her high neckline to the top of her cleavage,</p>
<p>revealing one thin, suggestive slice of skin. The effect weirdly echoed an evening</p>
<p>when another blonde introduced another politician with a breathy "Happy</p>
<p>birthday, Mr. President, happy birthday … to … you."</p>
<p> Alexandra, the more tempered brunette older sister, was no less</p>
<p>striking in her form-fitting, long-sleeved, high-necked red dress. After</p>
<p>recounting the surreal and much-puzzled-over anecdote of how their father</p>
<p>administered CPR to a drowning pet hamster, Alexandra, a filmmaker, painted a</p>
<p>picture of Mr. Kerry as a thoughtful, loving dad, one who put things in perspective</p>
<p>when she was a brooding 19-year-old. "Ali, this is a beautiful day. Feel the</p>
<p>sun. Look at the country you live in," she recounted him saying.</p>
<p> Meanwhile, the Bush campaign has begun to make use of the</p>
<p>President's 22-year-old twin daughters-Jenna, the frolicsome blonde, and</p>
<p>Barbara, the sensible brunette and designated driver-who posed wearing couture in this month's Vogue . At the G.O.P. convention this month, one can hardly imagine what they'll have to say about their father-all</p>
<p>six feet of him.</p>
<p> -Rachel Donadio </p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Like You Read About ….</p>
<p>In order to cover Teresa Heinz Kerry, The New York Times comes up with some polite ways to say "plumb crazy":</p>
<p> "flair"; "unpredictability"; "off-the-cuff"; "lively" (Jim Rutenberg, July 27)</p>
<p> "forthright"; "imperious" (Alessandra Stanley, July 28)</p>
<p> "quirky"; "outspoken" (Joyce Purnick, July 29)</p>
<p> "a centimillionaire heiress to a ketchup-and-pickle fortune" (Todd S. Purdum and David M. Halbfinger, July</p>
<p>29)</p>
<p> "dressed in bridal white" (Alessandra Stanley, July 30)</p>
<p> "penchant for free association" (Damien Cave, Aug. 1)</p>
<p> "a multilingual free spirit" (Ginia Bellafante, Aug. 3)</p>
<p> White Collar Beggar</p>
<p> It was 6:10 p.m. on a recent Thursday, and Jayson Littman was panhandling for a job on the S train.</p>
<p> Dressed in a white-and-orange-striped J. Crew dress shirt and</p>
<p>black Calvin Klein pants, the 27-year-old faced the carload of passengers-their</p>
<p>faces soured by the workday-and gamely launched into a loud speech.</p>
<p> "Ladies and gentleman, my name is Jayson, and I'm not here to ask</p>
<p>you for money or sell you fake batteries for a dollar," he said. "I am looking</p>
<p>for a job. Currently, I work in corporate finance, but am looking to move into</p>
<p>a marketing, advertising or P.R. position. If you are, or are in touch with, a</p>
<p>hiring manager at your company, please take a copy of my résumé. Thank you and</p>
<p>enjoy your day."</p>
<p> Mr. Littman makes $40,000 to $60,000 a year working as a</p>
<p>credit-risk analyst for a major investment bank he declines to name. As he</p>
<p>snaked his way down the crowded subway car, passengers obligingly moved out of</p>
<p>the way, most staring with amusement.</p>
<p> "Any takers?" asked Mr. Littman, holding out a stack of thin</p>
<p>envelopes with his résumé tucked inside. His voice now was lowered and polite,</p>
<p>as if he were passing out smoked salmon hors d'oeuvres. "Any takers?"</p>
<p> "I like your approach," a woman with pink-tinted glasses and</p>
<p>curly hair told him as he passed.</p>
<p> Lydia Schinasi, 39, a</p>
<p>saleswoman at Self magazine, was</p>
<p>sitting wedged between two passengers. She waved him down. "I'll pass it on to</p>
<p>H.R.," she told Mr. Littman, taking a copy of his résumé.</p>
<p> "Condé Nast," Mr. Littman told me with some satisfaction, but he</p>
<p>didn't have time to gloat. Ignoring the "Riding Between Cars Is Dangerous"</p>
<p>sign, he swung open the car door and started his speech again.</p>
<p> Mr. Littman described himself as "very unhappy" with his current</p>
<p>employer. So every day except Fridays, he stumps for a job on the rails. In the</p>
<p>morning, he catches the No. 1/9 train at 96th Street and works it down to 42nd</p>
<p>Street, where he rides the Grand Central shuttle back and forth for about a</p>
<p>half hour. Then it's back on the 1/9 down to his office.</p>
<p> In the evenings it's the same deal, except in the opposite</p>
