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PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004
Reuters ^ | December 9, 2004

Posted on 12/09/2004 2:35:12 PM PST by RWR8189

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  1. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Indonesian Muslim boys hold their sarongs up to let in cool air as they recover from circumcision in East Jakarta on March 25, 2004. A candidate in the June legislative election provided the funds for the mass circumcision and new clothes for more than 60 underprivileged boys. REUTERS/Beawiharta
    Reuters - 13 minutes ago


  2. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - British Army troops are covered in flames from a petrol bomb thrown during a violent protest by job seekers, who say they were promised employment in the security services, in the southern Iraq city of Basra March 22, 2004. REUTERS/Atef Hassan
    Reuters - 13 minutes ago


  3. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Pit crew worker Patrick Shafer, a front tire changer for the number 27 Kleenex/Winn Dixie Pontiac goes flying as the car makes a pit stop during running of the Hershey's Kisses 300 at the Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida February 14, 2004. Shafer suffered minor injuries and returned to the pit after receiving first aid. REUTERS/Doug Murray
    Reuters - 23 minutes ago


  4. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Alicja Fiodorow from Poland prepares for the start of Women's 200m-T46 Final during the 12th Paralympic Games in Athens September 27, 2004. REUTERS/John Kolesidis
    Reuters - 23 minutes ago


  5. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - An Afghan security guard plays with a dog on a hill overlooking Kabul on September 27, 2004. REUTERS/Desmond Boylan
    Reuters - 22 minutes ago


  6. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - An Iraqi Shi'ite supporter of cleric Moqtada Al Sadr celebrates near a burning U.S. Army truck in the Shuala neighborhood of Baghdad April 5, 2004. REUTERS/Ceerwan Aziz
    Reuters - 19 minutes ago


  7. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Tampa Bay Lightning Brad Richards holds up the Stanley Cup after they defeated the Calgary Flames 2-1 to win the NHL championship in Tampa June 7, 2004. Richards won the Conn Smythe award as the MVP for the series. REUTERS/Shaun Best
    Reuters - 17 minutes ago


  8. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Protesters scuffle with police blocking their march toward U.S. embassy in Seoul. Protesters scuffle with police blocking their march toward the U.S. Embassy in Seoul August 15, 2004, during a rally marking 59 years of independence from Japan's colonization. REUTERS/Lee Jae-Won
    Reuters - 19 minutes ago


  9. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - An ill child, effected by flooding, lies at a hospital in the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka on August 8, 2004. REUTERS/Mohammed Shahidullah
    Reuters - 19 minutes ago


  10. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Suspected African illegal immigrants are seated aboard a Spanish Civil Guard after being intercepted off the coast of Fuerteventura in Spain's Canary Islands early February 10, 2004. REUTERS/Carlos Guevara
    Reuters - 18 minutes ago


  11. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Democratic presidential candidate U.S. Senator John Kerry kite surfs off the coast of Nantucket, Massachusetts July 20, 2004. REUTERS/Brian Snyder US ELECTION
    Reuters - 21 minutes ago


  12. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Livestock officials dressed in bird flu protective gear during a demonstration for a new method of culling poultry by using carbon dioxide gas at a farm in Ayutthaya, 80 km (50 miles) north of Bangkok, August 19, 2004. REUTERS/Sukree Sukplang
    Reuters - 16 minutes ago


  13. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Greece players led by Traianos Dellas (C) celebrate with the cup after winning the Euro 2004 soccer final in Lisbon July 4, 2004. Greece defeated host Portugal 1-0. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
    Reuters - 24 minutes ago


  14. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - An Iraqi detainee gestures toward U.S. soldiers through bars of his cell at Abu Ghraib prison outside Baghdad May 17, 2004. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj
    Reuters - 2 hours, 25 minutes ago


  15. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - U.S. Democratic Senator presidential candidate John Kerry peeks from behind the curtain as he is introduced to address a town hall meeting at the University of South Carolina in Columbia January 30, 2004. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
    Reuters - 2 hours, 28 minutes ago


  16. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Palestinians throw stones at Israeli soldiers during clashes after a protest of Israeli and Palestinians against the construction of Israel's controversial security barrier in the West Bank town of A-Ram June 26, 2004. REUTERS/Reinhard Krause
    Reuters - 2 hours, 27 minutes ago


  17. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - A member of the Ukranian synchronized swimming team performs its free routine during an Olympic Games qualification tournament at the Olympic Aquatic Center of the Athens Olympic Sports Complex (OAKA) April 17, 2004. REUTERS/Yannis Behrakis
    Reuters - 2 hours, 27 minutes ago


  18. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Smarty Jones with jockey Stewart Elliot aboard wins at the 130th running of the Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Kentucky May 1, 2004. REUTERS/John Gress
    Reuters - 2 hours, 24 minutes ago


  19. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Iraq 's deposed dictator Saddam Hussein appears before an Iraqi tribunal in Iraq July 1, 2004. He refused to recognize its authority and said the 'real criminal' was President Bush . REUTERS/Ho
    Reuters - 2 hours, 35 minutes ago


