The Onion
This is laughable. People are becoming so immune to advertising there is literally a campaign to increase awareness of advertising. YES !!! We are good !!
National Advertising Board Launches "Advertising: Get the Message!" Campaign
NEW YORK—In an effort to raise the individual American's awareness of and interest in advertising, the National Advertising Board launched a $32-million "Advertising: Get The Message!" campaign in major markets across the country Monday.
http://www.theonion.com/news/index.php?issue=4121
"Onion" Advertising
http://www.americanapparelstore.com/theonion-2.html
Palmolive Attacks Dawn For Coddling Grease
NEW YORK—Representatives for Palmolive dish detergent issued a challenge to the makers of Dawn Monday, charging that the blue dishwashing soap "coddles grease." "Palmolive lives up to its vow to be 'tough on grease,' but Dawn merely 'takes grease out of your way,'" Colgate-Palmolive CEO Reuben Mark said. "Out of sight, out of mind, eh Dawn? Palmolive believes in eradicating the grease problem, not simply pushing it to the far reaches of the sink." Mark added that, as unrelenting as Palmolive is on grease, it continues to be soft on hands.
Thousands Dead in Wake of Low Carbon Diet
FORT WALTON BEACH, FL—Doctors are linking nearly 9,000 deaths nationwide to the popular low-carbon diet outlined in the bestselling book, Dr. Wesley's Elemental Dieting. "Dr. Ryan Wesley's book tells dieters to avoid consuming carbon, an element that occurs in all organic life, animal and vegetable," said Dr. Peter Castle, a nutritionist at Johns Hopkins University. "Although Wesley dieters can ingest limitless hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen, deriving nutrients only from gases is not viable in the long term." The low-carbon diet first came to prominence in February 2004 when Wesley appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show weighing an astonishing 76 pounds.
http://www.theonion.com/nib/index.php?issue=4121&nib=2
Alternative Training School for Dogs De-Emphasizes Obedience
MONTEREY, CA—Dogs who attend the Kylee Alternative Training Institute are exposed to a "creative canine learning environment where less emphasis is placed on obedience," director Morgan Kylee said Monday. "We believe in helping our students to discover their own potential, rather than forcing them to conform to the traditional idea of what a dog should be," Kylee said. "Dogs that mess on the carpet or bark incessantly are not scolded, but praised for finding their own parameters. Our motto is 'If it feels good, chew it.'" Classes at the school include Holistic Heeling, Elective Fetching, and Removing The Leg-Humping Stigma.
http://www.theonion.com/nib/index.php?issue=4121&nib=3
Cocky Attempt to Operate ATM in Spanish - Backfires !
SAFFORD, AZ—During a Monday night stop at an automated-teller machine, an overconfident Scott Tifton failed to withdraw cash using the machine's Spanish instructions. "My girlfriend Lisa was with me at the ATM, so I pressed Spanish as a joke," Tifton said. "I figured I could rely on my high-school Spanish, but instead of giving me $100, the deposit slot lit up. Then I hit what I thought meant 'cancel' a couple times, and it ate my card. We were going out to dinner for our two-year anniversary, and Lisa had to pay." Tifton said he probably could have figured out the instructions if he had been at his normal branch.
http://www.theonion.com/nib/index.php?issue=4121&nib=4
Former Addict Celebrates 10th Year of Mind-Numbing Boredom
PHOENIX—Tom Stubbens, 44, a former heroin abuser, attended a party in his honor to celebrate a full decade of clean, sober, and dismally tedious living Tuesday. "The crazy gang of partiers I used to have so much fun with in the '90s wouldn't even recognize the clean and respectable person standing before you today," said Stubbens, raising an iced tea to friends at his regular evening haunt, the 36th Avenue Denny's. "Yup, but here I am... that person." Stubbens then retired to his apartment, where he watered his plants, organized his sock drawer, and fell asleep on the couch.
http://www.theonion.com/nib/index.php?issue=4121&nib=5
Investigators Blame Stupidity in Area Deaths
WHEATLEY, AR—Although reckless driving and minor driver impairment were cited as additional factors, police investigators ruled pure, unadulterated stupidity as the primary cause in the death of an unlicensed motorist involved in a single-car accident Sunday.
http://www.theonion.com/news/index.php?issue=4121&n=1
Haaretz
Here we go. Bush wants to discredit Israel no matter what it takes. Prime Minister Sharon didn't come to the USA Diaspora for no reason.
