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LOS ANGELES — Perry Ellis International (NASDAQ:PERY) has entered into an exclusive
license agreement with Nolan Glove Company (Nolan) to manufacture,
design and distribute women’s Laundry by Shelli Segal® year-round
accessories, including: hats, caps, earmuffs, gloves, mittens, scarves
and wraps.

Headquartered in New York City, Nolan is one of the oldest glove
companies in America. Founded in 1920, the company has a heritage of
creating fashion in an industry segment that traditionally focused on
utility. “We are very excited to partner with the Nolan Glove Company
and benefit from their ninety years of experience in year-round
accessories manufacturing,” stated Oscar Feldenkreis, President Chief
Operating Officer of parent company, Perry Ellis International. “Nolan’s
head and handwear expertise ranges from the finest leather to complex
knitting, ensuring the superior quality expected by our Laundry by
Shelli Segal customer.”

Michael P. Nolan, President of Nolan Glove Company, added, “We consider
Laundry by Shelli Segal to be the most forward fashion platform in the
contemporary market today. The driving force at Nolan has been exquisite
execution of product and we have found the same aesthetic at Laundry by
Shelli Segal. It is truly an organic partnership that will reinvigorate
our market with luxurious energy.”

Launching fall 2010 in-store, Laundry by Shelli Segal year-round
accessories will be distributed to better department stores and
specialty stores. The collection will launch to the trade at the end of
January.

About Laundry by Shelli Segal®

Muslim civil rights group seeks confirmation of troubling new policy WASHINGTON, Jan. 6 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) today called on the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) to clarify whether Islamic head scarves, or hijab, will now automatically trigger additional security measures for Muslim travelers. CAIR made that request after a Muslim woman traveler taking a flight Tuesday from Washington Dulles International Airport (IAD) to Los Angeles (LAX) reported that TSA personnel first requested that she take off her hijab, then put her through a “humiliating” public full-body pat-down search when she refused. After the pat-down, the Muslim travelers luggage, coat, shoes, laptop, and cell phone were searched and tested for bomb-making chemicals. When the traveler, a resident of Maryland, questioned TSA staff about the way she was being treated, she was allegedly told that a new policy went into effect that morning mandating that “anyone wearing a head scarf must go through this type of search.” In a letter to TSA Acting Administrator Gale D. Rossides, CAIR National Executive Director Nihad Awad wrote in part:

scarf

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