  20. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Spiritual leader and founder of the Islamic movement Hamas Sheikh Ahmed Yassin listen to Imam at al Mojamah
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  1. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Rescuers carry a wounded man from the rubble of a building demolished by a bomb in the centre of the Iraqi capital of Baghdad June 14, 2004. A suicide car bomber blew himself up on a busy Baghdad street as a convoy of foreigners in civilian cars drove past, partly demolishing a nearby building, police at the scene said. REUTERS/Faleh Kheiber PP04100072
    Reuters - 2 hours, 58 minutes ago


  2. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - U.S. President George W. Bush is chased by a cicada as he walks up the steps to Air Force One outside of Washington at Andrews Air Force Base, May 25, 2004. The nation's capital was swamped with the once every seventeen-year appearance of the cicadas. REUTERS/Larry Downing
    Reuters - 2 hours, 59 minutes ago


  3. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Top seed Roger Federer of Switzerland drops to his knees as he celebrates victory over second seed Andy Roddick of the U.S. in their men's singles final match on Centre Court at the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London, July 4, 2004. Federer retained his Wimbledon title with a riveting 4-6 7-5 7-6 6-4 victory over Roddick in the men's final on Sunday. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:25 AM


  4. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Ferrari driver Michael Schumacher of Germany celebrates as he wins the French Formula One Grand Prix at the Magny Cours circuit July 4, 2004. Michael Schumacher won ahead Spanish Fernando Alonso and Brazilian Rubens Barrichello who took the third place. REUTERS/Regis Duvignau
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:20 AM


  5. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - SpaceShipOne pilot Michael Melvill waves from an open window as the launch plane WhiteKnight heads down the runway with SpaceShipOne attached as it begins the historic flight of the world's first privately funded rocket plane beyond Earth's atmosphere at the Mojave Airport in California June 21, 2004. SpaceShipOne, designed by legendary aerospace designer Burt Rutan and funded by billionaire Paul Allen, will fly to a height of 62 miles officially making test pilot Michael Melvill an astronaut. REUTERS/Mike Blake
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:23 AM


  6. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - A young muslim girl has two French flags and a headband which reads ' Fraternity' on her headscarf as she march among about 3,000 Sikhs from across Europe protesting on a Paris boulevard to defend their traditional headgear against a looming French ban on religious symbols in state schools, January 31, 2004. REUTERS/Charles Platiau
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:21 AM


  7. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Britain's Kelly Holmes celebrates as she crosses the finish line to win gold in the women's 800 meters final at the Athens 2004 Olympic Games August 23, 2004. Britain's Kelly Holmes won the gold medal in a time of one minute 56.38 seconds ahead of Morocco's Hasna Benhassi and Slovenia's Jolanda Ceplak. REUTERS/Dylan Martinez
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:20 AM


  8. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Britain's Paula Radcliffe cries in a vehicle after retiring from the women's Marathon in the Athens 2004 Olympic Games August 22, 2004. Big pre-race favorite Radcliffe failed to finish, breaking down in tears as she slipped back into fourth after just over two hours' running. The Briton tried to re-start but then slumped down by the side of the road, sobbing. REUTERS/Yannis Behrakis
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:19 AM


  9. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - A Haitian suspected of being a multiple assassin for exiled president Jean Bertrand Aristide's Lavalas party is detained in Petit Goave, Haiti some 50 kilometers south of Port-au-Prince March 3, 2004, three days after the departure of Aristide who sought temporary refuge in the Central African Republic. The man was detained by armed citizens of Petit Goave who proceeded to stone him and then burn him alive. REUTERS/Daniel Aguilar
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:24 AM


  10. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - A Saudi rescue worker inspects a government building wrecked after a car bomb rocked the Saudi capital of Riyadh, April 21, 2004. A suicide car bomber destroyed a Saudi security forces building in the capital, killing a senior officer and at least nine other people. REUTERS/Sultan al-Fahd PP04100072
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:23 AM


  11. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Hong Kong singer-actor Nicholas Tse (R) and a cousin of the late canto-pop diva Anita Mui carry a portrait of Mui during her funeral in Hong Kong January 12, 2004. More than a thousand sobbing fans waited for hours outside Hong Kong's main funeral home on Monday to say goodbye to Anita Mui, one of Asia's best loved Cantopop stars whose deep voice ruled local airwaves for years. Mui, the self-styled Asian Madonna , died of cervical cancer on December 30, aged 40. REUTERS/Bobby Yip
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:23 AM


  12. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Socialist Party (PSOE) leader and Prime Ministerial candidate Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero greets supporters at the end of an electoral rally at headquarters of ONCE (Spain's National Organization for the Blind) in Madrid March 10, 2004. Spain will be holding general elections on March 14 with Zapatero and Popular Party (PP) Secretary General Mariano Rajoy as the two main contenders. REUTERS/Susana Vera REUTERS
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:23 AM


  13. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Homes in Sunset Lakes are in the path of flames and smoke of a giant brush fire in Miramar, Florida, March 18, 2004. The huge fire has been burning out of control since Sunday with well over 100 acres gone, and the fire is now dangerously close to several thousand homes. REUTERS/Marc Serota
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:11 AM


  14. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - An artist from the Canadian circus 'Cirque du Soleil' kisses Pope John Paul II's hand during his weekly audience in Paul VI hall at the Vatican November 10, 2004. The Pope has today splits his audience in two parts, starting from St. Peter's Basilica for the faithful speaking English root language and continuing in Paul VI hall for the rest of the world. REUTERS/Max Rossi REUTERS
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:14 AM