<p>direction. He varies his schedule by about 10 minutes each day to avoid hitting</p>
<p>the same crowd.</p>
<p> Mr. Littman has television good looks: a wide smile, warm brown</p>
<p>eyes and a neat, cropped haircut. He said he's passed out over 700 résumés in</p>
<p>the one month he's been working the rails. He's landed five interviews, as well</p>
<p>as two job offers, including one from Thomson Media, publisher of American Banker and The Bond Buyer . James MacDonald, a publisher at Thomson, was</p>
<p>riding the 1/9 a couple of weeks ago. Mr. Littman began his speech and Mr.</p>
<p>MacDonald, who was reading The Wall Street Journal , told him to shut up.</p>
<p>People often tell Mr. Littman to shut up.</p>
<p> "I'd kind of had enough of it on the subways," Mr. MacDonald, 56,</p>
<p>recalled. "But then he went on with his speech in kind of a charming fashion</p>
<p>and I thought, 'He's got a good presentation.'"</p>
<p> Mr. Littman went in for an interview but declined the job.</p>
<p>"Cold-call sales," he told me, wrinkling his nose.</p>
<p> We were standing on a platform, taking a break. Mr. Littman had</p>
<p>pulled me off the train after he spotted Steve, who sells the Street News , a</p>
<p>newspaper covering homeless issues.</p>
<p> "I don't want to impede on what he's doing," Mr. Littman said.</p>
<p>"It's just a courtesy."</p>
<p> Mr. Littman grew up in New York near 193rd Street and attended</p>
<p>Brooklyn College, where he majored in psychology and minored in marketing.</p>
<p>Since graduating, he's worked in finance-a career, he said, "that is completely</p>
<p>not my personality."</p>
<p> The idea to look for a job on the M.T.A. came after he watched a</p>
<p>homeless man collect money after performing "Under the Boardwalk" on the 1/9.</p>
<p>"He sang it on key," said Mr. Littman, smiling.</p>
<p> Mr. Littman smiles a lot. Last April, he started a small company</p>
<p>called Free Hugs. Every Sunday he runs a booth in Washington Square Park, where</p>
<p>he gives out free hugs to strangers.</p>
<p> The train pulled in and we got back on. Mr. Littman started up</p>
<p>again. A tall, tired-looking man leaning against the door introduced himself.</p>
<p>He worked at Bloomberg L.P., he said, and asked for Mr. Littman's e-mail</p>
<p>address. Two blond women from Revlon also offered to take his résumé, as did a</p>
<p>young woman in a silver spaghetti top who worked at Trent &amp; Co., a P.R.</p>
<p>firm.</p>
<p> All told, almost 40 people had taken his resume in 45 minutes.</p>
<p> "Anyone who has the balls to do this deserves a job," said Leslie</p>
<p>Biddle, 35, an executive assistant in public relations at designer Carlos</p>
<p>Falchi, tucking Mr. Littman's résumé in her purse.</p>
<p> A heavy-set woman in a wrinkled T-shirt stopped him and asked him</p>
<p>for a résumé. Mr. Littman paused. "What's the company?" he asked. She said it</p>
<p>involved housing. "Thanks, but that's O.K.," he said politely.</p>
<p> Mr. Littman's face was shiny and flushed by now. He gave his</p>
<p>speech a half dozen more times, at one point straining to be heard over a</p>
<p>screeching toddler.</p>
<p> We emerged at 96th Street, and Mr. Littman checked his cell</p>
<p>phone. There was a message from the recruitment advertising agency McFrank</p>
<p>&amp; Williams.</p>
<p> He said he believes he will land a job soon, though he may be</p>
<p>forced to take one he isn't wild about: Things at his present job are getting a</p>
<p>little dicey.</p>
<p> A few weeks ago, he was in the middle of his spiel when he felt</p>
<p>someone kick his leg. It was one of his co-workers, 23-year-old Tara Pullen, a</p>
<p>fellow credit-risk analyst.</p>
<p> "She was like, 'What are you doing, Jayson?'" said Mr. Littman.</p>
<p>"I told her to wait a minute and I continued my speech."</p>
<p> He swore Ms. Pullen to secrecy, but another co-worker spotted him</p>
<p>on the subway and ratted him out to his office manager.</p>
<p> "My manager called me into her office and said, 'Jayson, I know</p>
<p>you are actively looking for another job,'" he said. "I told her I was</p>
<p>passively looking for a new job."</p>
<p> -Dakota Smith</p>
<p> Oh, Daddy !</p>
<p> On Thursday, July 29, Vanessa Kerry strode onto the stage of the</p>
<p>Fleet Center in Boston and, with a sparkle in her eye and a slight toss of her</p>