U.S. to indict two senior AIPAC officials under Espionage Act
By Nathan Guttman, Haaretz Correspondent
WASHINGTON - The U.S. Justice Department is expected to file indictments against two former senior staffers at the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) - Steve Rosen and Keith Weissman - and, according to sources familiar with the affair, the charges will be subsumed under the Espionage Act.
A Virginia grand jury is now examining the evidence in the case, which involved receipt of classified defense information from Larry Franklin, a Pentagon official, and its transfer to the representative of a foreign country, Naor Gilon, of the Israeli embassy in Washington.
Sources involved in the case confirmed that the Espionage Act is on the agenda. But there is also the possibility that the Justice Department is raising the intention to use that law with the purpose of reaching a plea bargain concerning a lesser offense, albeit one that is still covered by anti-espionage legislation in the U.S.
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/581788.html
The Bush Administration has a basic hated for Israel. People don't really 'buy into' the idea of an American President being Anti-Semitic but that is exactly what Bush/Cheney and their administration are.
I can't recall who of the Repuglican Right is Jewish.
AIPAC ( http://www.aipac.org/ ) is instrumental in providing meaningful support to Israel while being the a vital link for the diaspora to find comfort in that reality.
Sharon Gets Nod for Gaza Plan at Aipac Parley
http://forward.com/articles/3229
Rice Makes Plea For a 'Viable' Palestinian State
By Ori Nir
May 27, 2005
WASHINGTON — Despite fears of discord, Israel's prime minister received a rousing show of support Tuesday when he presented his Gaza disengagement plan to a cheering crowd of some 5,000 of America's most influential pro-Israel activists at the annual meeting of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.
.....................
In the time after that lunch. Bush's FBI sent an incompetent agent who has since been removed from any further investigation to AIPAC to rummage through the materials and files of that organization in a witch hunt to find SOMETHING. ANYTHING. That could be used as a wedge against Israel. Why? Because Bush as an Evangelical Christian has plans for a Christian Holy Land beginning by meetings held in Ur, Iraq at the beginnings of the invasion into Iraq.
It well known the land where Israel has built it's Knesset and other government buildings as well as private concerns are believed to be owned by Palestinian Christians. How that is the case when the Palestinians are not entitled to any of Israel since it's inception nearly fifty years ago but the 'myth' goes on. It can be speculated in Bush's fanaticism that he would see these lands as Christian and nothing else.
Under this oppressive administration Israel has been denied loans while the PA has been proved with millions upon millions of funding. Recently, it has come to the relief of the American Jewish Community the House of Representatives have earmarked all funds going to Palestinian development go through Hebrew Charitable Foundations, like AIPAC, to prevent funds from the USA becoming a blank check to kill Jews. The monies are to rehabilitate Palestine and assist where necessary while creating a peaceful process to disengagement.
Bush, just this past week, while Abbas was visiting, stated there would be more monies to Palestine taht woud go directly to the PA. Those are his demands but not necessarily the 'final word' about the legislation. The President can submit legislation but not dictate the outcome of it.
It is astounding that today there are announcements about a casual lunch called together by by Larry Franklin, a Pentagon operative, where alarming information was given to Mr. Rosen and Mr. Weissman who are civilians and not officers of Israel or the USA. The purpose of this pursuit of indictment of innocent civilians who happen to work for AIPAC is to discredit Hebrew Chartable Funds so Bush 'gets his way' and the monies he is demanding for Palestine go directly to the Palestinian Authority (PA).
If someone called me the Pentagon and requested me and a pier to lunch, as Mr. Franklin did of Mr. Rosen and Mr. Weissman, I would be honored to attend. The senior staff members of AIPAC were set up. They were given alarming information over lunch as planned by Mr. Franklin. What would you do if a Pentagon Official provided alarming information to you? Wouldn't you feel as though you had act on it? I would. What was it supposed to be 'gossip' over lunch. I imagine the presentation of the information to Mr. Rosen and Mr. Weisseman was rather creative and guided into concern those men carried away with them after lunch. Naturally, having information provided by a USA Pentagon Official in friendship over a friendly lunch would lead these men who loved Israel with all their heart for the work they do directly to an Israel contact to validate the information and voice concern now that they had knowledge of it. I believe Mr. Rosen and Mr. Weissman's contact with any Israeli entity was to demand attention to the issue as if the Israeli government were ignoring the issue. Those gentlemen are innocent of any malice to the USA. The ONLY guilty party is Mr. Franklin who 'set up' these Jewish Gentlemen to act on an emotional 'trigger' for their love of their native country, Israel.