  15. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - U.S. President George W. Bush and Democratic presidential nominee Senator John Kerry turn away from each other after their second debate at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, in this October 8, 2004 file photo.The White House rivals face a frantic sprint to the finish, hunting for votes in fewer than 10 battleground states that hold the key to a win on Tuesday. REUTERS/Jim Bourg US ELECTION
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:15 AM


  16. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - A Ukrainian woman places carnations into the shields of anti-riot policemen standing outside the presidential office in Kiev, November 24, 2004. Ukraine's authorities raised the stakes in a face-off with their liberal opposition on Wednesday as they prepared to announce results of a disputed election that are likely to infuriate thousands of protesters in the streets. REUTERS/Vasily Fedosenko
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:12 AM


  17. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Brazilian firemen try in vain to save a humpback whale that became stranded on Jurujuba beach, in the Rio de Janeiro suburb of Niteroi, August 10, 2004. The whale died after the firemen failed for the third straight day to tow the whale off the beach. Rio's famous Sugar Loaf mountain can be seen in the background at right. REUTERS/Bruno Domingos REUTERS
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:12 AM


  18. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - A Sudanese girl is embraced by her sister at Abushouk camp near El Fasher, the capital of North Darfur state, November 23, 2004. Fresh fighting around the town of Tawilla on Tuesday drove people from their villages, with some arriving at Abushouk camp, which is home to more than 45,000 people who have fled violence in western Sudan's troubled Darfur region. REUTERS/Finbarr O'Reilly REUTERS
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:12 AM


  19. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - A man carries a boy who was injured in a school seized by heavily armed masked men and women in the town of Beslan in the province of North Ossetia near Chechnya , September 3, 2004. Up to 100 bodies were seen lying in a Russian school gymnasium after troops stormed the building to end a two-day siege, a British ITV News reporter said on Friday, after Russian soldiers battled Chechen separatists to end the two-day-old school siege as naked children ran out screaming amid explosions and machinegun fire. REUTERS/Eduard Kornienko REUTERS
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:17 AM


  20. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Palestinian security officers protect the coffin late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat , inside Arafat's compound in the West Bank city of Ramallah, November 12, 2004. Yasser Arafat was buried on Friday in a chaotic scene of grief and gunfire at the compound where he spent his final years encircled by the Israeli army and powerless to realise his dream of a Palestinian state. REUTERS/Oleg Popov
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:10 AM
Relevance | Date
  1. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Flowers, notes, and photos of Christopher Reeve and wife Dana and a Superman doll mark the Hollywood Walk of Fame star of 'Superman' actor Christopher Reeve in Hollywood October 11, 2004. Reeve died in a New York hospital of heart failure October 10, 2004, his publicist said on October 11, 2004. Reeve, 52, went into a coma on October 9, when he suffered a heart attack during treatment for an infected pressure wound and died in the afternoon October 10. Reeve was paralyzed when he fell from a horse in 1995. REUTERS/Fred Prouser
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:15 AM


  2. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Twenty-year-old Chris Paulette walks along a five foot in diameter oak tree that split his house in half as Tropical Storm Jeanne passed through Tallahassee, Florida in the early morning hours of September 27, 2004. Paulette was pulled from his bed under the wood and insulation that buried him in his bedroom inside the window at right by roommates. REUTERS/Mark Wallheiser
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:13 AM


  3. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - England's David Beckham reacts during their Group B Euro 2004 soccer match against France at the Luz Stadium in Lisbon, June 13, 2004. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:16 AM


  4. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - A man is rescued from the rubble after a bomb explosion at Mount Lebanon hotel in central Baghdad March 17, 2004. The blast on Wednesday evening was probably caused by a car bomb and killed at least 25 people, with at least 45 wounded, U.S. Lieutenant Colonel Peter Jones said at the scene. REUTERS/Ammar Awad REUTERS
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:16 AM


  5. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - An Iranian asylum seeker known only as Hassan screams in pain after setting himself on fire outside the UNHCR office in Kuala Lumpur, January 27, 2004. Hassan torched himself on Tuesday after failing to obtain political asylum and was due to be sent back. Hassan survived the self immolation and was sent to the hospital for treatment. MALAYSIA OUT REUTERS
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:15 AM


  6. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - ATTENTION EDITORS; VISUALS COVERAGE OF SCENES OF DEATH AND INJURY. A woman grieves over the body of her child killed when Russian troops stormed a school seized by heavily armed masked men and women in the town of Beslan in the province of North Ossetia near Chechnya , September 3, 2004. Russian soldiers battled Chechen separatists on Friday to end a two-day-old school siege as naked children ran out screaming amid explosions and machinegun fire. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin REUTERS
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:14 AM


  7. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Terry Fry sits in front of his home which was devistated by hurricane Charlie in Port Charlotte, Florida, August 14, 2004. Fry protects his home with a twelve guage shotgun and a sign to scare off looters. REUTERS/Marc Serota
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:15 AM


  8. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Standing at his desk in the Oval Office, President George W. Bush receives a phone call from Democratic nominee John Kerry , in which the Senator conceded defeat in the 2004 presidential election, November 3, 2004. Kerry's concession squashed prospects of a lengthy legal challenge and endless ballot counting in Ohio, where the election had been too close to call and delayed the final outcome for hours. EDITORIAL USE ONLY REUTERS/Eric Draper/The White House/Handout
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:18 AM


