Lifestyle
The Windsor Knot Takes Washington
On Tuesday, as news piled up about the Trump administration’s use of a Signal group chat to discuss military strikes, Kash Patel, the F.B.I. director, found himself facing the Senate Committee on Intelligence. He looked like a prep schooler sitting in detention.
His striped tie was yanked off center, and the top button of his dress shirt was conspicuously unfastened, as if too constricting for his neck.
But by the standards of President Trump’s cabinet, there was nothing off about Mr. Patel’s Dorito-shaped tie. After all, the wide Windsor knot, a symmetrical loop about the size of a Labrador’s paw, has become the standard in the administration.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, the central character in the group chat debacle, favors plump knots that lack a dimple, giving them the look of a tie drawn by a child. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and the E.P.A. administrator Lee Zeldin similarly favor knots scaled somewhere between meatballs and dinner rolls.
For Mr. Trump’s congressional address in early March, when Elon Musk, the DOGE leader, finally traded his graphic T-shirts for a suit, his satiny blue tie was looped into a flat, broadsided knot. He may not officially be in Mr. Trump’s cabinet, but on that evening he knew the dress code.
The style transcends the West Wing. In their official portraits, Senators Jim Justice of West Virginia, Bernie Moreno of Ohio and Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma demonstrate that they’re devotees of a fanned out V-shaped tie. The look is less common across the aisle, but some Democrats are Windsor sticklers, predating this administration. In fact, Senators Mark Kelly of Arizona and Chris Coons of Delaware flaunt two of the fattest, monkey-fisted knots on the Hill.
“It’s the new power look,” said G. Bruce Boyer, a former fashion editor of Town & Country magazine, said.
The 1999 book “The 85 Ways to Tie a Tie” illustrates many of the more esoteric methods for roping silk around one’s neck, but we really use only a handful of the knots today. The Windsor, and its brawnier brother, the double Windsor, are on the all-business end of that spectrum, according to Michelle Kohanzo, the president of the Tie Bar in Chicago. (The Windsor knot is named for the Duke of Windsor, though he didn’t actually employ the knot; he just wore thicker ties.)
“Historically, you would wear it to really formal or important events,” Ms. Kohanzo said. But today, as even ex-presidents forgo ties in public, most men wear a tie only for formal events or to workplaces clinging to a dated level of decorum. The Windsor has thus become the default.
It wasn’t always so in the White House.
In 2001, The Los Angeles Times noted that George W. Bush wore “his necktie with a rather trim knot that yields a dimple, a staple of contemporary dress.” Barack Obama and Joseph R. Biden likewise favored reedier, asymmetrical knots that didn’t fill the full cavity of their shirt collars.
There are outliers in Mr. Trump’s cabinet, especially among those who came of age when preppy fashions prevailed. The skinny ties that Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the health and human services secretary, wears are looped in a compact hold, about the size of an immature tulip.
But among the comparatively younger members of Trump’s administration — those roughly 55 and under — there appears to be a shared thinking that broad knots convey authority.
“There’s a brashness to it that kind of says, ‘We’re taking over and what are you going to do about it?’” Mr. Boyer said. He even ventured that there is something “Freudian” going on with these tie knots. “Mine is bigger than yours,” he offered.
As someone old enough to recall that John F. Kennedy’s cabinet caused a commotion by wearing tweed sport coats, Mr. Boyer believes that the only tie technique anyone really needs is the unboastful four-in-hand loop.
Mr. Trump himself may not wear the widest tie in Washington, but he favors large, simple, bright clothes that recall the 1980s.
“This kind of ’80s, ’90s power dressing is coming back,” Ms. Kohanzo said. If men are wearing ties at all, they’re embracing them at Gordon Gekko scale.
The Tie Bar’s best seller is a three-inch “moderately fat tie,” Ms. Kohanzo said, and increasingly the company is selling even larger ties, as well as shirts with conspicuous collars.
Business leaders like Jeff Bezos and Sundar Pichai wore Windsor knots when they attended Mr. Trump’s inauguration in January. Mr. Bezos rarely wears a tie in public, but when he does, he tends to favor the Windsor. On NBC, sports commentators like Tim Howard are employing this knot. And Jamie Dimon’s tie loop looks not that dissimilar to those worn in the White House.
“There’s no subtlety to it,” Mr. Boyer said. “Everything is just a little oversize, glossy, showy, shiny.”
Lifestyle
How the new dietary guidelines could impact school meals
Putting together a school meal isn’t easy.
“It is a puzzle essentially,” said Lori Nelson of the Chef Ann Foundation, a nonprofit that promotes scratch cooking in schools.
“When you think about the guidelines, there’s so many different pieces that you have to meet. You have to meet calorie minimums and maximums for the day and for the week. You have to meet vegetable subgroup categories.”

Districts that receive federal funding for school meals — through, for example, the National School Lunch Program — must follow rules set by the Department of Agriculture (USDA).
And those rules may be changing soon.
In early January, the Department of Health and Human Services and the USDA unveiled new Dietary Guidelines for Americans, along with a new food pyramid.
The USDA sets school nutrition standards based on those dietary guidelines, which now place an emphasis on protein and encourage Americans to consume full-fat dairy products and limit highly processed foods.
Here’s what to know about how the new food pyramid could impact schools:
Cutting back on ready-to-eat school meals won’t be easy
Highly processed and ready-to-eat foods often contain added sugars and salt. Think mac and cheese, pizza, french fries and individually packaged peanut butter and jelly sandwiches.
These foods are also a big part of many school meals, said Nelson. That’s because schools often lack adequate kitchen infrastructure to prepare meals from scratch.