I am personally appalled at the USA Justice Department that they would ever entertain such charges against citizens with a long history of devoted service within their faith and to Israel. But, when I reflect on it more I realize the Bush/Cheney Justice Department has a chronic history of victimizing innocent people for political gain. Also, Mr. Gonzalez has a long history of advocating distasteful torture that was used by this administration in Abu Ghraib.
To say the least this situation is upsetting, but, it is far more than that; it's victimizing to the Jewish Community and two of it's finest gentlemen who have devoted their lives to promoting Israel in the best light possible. If the Bush/Cheney administration is this determined to undermine Israel's reputation there is some very sounds concern for their determination to undermine Israeli sovereignty as well.
When all is said and done I guarantee you; Mr. Rosen and Mr. Weissman will be found innocent but in the meantime there will be huge amounts of damage done to Israel's reputable charitable organizations. It chills me to the bone to realize the hate that accompanies these allegations.
Court remands top Israeli execs in industrial espionage affair
By Roni Singer, Haaretz Correspondent and Haaretz Service
The Tel Aviv Magistrate's Court Monday remanded several people from some of Israel's leading commercial companies and private investigators suspected of commissioning and carrying out industrial espionage against their competitors, which was carried out by planting Trojan horse software in their competitors' computers.
Uzi Mor, CEO of Mayer and his deputies Avner Kez and Or Schachar, Moriah Katriel, financial vice president of Yes as well as Yoram Cohen, CEO of Hamafil were placed under an eight-day house arrest.
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/581790.html
AG denies hearing for chief rabbi on possible fraud charge
By Yuval Yoaz, Haaretz Correspondent
Attorney General Menachem Mazuz on Monday rejected a request by Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi Yona Metzger for a hearing ahead of any decision on whether to indict him for fraud and breach of trust.
Metzger could face charges for allegedly staying with his family at the David Citadel Hotel in Jerusalem for a minimal fee during Pesach 2004. During an investigation into the affair, police discovered that the Metzgers also allegedly received huge discounts at David Citadel during last year's Sukkot and Shavuot holidays, and enjoyed similarly discounted stays at other hotels.
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/582283.html
FBI arrests two men on charges they offered to help al Qaida
By Associated Press
The FBI has arrested a Florida doctor and a New York martial arts expert on federal terrorism charges, saying they conspired to treat and train terrorists, prosecutors have announced.
Rafiq Abdus Sabir, a Boca Raton physician, and Tarik Shah, a self-described martial arts expert in New York, were both charged in Manhattan federal court with conspiring to provide material support to al-Qaida, the U.S. attorney's office for the Southern District of New York said Sunday.
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/582169.html
FBI arrests two men on charges they offered to help al Qaida
By Associated Press
The FBI has arrested a Florida doctor and a New York martial arts expert on federal terrorism charges, saying they conspired to treat and train terrorists, prosecutors have announced.
Rafiq Abdus Sabir, a Boca Raton physician, and Tarik Shah, a self-described martial arts expert in New York, were both charged in Manhattan federal court with conspiring to provide material support to al-Qaida, the U.S. attorney's office for the Southern District of New York said Sunday.
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/582169.html
EU meets with Israel, Arab neighbors over cooperation
By The Associated Press
BRUSSELS, Belgium - European Union foreign ministers and their counterparts from Israel and its Arab neighbors take stock of the Mideast peace process and debate economic and political cooperation between Europe and the Middle East at a two-day meeting opening Monday.
Rarely in the past decade has the twice-annual Euro-Mediterranean ministerial meeting opened with better prospects for peace in the region than now.
http://www.haaretz.co.il/hasen/spages/581851.html
Abbas: Era of suicide bombers may be over
By Reuters
WASHINGTON - The culture of violence is changing in the Middle East, said Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas on ABC's "This Week" program yesterday.