  9. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Palestinian medics carry four children with the youngest being six month old (R), who were wounded after an Israeli tank fired a shell while they were sleeping at their home, in Beit Lahiya town north of Gaza Strip October 6, 2004. Israeli tanks shelled a town in the northern Gaza Strip early on Wednesday, killing three Palestinians and wounding 10 children in their houses, witnesses and medics said. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem REUTERS
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:18 AM


  10. PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2004 - Kenyan environmentalist Wangari Maathai is seen talking on the phone in Nyeri; 160 Km east of Kenya's capital Nairobi soon after she was named the winner of the Nobel Peace Prize October 8, 2004. She is the first African woman to win such an award for aiding the continent's poor with a campaign to plant millions of trees to slow down deforestation. 'Peace on earth depends on our ability to secure our living environment', the head of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, Ole Danbolt Mjoes said in announcing the winner. He praised her 'contribution to sustainable development, democracy and peace'. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya REUTERS
    Reuters - Dec 09 11:18 AM


  11. Unidentified woman begs at a Johannesburg traffic light. South Africa, once Africa's last bastion of white rule, has something you don't see elsewhere on the continent: poor whites. An unimagineable sight in South Africa just a few years ago, whites begging at traffic lights or working as parking attendants have become common. Picture taken September 9, 2004. TO GO WITH A STORY BC-SAFRICA-POVERTY-WHITES. REUTERS/Juda Ngwenya
    Reuters - Dec 09 9:13 AM


  12. An undentified school girl studies inside a tiny shack at the Vanderbijl park, south of Johannesburg. South Africa, once Africa's last bastion of white rule, has something you don't see elsewhere on the continent: poor whites. An unimagineable sight in South Africa just a few years ago, whites begging at traffic lights or working as parking attendants have become common. Picture taken September 9, 2004. TO GO WITH A STORY BC-SAFRICA-POVERTY-WHITES. REUTERS/Juda Ngwenya
    Reuters - Dec 09 9:02 AM


  13. South Korean protesters participate next to U.S. President George W. Bush 's picture during an anti-government rally near the National Assembly in Seoul, Thursday, Dec. 9, 2004. President Roh Moo-hyun made a surprise visit Wednesday to northern Iraq . The trip came as a parliamentary committee on Wednesday approved a government proposal to extend the deployment of South Korean troops in Iraq for another year. The Korean letters say on the banner ' Withdraw the Occupation Forces from Iraq'. (AP Photo/ Lee Jin-man)
    AP - Dec 09 7:09 AM


  14. A snow man salutes as Cuban soldiers stand guard outside the U.S. diplomatic mission in Havana, December 7, 2004. Since the legalization of Christmas festivities by the Fidel Castro administration following Pope John Paul II's visit here in 1997, nearly 30 years since Castro outlawed them, one of the most public Christmas displays can always be found in front of the U.S. mission, just across from the Jose Marti Anti-Imperialist Tribune, a square where the government organizes the largest anti-American protests. PICTURE TAKEN DECEMBER 7 REUTERS/Claudia Daut
    Reuters - Dec 08 9:59 AM


  15. A Cuban soldier stands guard in the front of the U.S. diplomatic mission in Havana where employees of the mission set up Christmas decorations, December 7, 2004. Since the legalization of Christmas festivities by the Fidel Castro administration following Pope John Paul II's visit here in 1997, nearly 30 years since Castro outlawed them, one of the most public Christmas displays can always be found in front of the U.S. mission, just across from the Jose Marti Anti-Imperialist Tribune, a square where the government organizes the largest anti-American protests. PICTURE TAKEN DECEMBER 7 REUTERS/Claudia Daut
    Reuters - Dec 08 10:01 AM


  16. Cars drive past the U.S. diplomatic mission in Havana with its front yard adorned with Christmas decoration, December 7, 2004. Since the legalization of Christmas festivities by the Fidel Castro administration following Pope John Paul II's visit here in 1997, nearly 30 years since Castro outlawed them, one of the most public Christmas displays can always be found in front of the U.S. mission, just across from the Jose Marti Anti-Imperialist Tribune, a square where the government organizes the largest anti-American protests. PICTURE TAKEN DECEMBER 7 REUTERS/Claudia Daut
    Reuters - Dec 08 10:01 AM


  17. This year's Christmas decorations at the U.S. diplomatic mission in Havana include a lit-up display of the number 75, seen in the front yard of the compound on December 7, 2004, remembering the March 2003 mass arrest of 75 opponents of Cuba's communist government. Cuban authorities recently freed seven of the jailed dissidents. Since April, a total of 14 have been released from prison, where 61 dissidents remain behind bars serving sentences of up to 28 years for conspiring with the United States to undermine President Fidel Castro 's government. Cuba labels all dissidents as 'counter-revolutionaries' on Washington's payroll. PICTURE TAKEN DECEMBER 7 REUTERS/Claudia Daut
    Reuters - Dec 08 9:56 AM