<p>wavy blond hair, proceeded to deliver one of the raciest public displays of</p>
<p>affection ever to cross the lips of a candidate's daughter.</p>
<p> "As someone who knows all 6-foot-4 inches of my dad best-6-foot-6</p>
<p>if you count the hair-I'm here to share some secrets," Ms. Kerry began, with</p>
<p>words that all but silenced the raucous hall and which, had Chelsea Clinton</p>
<p>ever uttered them, would surely have drawn gasps across the globe. "Over the</p>
<p>years, I've come to know him in many ways," said the 27-year-old Ms. Kerry.</p>
<p>"Through the silly moments, when he laughs with his head thrown back and his</p>
<p>shoulders rocking, and through sad moments, such as when my grandmother lay</p>
<p>dying, and also through warm moments when he enveloped me in that dad hug that</p>
<p>overwhelmed me with a feeling of safety." Later, Ms. Kerry told how her father</p>
<p>fashioned a tiny tree for his mother using fall foliage and "teasing out" the branches</p>
<p>from copper wire.</p>
<p> You don't need to be a Freudian to comprehend what Ms. Kerry's</p>
<p>speech was about: not death and taxes, but sex and death. Consider the choice</p>
<p>of words: sharing secrets. Shoulders rocking. Lay dying. Warm moments.</p>
<p>Enveloped. Overwhelmed. Teasing out. In a one-page speech, Ms. Kerry mentioned</p>
<p>her father's 6-foot-4 height twice, used the word "love" seven times and "gut"</p>
<p>two. What became apparent on Thursday was that Vanessa Kerry's role in this</p>
<p>campaign is to lend a sexual dimension to her cold, New England patrician</p>
<p>father, to make it clear that Dad wears the pants, no matter how brash or</p>
<p>ballsy his billionaire wife happens to be. Even her name, Vanessa, with its</p>
<p>seductive hiss of S's, helps.</p>
<p> Women on the Upper West Side are already sporting buttons that</p>
<p>say "Shove It"-Ms. Heinz Kerry's instructions to a journalist last week-but in</p>
<p>many other parts of the country, Ms. Heinz Kerry's nonscheduled persona isn't</p>
<p>exactly seen as a virtue. Laura Bush, meanwhile, comes across as completely</p>
<p>nonthreatening, almost medicated. Then again, any woman who claims her favorite</p>
<p>book is Dostoyevsky's The Brothers</p>
<p>Karamazov is sure to have a dark side. Lurking in the background, of</p>
<p>course, is the specter of Al Gore's sloppy lip lock with Tipper before his</p>
<p>speech at the 2000 convention, and no one wants to repeat that.</p>
<p> And so it's up to the Kerry daughters to toughen-yet also</p>
<p>soften-their father, to make him seem manly when their stepmother makes him</p>
<p>seem cowed.</p>
<p> It's an act that requires careful costuming and scripting.</p>
<p>Whereas Ms. Heinz Kerry favors dark pants suits and spread collars, for her</p>
<p>convention speech Vanessa Kerry-who took time off from Harvard Medical School</p>
<p>to campaign for her father-was dressed in a powder blue silk dress.</p>
<p>Knee-length, sleeveless and tasteful, it had one twist: An ever-so-tiny slit</p>
<p>ran from a hidden clasp at her high neckline to the top of her cleavage,</p>
<p>revealing one thin, suggestive slice of skin. The effect weirdly echoed an evening</p>
<p>when another blonde introduced another politician with a breathy "Happy</p>
<p>birthday, Mr. President, happy birthday … to … you."</p>
<p> Alexandra, the more tempered brunette older sister, was no less</p>
<p>striking in her form-fitting, long-sleeved, high-necked red dress. After</p>
<p>recounting the surreal and much-puzzled-over anecdote of how their father</p>
<p>administered CPR to a drowning pet hamster, Alexandra, a filmmaker, painted a</p>
<p>picture of Mr. Kerry as a thoughtful, loving dad, one who put things in perspective</p>
<p>when she was a brooding 19-year-old. "Ali, this is a beautiful day. Feel the</p>
<p>sun. Look at the country you live in," she recounted him saying.</p>
<p> Meanwhile, the Bush campaign has begun to make use of the</p>
<p>President's 22-year-old twin daughters-Jenna, the frolicsome blonde, and</p>
<p>Barbara, the sensible brunette and designated driver-who posed wearing couture in this month's Vogue . At the G.O.P. convention this month, one can hardly imagine what they'll have to say about their father-all</p>
<p>six feet of him.</p>
<p> -Rachel Donadio </p>
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