“Many schools were built 40-plus years ago, and they were built to reheat food. So they weren’t built as commercial cooking kitchens,” said Nelson.
Even so, schools have been able to bring sodium and sugar levels down in recent years.
“They’ve been working with food companies to find a middle ground, to find recipes that meet [the current] standards and appeal to students and that schools can serve given the equipment that they have,” said Diane Pratt-Heavner, a spokesperson for the School Nutrition Association.
Bringing sugar and salt levels down further would likely require that food companies adapt their recipes and that schools prepare more meals from scratch, Pratt-Heavner said.
But leaning into scratch cooking won’t be easy. A recent survey of school nutrition directors by the School Nutrition Association found that most programs would need better equipment and infrastructure as well as more trained staff — and nearly all respondents said they would also need more money. “You cannot go from serving heavily processed, heat-and-serve items to scratch cooking immediately,” said Nelson. “It is a transition.”
Protein-rich school meals will come at a higher cost
At the top of the new food pyramid are animal products such as meat and cheese. The new guidelines prioritize consuming protein as a part of every meal and incorporating healthy fats.

“That could cause a change in school breakfast standards,” said Pratt-Heavner. “Right now, there’s no mandate that breakfasts include a protein.”
A typical school breakfast today might include fruit, milk and a cereal cup or muffin; some schools may serve breakfast burritos or sandwiches.
She said schools would “absolutely need more funding,” should they be required to provide protein under the USDA’s School Breakfast Program.
Current standards allow for schools to serve either grains or meats/meat alternates for breakfast, and Pratt-Heavner said, “Protein options … are more expensive than grain options.”
She said it’s unclear whether the USDA would require protein under its own category or whether the agency would consider milk to be sufficient to meet any new protein requirements.
Whole milk is getting a lot of attention
Schools that participate in federal school meal programs are required to offer milk with every meal, though students don’t have to take it. Up until recently, an Obama-era rule allowed for only low-fat and nonfat milk in schools.
But the new food pyramid emphasizes whole fat dairy, like whole milk. At the same time, recent federal legislation reversed that Obama-era rule and now allows schools to serve reduced-fat and full-fat milk.
One more thing to know about milk: Federal law also limits saturated fats in school meals — and whole milk has more of those than low-fat and nonfat varieties. But the recent federal legislation now exempts milk fat from those limits.
What does all this mean for schools? They’re now able to start serving whole milk, and they won’t have to worry about whole milk pushing them past the limits on saturated fats.
It’ll be a while before these changes trickle down to schools
While the USDA sets regulations for schools based on the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, it takes time to draft and implement new rules after new guidelines are released.
“The current school nutrition standards that we’re operating under were proposed in February 2023, finalized in April 2024,” said Pratt-Heavner. “The first menu changes in school cafeterias were not required until July 2025.” Other changes are still rolling out.
Which is to say: The new dietary guidelines won’t bring immediate changes to school cafeterias. They’re only the first step in a regulatory process that will take time.
“We’re going to have to see what USDA proposes,” said Pratt-Heavner.
Then, she said, “the public will comment on those regulations, and then final rules will be drafted and issued.”
The USDA then gives schools and school food companies time to update recipes and implement the new nutrition standards.
Lifestyle
Jeffrey Epstein Pled Guilty to Soliciting a Minor Whose Name He Never Knew
Epstein Files Deposition
Pedo Dismisses Underage Sex Victim … ‘What Minor?’
Published
DOJ
Jeffrey Epstein was put on the hot seat during a 2010 deposition over his criminal conviction for soliciting a minor for prostitution … but the pedophile financier didn’t have a clue who his victim was, and even asked the lawyer questioning him, “What minor?”
In the stunning clip, Epstein tells the lawyer deposing him that he didn’t know the name of his underage victim, but pled guilty anyway in 2009 to soliciting prostitution from someone under the age of 18. He also pleaded guilty to another count of soliciting prostitution and was sentenced to 18 months in jail in Florida under a plea deal with prosecutors.
The 2010 deposition, released in the latest tranche of Epstein Files, opens with the lawyer repeatedly asking Epstein if any female he interacted with was a prostitute prior to meeting him. Epstein gives the same response each time, saying he pleaded guilty to solicitation of prostitution. He then falsely claims he never pleaded guilty to soliciting sex from an underage prostitute.
The attorney seems to be taken aback, pointing out that Epstein pled guilty to procuring a minor for the purposes of prostitution, which is a felony. Epstein acknowledges this, prompting the lawyer to ask him if he’s remorseful for his interaction with that minor.
That’s when Epstein responds, “What minor?”
Check it all out for yourself. The video is quite dramatic, especially when the attorney asks Epstein why he pleaded guilty if he never knew the identity of his underage victim.
Lifestyle
Video: Penny, a Doberman Pinscher, Wins 150th Westminster Dog Show
new video loaded: Penny, a Doberman Pinscher, Wins 150th Westminster Dog Show
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