  18. Nikolai Makurin, a 73-years-old inhabitant of the remote taiga settlement Lugovatka, about 780 kms northwest of Krasnoyarsk, takes water from a well, December 7, 2004. Makurin belongs to 'starovers' (old-believers), who separated from the Russian Orthodox Church over 300 years ago in revolt against the church's proposed liturgical reforms. They live independently in the Siberian taiga very far from cities and villages and rarely contact with the external world, usually only to exchange goods. The starovers do not watch TV, nor read the newspapers and limit the education of their children to the knowledge necessary for a forest life. The 'starovers' keep ancient Russian religious, spiritual and cultural traditions and strictly limit the influence of the modern world on their communities. Picture taken December 7, 2004. REUTERS/Ilya Naymushin
    Reuters - Dec 08 5:41 AM


  19. Vasily Zebzeev, a 65-year-old inhabitant of the remote taiga settlement Alexandrovsky Shlyuz, about 750 km northwest of Krasnoyarsk, performs his daily ski walk outside the settlement, December 6, 2004. Zebzeev belongs to 'starovers' (old-believers), who separated from the Russian Orthodox Church over 300 years ago in revolt against the church's proposed liturgical reforms. They live independently in the Siberian taiga very far from cities and villages and rarely contact with the external world, usually only to exchange goods. The starovers do not watch TV, nor read the newspapers and limit the education of their children to the knowledge necessary for a forest life. The 'starovers' keep ancient Russian religious, spiritual and cultural traditions and strictly limit the influence of the modern world on their communities. Picture taken on December 6, 2004. REUTERS/Ilya Naymushin
    Reuters - Dec 08 5:12 AM


  20. Natalia Golovkova carries her little daughter in the remote taiga settlement Staroverovsky, about 850 kms northwest of Krasnoyarsk, December 7, 2004. Golovkova belongs to 'starovers' (old-believers), who separated from the Russian Orthodox Church over 300 years ago in revolt against the church's proposed liturgical reforms. They live independently in the Siberian taiga very far from cities and villages and rarely contact with the external world, usually only to exchange goods. The starovers do not watch TV, nor read the newspapers and limit the education of their children to the knowledge necessary for a forest life. The 'starovers' keep ancient Russian religious, spiritual and cultural traditions and strictly limit the influence of the modern world on their communities. Picture taken on December 7, 2004. REUTERS/Ilya Naymushin
    Reuters - Dec 08 2:15 AM

    • Ulyan Sidorkin, the inhabitant of a remote taiga settlement Staroverovsky, about 850 kms northwest of Krasnoyarsk, reads the 17th century Gospel, December 7, 2004, which he inherited from his ancestors. This Gospel complies to 'starovers' (old-believers), who separated from the Russian Orthodox Church over 300 years ago in revolt against the church's proposed liturgical reforms. They live independently in the Siberian taiga remotely from cities and villages and rarely contact with the external world, usually only to exchange goods. The starovers do not watch TV, nor read the newspapers and limit the education of their children to the knowledge necessary for a forest life. The 'starovers' keep ancient Russian religious, spiritual and cultural traditions and strictly limit the influence of the modern world on their communities. Picture taken on December 7, 2004. REUTERS/Ilya Naymushin
      Reuters - Dec 08 2:11 AM


    • In this picture released by the British Broadcasting Corp., BBC, Director-General Mark Thompson speaks to BBC staff at Television Center in west London Tuesday, Dec. 7, 2004, where he outlined a new vision for programs and content focused on 'excellence', plus radical plans for funding the ideas and transforming the BBC into a simpler, more agile and creative digital broadcaster. The BBC has confirmed plans to cut about 2,900 jobs over the next three years under moves to make savings of 320 million pounds (US$245; euro 183) or nearly 10 percent of its annual expenditure. (AP Photo/Tim Anderson/BBC)
      AP - Dec 07 6:56 AM


    • Actor Kirk Douglas (L) and son actor Michael Douglas attend ceremonies for Jack Valenti, president emeritus of the Motion Picture Association of America, honoring him with a footprint and handprint ceremony at the forecourt of Manns Chinese Theatre in Hollywood December 6, 2004. Valenti served as president of the association for 38 years and was instrumental in launching the movie rating system. Los Angeles mayor James Hahn is shown left of Kirk Douglas.REUTERS/Fred Prouser
      Reuters - Dec 06 11:42 PM


    • Jack Valenti (5th-L), president emeritus of the Motion Picture Association of America, poses with the heads of the major Hollywood studios (L-R) Michael Lynton, chairman and CEO of Sony Pictures Entertainment, Chris McGurk, vice chairman and COO of MGM, Peter Chernin, president and COO of News Corporation, Barry Meyer, chairman and CEO of Warner Bros. Entertainment, Sherry Lansing, chairman Paramount Pictures, actor Kirk Douglas , Jim Gianpulos, chairman of 20th Century Fox, Alex Yemenidjian, chairman and CEO of MGM and Los Angeles mayor James Hahn, after hand and footprint ceremonies honoring Valenti at the forecourt of Manns Chinese Theatre in Hollywood December 6, 2004. Valenti served as president of the association for 38 years and was instrumental in launching the movie rating system. REUTERS/Fred Prouser
      Reuters - Dec 06 11:30 PM


    • Jack Valenti (C), president emeritus of the Motion Picture Association of America, poses with the heads of major Hollywood studios (L-R), Chris McGurk, vice chairman and COO of MGM, Peter Chernin, president and COO of News Corporation, Barry Meyer, chairman and CEO of Warner Bros. Entertainment, Johnny Grant, honorary mayor of Hollywood, Sherry Lansing, chairman of Paramount Pictures and Ron Meyer, president and COO of Universal Studios, after hand and footprint ceremonies honouring Valenti at the forecourt of Manns Chinese Theatre in Hollywood December 6, 2004. Valenti served as president of the association for 38 years and was instrumental in launching the movie rating system. REUTERS/Fred Prouser
      Reuters - Dec 06 11:23 PM