Abbas, who visited the U.S. last week to meet President George W. Bush, said Palestinian-Israeli violence was down 90 percent in the past four months. Asked whether the era of suicide bombing was over, he said: "I believe it is over."
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/581811.html
The Washington Post
A Bane Amid The Housing Boom: Rising Foreclosures
By Michael Powell
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, May 30, 2005; Page A01
PHILADELPHIA -- To walk Thayer Street in northeast Philadelphia is to count, door by door, the economic devastation afflicting a working-class neighborhood. On a single block, 18 of the 42 brick rowhouses have gone into foreclosure in the past three years.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/29/AR2005052900972.html?sub=AR
Finding Support in the Search for E.T.
With Stronger Telescope and Renewed Vigor, Scientists Scan the Sky
By Ariana Eunjung Cha
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, May 30, 2005; Page A01
HAT CREEK, Calif. -- Astronomer Michael M. Davis checked his computer. One of the antennas on the state-of-the-art radio telescope being built in the valley outside his office was picking up an unusual pulse from beyond the Earth. A signal from another intelligent civilization? Not today. It was the Rosetta Satellite, en route to study a comet.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/29/AR2005052900966.html
Less Popular, Yet Tended With Care
Small National Cemeteries Have Their Own Faithful
By Stephanie McCrummen
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, May 30, 2005; Page A01
Kelvin Bennett wakes up about 4 a.m. most mornings and drives nearly two hours from Baltimore to the wrought-iron gates of Quantico National Cemetery in Virginia.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/29/AR2005052900973.html
Illinois Elephants' Fate Remains Uncertain
Battle Over 'Hawthorn Herd' Pits Circus World Against Animal Rights Backers
By Marc Kaufman
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, May 30, 2005; Page A06
More than two years ago, federal officials concluded that 16 elephants owned by an Illinois circus-animal training business were being mistreated and had to be removed quickly. Facing the possible loss of his license to keep circus animals, the owner of Hawthorn Corp. formally agreed last year to give up his elephants as soon as a new home could be found.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/29/AR2005052900956.html
A Tall Agenda in the Smokies
New Park Superintendent Hopes to Resolve Several Old Issues
By Duncan Mansfield
Associated Press
Monday, May 30, 2005; Page A19
GATLINBURG, Tenn. -- After barely a year on the job, Dale A. Ditmanson is talking about leaving a lasting mark on the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
Besides championing the health of the 520,000-acre forest and urging regional cooperation to improve its sometimes smoggy air, the 51-year-old superintendent said in an interview that he wants to resolve several long-running issues.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/29/AR2005052900884.html
The 100 Best High Schools in America
By Barbara Kantrowitz
Newsweek
Tuesday, May 10, 2005; 6:29 PM
In the winter of 1821, the civic leaders of Boston approved what was then a radical idea. At a time when advanced learning was largely restricted to the wealthy, they voted to create the country's first public high school, open to boys 12 or older who could pass an entrance exam. Ever since, Americans have been trying to figure out exactly what public high schools should do. Should they concentrate on preparing the best and the brightest for college? Should there be more emphasis on vocational training? Should students with different abilities and goals learn in the same classrooms, or should they be segregated into different tracks or even different schools? The debate has never been more contentious than now, when the attention of politicians, business leaders, educators, parents and students is focused on an unprecedented explosion of new ideas in big cities and small towns across the country. Everything is up for grabs: curriculum, size, even the idea of school itself. With new technology that puts the world at their keyboards, students can learn without a classroom or a formal teacher.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/10/AR2005051001140.html
The 100 Best High Schools in America
By Barbara Kantrowitz
Newsweek
Tuesday, May 10, 2005; 6:29 PM
In the winter of 1821, the civic leaders of Boston approved what was then a radical idea. At a time when advanced learning was largely restricted to the wealthy, they voted to create the country's first public high school, open to boys 12 or older who could pass an entrance exam. Ever since, Americans have been trying to figure out exactly what public high schools should do. Should they concentrate on preparing the best and the brightest for college? Should there be more emphasis on vocational training? Should students with different abilities and goals learn in the same classrooms, or should they be segregated into different tracks or even different schools? The debate has never been more contentious than now, when the attention of politicians, business leaders, educators, parents and students is focused on an unprecedented explosion of new ideas in big cities and small towns across the country. Everything is up for grabs: curriculum, size, even the idea of school itself. With new technology that puts the world at their keyboards, students can learn without a classroom or a formal teacher.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/10/AR2005051001140.html
The Macho Culture
5 million readers a month
http://www.askmen.ca/media_kit/ppc/fl1.html
Improve Yourself
http://www.askmen.com/
The Top Most Desirable Women in 2005
http://www.askmen.com/specials/2005_top_99/99.html
The Chicago Tribune
Where the elephants roam
At Tennessee facility, the land is their land
By William Mullen
Tribune staff reporter
Published May 29, 2005
HOHENWALD, Tenn. -- In the rural hills of central Tennessee, workmen are almost finished installing electrified double fences around 2,700 acres of forest: an 8-foot-high, chain-link barrier on the outside, and a much stronger inner fence of tubular steel and cable.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-0505290315may29,1,1129943.story?coll=chi-news-hed&ctrack=1&cset=true
Suicide Bombers Kill 20 Policemen in Hillah
Published May 30, 2005, 3:06 AM CDT
HILLAH, Iraq -- Two suicide bombers attacked a large crowd of policemen south of Baghdad on Monday, killing 20 and wounding nearly 100, an Interior Ministry official said.
