| Argentine Women Ask, 'What's in
    a Name?  [Argentina] 
What's in a name?  If you're a married woman in Argentina,
    it's often a little word called "de," meaning "of," that comes after
    your maiden name and before your husband's last name.  But for many Argentine women
    these days, the possessive ring to that traditional formulation feels offensive and smacks
    of a not-too-distant chauvinist past here when women were put on pedestals but locked in
    cages ... figuratively, of course.  In this beauty-conscious country of well-defined
    gender roles, the role of women is being slowly but surely reconfigured.  Women here
    are free not to take their husbands' names.  But if they choose to do so, a national
    law requires the use of de before the husband's last name.  The Argentine Congress is
    currently considering amending that law by giving women the right to use "y,"
    meaning "and," instead of de, and even offering the husband the right to take
    his wife's name. | 
  
    | Chileans
    Watch for a Cultural Shift With Their First Female President.  [Chile] Hemmed in
    by waitresses in skimpy pink outfits, Alejandra Gonzalez is unfazed about crashing one of
    this nation's stoutest bastions of old-school male privilege.  "It's still a
    macho country," Gonzalez says casually while polishing off the dregs of her coffee at
    the Café Caribe.  Sort of a missing link between a Hooters restaurant and a Playboy
    Club circa 1970, the Café Caribe is a peculiar institution.  Though it serves mainly
    creamy coffee drinks and no alcohol, its all-female staff wears short, clingy
    cocktail-style dresses and high heels, and favors the mostly male clientele with obliging
    smiles and sympathetic nods.  But cultural change is in the air in this South
    American capital. On Saturday, President-elect Michelle Bachelet will officially take
    office, becoming the first female head of state in what historically has been regarded as South
    America's most socially conservative country.  A single mother, socialist and
    agnostic, she's the antithesis of the traditional Chilean middle-class housewife.  
    Like many women here, Gonzalez says she's excited about how Bachelet's administration
    could improve the Second Sex's economic and social standing.  And though Gonzalez
    thinks that "we'll have to wait at least a year to see what happens," there
    already are signs that Chile's 
gender status quo is being shaken up  even at the
    Café Caribe and a handful of similar surviving downtown establishments.  "Not
    long ago there weren't many women here; it was only men.   It was like a pact,"
    says Gonzalez, who sometimes stops by the cafe with her female colleagues from Santander
    bank.  "Now you come in and drink a coffee in the afternoon and go back to
    work." |