    • Jack Valenti, president emeritus of the Motion Picture Association of America poses with long time friends actors Kirk Douglas (L) and Michael Douglas (R) after Valenti placed his hand and footprints in cement during ceremonies honoring him at the forecourt of Manns Chinese Theatre in Hollywood December 6, 2004. Valenti served as president of the association for 38 years and was instrumental in launching the movie rating system. REUTERS/Fred Prouser
      Reuters - Dec 06 10:04 PM


    • Jack Valenti, president emeritus of the Motion Picture Association of America, shows his hands after placing them in cement during ceremonies honoring him at the forecourt of Manns Chinese Theatre in Hollywood December 6, 2004. Valenti served as president of the association for 38 years and was instrumental in launching the movie rating system. REUTERS/Fred Prouser
      Reuters - Dec 06 6:13 PM


    • Actor Kirk Douglas (L) and son actor Michael Douglas attend ceremonies honoring Jack Valenti, president emeritus of the Motion Picture Association of America, to honor him with a footprint and handprint ceremony at the forecourt of Manns Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, December 6, 2004. Valenti served as president of the association for 38 years and was instrumental in launching the movie rating system. REUTERS/Fred Prouser
      Reuters - Dec 06 5:58 PM


    • Jack Valenti, president emeritus of the Motion Picture Association of America places his cowboy boot footprints in cement during ceremonies honoring him at the forecourt of Manns Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, December 6, 2004. Valenti served as president of the association for 38 years and was instrumental in launching the movie rating system. REUTERS/Fred Prouser
      Reuters - Dec 06 5:57 PM


    • Austrian extreme sportsman Felix Baumgartner prepares to BASE jump from the giant Christ Redentor statue in Rio de Janeiro in this picture taken December 5, 1999. On December 5, 2004, exactly five years after Baumgartner's jump from the Christ statue, he jumped out of a helicopter above Copacabana beach. Baumgartner jumped from the helicopter at an altitude of 1000 metres and opened the parachute 50 metres from the ground. 'It was the lowest parachute opening in my career', Baumgartner explained. Picture taken December 5, 1999. NO ARCHIVES NO SALES REUTERS/Wolfgang Luif/Handout
      Reuters - Dec 05 9:34 PM


    • Motion Picture Association of America President and CEO Dan Glickman and his wife Rhoda arrive for the Kennedy Center Honors gala performance at the Kennedy Center, December 5, 2004 in Washington. This year the Kennedy Center is honoring actor Warren Beatty , singer Sir Elton John , conductor John Williams, soprano Joan Sutherland and husband and wife team Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee. Recipients are recognized for their lifetime contributions to American culture through the performing arts. REUTERS/Mike Theiler
      Reuters - Dec 05 6:49 PM


    • (L-R) Director Terry George, Paul Rusesabagina and actress Anglina Jolie arrive for the premiere of 'Hotel Rwanda' at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences in Beverly Hills December 2, 2004. 'Hotel Rwanda' tells the real-life story of Rusesabagina, a hotel manager in Rwanda who secretly used his position to shelter more than a thousand refugees during the genocide crisis ten years ago. The film opens in the United States December 22. Jolie co-hosted the event with actor Harrison Ford . REUTERS/Jim Ruymen
      Reuters - Dec 02 10:13 PM


    • 'Godzilla' walks the red carpet as he arrives for the world premiere of the film 'Godzilla Final Wars' in Hollywood, California November 29, 2004. The picture is set to be the last of 28 Godzilla films that have been made over the past 50 years. (Robert Galbraith/Reuters)
      Reuters - Dec 02 6:59 PM


    • Brazilan photographers take pictures of a new dinousar model during a press conference at Rio's Federal University in Rio de Janeiro, December 2, 2004. Scientists have found well-preserved fossils of a new dinosaur species that lived 225 million years ago in southern Brazil but had its closest relatives in what is now Europe. Paleontologist Luciano Leal said the herbivorous Triassic period dinosaur, called Unaysaurus tolentinoi, is 'among the oldest finds in the world.' REUTERS/Bruno Domingos
      Reuters - Dec 02 1:58 PM


    • A commuter walks past an illuminated sign carrying the latest market price for the US Dollar against the British Pound Sterling, in London, Thursday, Dec. 2, 2004. The dollar rallied after falling to new lows against the euro and the British pound in European trading Thursday, on continuing worries about the U.S. trade and budget deficits, at one point the pound reached a new 12-year high of $1.9438. The sign shows the rate of US $1.935 to the pound at the time the picture was taken. (AP Photo/ Alastair Grant)
      AP - Dec 02 9:53 AM


    • Lions Gate opens Kevin Spacey's labor of love about the late singer Bobby Darin on December 17, 2004 in New York and Los Angeles. Two-time Academy Award winner Spacey, who sought the rights to Darin's story for years, co-produced, directed, co-wrote and starred in the picture; he sings and dances in the Darin role. Spacey (L), is shown with Darin's son Dodd at the premiere in Los Angeles, Nov. 4. Photo by Jim Ruymen/Reuters
      Reuters - Dec 02 7:26 AM