Iraqi police and soldiers immediately cordoned off the area, which was covered with pieces of flesh, pools of blood and shreds of clothing.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/ats-ap_top10may30,1,7901380.story?coll=chi-news-hed&ctrack=2&cset=true
Six Found Shot to Death in Ohio Farmhouses
By NICK JULIANO
Associated Press Writer
Published May 30, 2005, 2:54 AM CDT
BELLEFONTAINE, Ohio -- Six people were found shot to death and a seventh was in critical condition following a multiple murder-suicide in two neighboring farmhouses near this west-central Ohio town, authorities said. Investigators believe one of the victims was responsible for the attack, Logan County Sheriff's Lt. Chuck Stout said Sunday. Authorities would not say who they suspect opened fire.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/sns-ap-six-dead,1,7900254.story?coll=chi-news-hed
THE PUBLIC HAS A RIGHT to the information generated by it's agencies, including The Weather Service.
Weather Service braces for storm
Private firms, senator say agency's leg up on information unfair
By Dawn Withers
Washington Bureau
Published May 29, 2005
WASHINGTON -- A tempestuous clash between the National Weather Service and private weather companies is prompting an influential senator to intervene to protect AccuWeather, WeatherBank and other firms that package forecasts for public use.
Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.), the Senate's third-ranking Republican, is pushing a bill that critics say would force the Weather Service to disseminate much of its data only to private companies.
The bill, these opponents contend, would limit the public's access to user-friendly weather information and require that people go to a commercial weather company to get any meaningful interpretation of raw climate data.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/technology/chi-0505290318may29,1,1594490.story?coll=chi-technology-hed
The New York Times
Iraqi Offensive Met by Wave of New Violence From Insurgents
By JOHN F. BURNS
Published: May 30, 2005
BAGHDAD, Iraq, May 29 - The largest Iraqi-led counterinsurgency operation since the downfall of Saddam Hussein set off a violent backlash on Sunday across Baghdad. At least 20 people were killed in the capital, 14 of them in a battle lasting several hours when insurgents initiated sustained attacks on several police stations and an army barracks.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/30/international/middleeast/30iraq.html?hp&ex=1117512000&en=4b17abb841822b94&ei=5094&partner=homepage
French Voters Soundly Reject European Union Constitution
By ELAINE SCIOLINO
Published: May 30, 2005
PARIS, May 29 - Turning its back on half a century of European history, France decisively rejected a constitution for Europe on Sunday, plunging the country into political disarray and jeopardizing the cause of European unity.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/30/international/europe/30france.html?hp&ex=1117512000&en=afa961eafddc3382&ei=5094&partner=homepage
In Rising Numbers, Lawyers Head for Guantánamo Bay
By NEIL A. LEWIS
Published: May 30, 2005
WASHINGTON, May 29 - In the last few months, the small commercial air service to the naval base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, has been carrying people the military authorities had hoped would never be allowed there: American lawyers.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/30/politics/30detain.html
THIS IS OBSCENE. I suppose it is better called decadent.
It's All in How the Dog Is Served
Tony Cenicola/The New York Times
The 15-bite hot dog at Brooklyn Diner USA, on West 57th Street, is $13.50 with onion rings and sauerkraut.