    • Lions Gate opens Kevin Spacey 's labor of love about the late singer Bobby Darin on December 17, 2004 in New York and Los Angeles. Two-time Academy Award winner Spacey, who sought the rights to Darin's story for years, co-produced, directed, co-wrote and starred in the picture; he sings and dances in the Darin role. Spacey (L), is shown with Darin's son Dodd at the premiere in Los Angeles, Nov. 4. (Jim Ruymen/Reuters)
      Reuters - Dec 02 7:25 AM


    • A Taiwan history teacher draws a map of China to teach students Chinese history in Taipei in this picture taken on November 11, 2004. Taiwan's Education Ministry has drafted new guidelines for the 2006 academic year, ordering high schools to create a separate textbook for Taiwan history, currently included under Chinese history. A separate course on Chinese culture, mandatory today, will become optional. Picture taken on November 11, 2004. TO ACCOMPANY FEATURE TAIWAN-CHINA-HISTORY REUTERS/Richard Chung
      Reuters - Dec 01 6:34 PM


    • A group of Taiwan high school students leave their classroom during a break in Taipei in this picture taken on November 11, 2004. Taiwan's Education Ministry has drafted new guidelines for the 2006 academic year, ordering high schools to create a separate textbook for Taiwan history, currently included under Chinese history. A separate course on Chinese culture, mandatory today, will become optional. Picture taken on November 11, 2004. TO ACCOMPANY FEATURE TAIWAN-CHINA-HISTORY REUTERS/Richard Chung
      Reuters - Dec 01 6:32 PM


    • In a picture taken off a television screen, NBC news anchor Tom Brokaw gathers his papers at the end of his final broadcast of the NBC Nightly News in New York December 1, 2004. Brokaw is retiring from the broadcast after 23 years on the show. Brokaw hands the anchor spot to Brian Williams. Photo courtesy of NBC News. REUTERS/Gary Hershorn
      Reuters - Dec 01 4
by: Relevance | Date
  1. A Thai cleaner sweeps near a HIV positive sign located at the main entrance of the Buddhist Prabat Namphu Temple in Lopburi province, 150 km (94 miles) north of Bangkok, November 28, 2004. More than one million people in Thailand have been infected with HIV since the first case was reported here 20 years ago. Picture taken November 28, 2004. REUTERS/Chaiwat Subprasom
    Reuters - Nov 29 8:49 PM


  2. A view of a tomb in Med'in Saleh, northwest Saudi Arabia taken November 16, 2004. Sheltered from the world by an ancient religious curse and modern Middle East conflict, a spectacular ruined city lies almost hidden in the northern deserts of Saudi Arabia. More than 100 tombs and burial chambers are carved elaborately into rocky outcrops across the sands of this city, still bearing names and ornate religious symbols chipped into the sandstone 2,000 years ago. REUTERS/Dominic Evans/FEATURE/SAUDI-TOMBS Picture taken November 16, 2004.
    Reuters - Nov 29 5:21 AM


  3. A view of a tomb in Med'in Saleh, northwest Saudi Arabia taken November 16, 2004. Sheltered from the world by an ancient religious curse and modern Middle East conflict, a spectacular ruined city lies almost hidden in the northern deserts of Saudi Arabia. More than 100 tombs and burial chambers are carved elaborately into rocky outcrops across the sands of this city, still bearing names and ornate religious symbols chipped into the sandstone 2,000 years ago. REUTERS/Dominic Evans/FEATURE/SAUDI-TOMBS Picture taken November 16, 2004.
    Reuters - Nov 29 5:22 AM


  4. View of Qasr al-Farid in Saudi Arabia taken November 16, 2004. Sheltered from the world by an ancient religious curse and modern Middle East conflict, a spectacular ruined city lies almost hidden in the northern deserts of Saudi Arabia. More than 100 tombs and burial chambers are carved elaborately into rocky outcrops across the sands of this city, still bearing names and ornate religious symbols chipped into the sandstone 2,000 years ago. REUTERS/Dominic Evans/FEATURE/SAUDI-TOMBS Picture taken November 16, 2004.
    Reuters - Nov 29 5:20 AM


  5. Headscarfed women sit in front of computer screens during a German language course in the Neukoelln district of Berlin, in this Nov. 23 2004 file picture. 40 years after Turks first flocked to then West Germany to help power the postwar economic boom, many immigrants still live in parallel societies in the big cities to the point where they can go from birth to burial without speaking German. (AP Photo/Jockel Finck, File)
    AP - Nov 28 3:57 PM


  6. A picture taken on November 28, 2004, shows the restored al-Abbas Mosque at the Asnaf village, some 40 kilometers east of the Yemeni capital Sanaa. Built nearly 900 years ago, the mosque was among seven Islamic architectural sites that won on Sunday the 2004 Aga Khan Award for Architecture. The award established in 1997 by the Aga Khan, the 49th hereditary imam of the Shia Ismaili Muslims, to enhance understanding and appreciation of Islamic culture as expressed through architecture. REUTERS/Khaled Abdullah
    Reuters - Nov 28 11:07 AM