By ED LEVINE
Published: May 25, 2005
YOU know those hot dogs that you know and love, and can't wait to eat this time of year? The ones served at Katz's Delicatessen, Gray's Papaya, Papaya King, the legendary Dominick's truck in Queens and the best "dirty water dog" carts?
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/25/dining/25dogs.html
The Philadelphia Inquirer
MIA hope spans half a century
As remains arrive in the U.S., local families and others wonder if they could be loved ones.
By Tom Infield
Inquirer Staff Writer
After five weeks of digging on old battlefields, American military teams emerged from North Korea on Tuesday carrying the remains of U.S. servicemen lost 55 years ago in the Korean War.
http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/local/11763806.htm
Phila. to host Live Aid sequel concert
The July 2 show, called "Live 8," will coincide with one in London to help African countries.
By Michael Klein
Inquirer Staff Writer
Twenty years after Philadelphia hosted one of two Live Aid concerts that dramatized the plight of starving Africans, a second big-name benefit is in the works.
It will be July 2 on Ben Franklin Parkway, in the middle of the city's jam-packed Fourth of July festivities, according to Deborah
http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/front/11767041.htm
Honoring those who made a mark
By Edward Colimore
Inquirer Staff Writer
A century ago, the distinctive Grand Army of the Republic markers were scattered across the rolling grounds of Laurel Hill Cemetery in the city's East Falls section, amid ornate obelisks, statues and mausoleums.
http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/local/11763831.htm
Evangelicals divided over evolution
By Paul Nussbaum
Inquirer Staff Writer
Can God and evolution coexist?
For many evangelical Christians, the debate over teaching evolution in public schools touches a vital spiritual nerve. Some see evolution as a path to perdition, while others see it as a crowning example of God's handiwork.
A legal battle in Dover, Pa., over the teaching of evolution and "intelligent design" has focused new attention on the issue, as have recent proposals in Kansas to change how evolution is taught there.
For David Wilcox, a biology professor at Eastern University, an evangelical college in St. Davids, the challenge is to teach students that it's possible to embrace evolution "without intellectual schizophrenia."
http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/front/11771436.htm
Nude photo now just a footnote to her
"I was a girl on the verge of womanhood... not an icon, not a freak," Lorna Anton says of her brush with Diane Arbus.
By Rusty Pray
Inquirer Staff Writer
Lorna Anton says she's still the free spirit she was when, as a 13-year-old girl, she had her modesty compromised famously and forever.
She was the subject of a Diane Arbus photograph taken at Sunshine Park, a nudist resort in Mays Landing, N.J. Anton was working her first summer job as a server in the camp's dining hall when she posed for Arbus wearing only a silver hair band and a white apron.
The photograph, A Young Waitress at a Nudist Camp, N.J., 1963, has been part of a retrospective at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. The show ends today.
The young waitress spent much of her childhood in Mays Landing and
http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/front/11771462.htm
Editorial Pat Tillman and Memorial Day Fighting for the truth
Battlefields do not tell lies.
They hold truths, truths that may be complex and unsavory, yet nonetheless hold a poignant purity. For in the rawest accounts of war are the real stories of heroes.
It is these tales of our men and women in uniform that deserve to be honored on Memorial Day - not stories whose facts have been distorted into made-for-TV myths. The life and death of Pat Tillman is a case in point.
Tillman made news long before he donned an Army uniform as a star defensive player for Arizona State University and the NFL's Arizona Cardinals. Many Americans felt pride and admiration when Tillman, shaken by the Sept. 11 attacks, turned away from his $3.6 million pro football contract to enlist in the Army with his brother to fight terrorists.
http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/editorial/11771454.htm
Anti-Syrian opposition favored in Lebanese vote
Associated Press
BEIRUT, Lebanon - Beirut residents voted yesterday in the opening round of the country's first elections since Syria ended its 29-year domination of Lebanon, with lingering anger over former Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri's assassination expected to propel his son to a big victory in the capital.
Turnout in Beirut, the first of four legs of parliamentary voting, was light, according to unofficial results. About 28 percent of eligible voters cast ballots, compared with 35 percent in the 2000 parliamentary elections, Interior Minister Hassan Sabei said after the polls closed.
http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/nation/11771439.htm
continued . . .