  7. In this picture taken, 27 November 2004, Indian woman Gazala Praveen, 33, who was blinded by the December 1984 Bhopal Gas tragedy, holds a photograph of herself aged 13 at her home in Bhopal. As stated in a report released, 28 November 2004, Twenty years ago a toxic gas leak killed thousands in Bhopal, shattered lives, devastated the environment and left this central Indian city with the stigma of being site of the world's deadliest industrial accident.(AFP/File)
    AFP/File - Nov 28 10:18 AM


  8. A Kenyan woman prepares ribbons ahead of December 1st, the World Aids Day at Beacon of Hope centre, a non-government organization formed to address women's problem of HIV /AIDS in Nairobi November 25, 2004. Close to half of 37.2 million adults living with HIV are women, according to a new report by UNAIDS /WHO released today show that the number of women living with HIV has risen in each region of the word over the past two years, with the steepest increases in East Asia, followed by Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Sub-Saharan Africa has just over 10% of the world's population, but is home to more that 60% of all people living with HIV some 25.4 million. Picture taken on November 25, 2004. REUTERS/Antony Njuguna
    Reuters - Nov 28 4:47 AM


  9. A Kenyan woman prepares ribbons ahead of December 1st, the World Aids Day at Beacon of Hope centre a non-government Organization formed to address woman with the problems of HIV /AIDS in Nairobi November 25, 2004. Close to half of 37.2 million adults living with HIV are women, according to a new report by UNAIDS /WHO released today show that the number of women living with HIV has risen in each region of the word over the past two years, with the steepest increases in East Asia, followed by Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Sub-Saharan Africa has just over 10% of the world's population, but is home to more that 60% of all people living with HIV some 25.4 million. Picture taken on November 25, 2004. REUTERS/Antony Njuguna
    Reuters - Nov 28 4:46 AM


  10. Kenyan women prepare ribbons ahead of December 1st, the World Aids Day at Beacon of Hope centre, a non-government organization formed to address women's problem of HIV /AIDS in Nairobi November 25, 2004. Close to half of 37.2 million adults living with HIV are women, according to a new report by UNAIDS /WHO released today show that the number of women living with HIV has risen in each region of the word over the past two years, with the steepest increases in East Asia, followed by Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Sub-Saharan Africa has just over 10% of the world's population, but is home to more that 60% of all people living with HIV some 25.4 million. Picture taken on November 25, 2004. REUTERS/Antony Njuguna
    Reuters - Nov 28 4:46 AM


  11. An HIV -positive Kenyan woman holds her one month-old girl while her mother prepares a meal for them in their one-room shack in Nairobi's Mukuru slum November 25, 2004. Close to half of 37.2 million adults living with HIV are women, according to a new report by UNAIDS /WHO released today show that the number of women living with HIV has risen in each region of the word over the past two years, with the steepest increases in East Asia, followed by Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Sub-Saharan Africa has just over 10% of the world's population, but is home to more that 60% of all people living with HIV some 25.4 million. Picture taken on November 25, 2004. REUTERS/Antony Njuguna
    Reuters - Nov 28 4:45 AM


  12. Palestinian woman Rusaila Brawi holds a picture of her husband, Nabil Brawi, jailed in an Israeli prison for a sentence of 22 years, during a rally in the West Bank city of Hebron, November 27, 2004. The PLO's mainstream Fatah faction took a major step towards its first internal election in 14 years, a move that should allow a new generation of Palestinians to join its decision-making process. REUTERS/Nayef Hashlamoun
    Reuters - Nov 27 4:22 AM


  13. Thai farmers tend to a flock of ducks in Pathum Thani, north of Bangkok, October 22, 2004. Health ministers and officials from 13 countries are meeting this week to try to head off the growing threat from bird flu that has left 32 people dead and destroyed poultry flocks across Asia in the past year. Picture taken October 22, 2004. REUTERS/Chaiwat Subprasom
    Reuters - Nov 25 9:04 PM


  14. U.S. actor Danny Glover talks with children in a classroom at the Ethiopian children's fund school in Aletlu village in Ethiopia in this picture released by UNICEF on November 26, 2004. Glover, on his first trip as a goodwill ambassador for the UN's Children's Fund (UNICEF) criticized the deadly legacy of landmines, which were responsible for more than 8,000 casualties last year and called for a complete ban of their use and production. REUTERS/Unicef/Guillaume Bonn NO ARCHIVE, NO THIRD PARTIES
    Reuters - Nov 25 3:34 PM


  15. U.S. actor Danny Glover talks with a pupil in a classroom at the Ethiopian children's fund school in Aletlu village in Ethiopia in this picture released by UNICEF on November 25, 2004. Glover, on his first trip as a goodwill ambassador for the UN's Children's Fund (UNICEF) criticized the deadly legacy of landmines, which were responsible for more than 8,000 casualties last year and called for a complete ban of their use and production. REUTERS/Unicef/Guillaume Bonn NO ARCHIVE, NO THIRD PARTIES
    Reuters - Nov 25 3:25 PM


  16. U.S. actor Danny Glover stands among children at the Ethiopian children's fund school in Aletlu village in Ethiopia in this picture released by UNICEF on November 25, 2004. Glover, on his first trip as a goodwill ambassador for the UN's Children's Fund (UNICEF) criticized the deadly legacy of landmines, which were responsible for more than 8,000 casualties last year and called for a complete ban of their use and production. REUTERS/Unicef/Guillaume Bonn NO ARCHIVE, NO THIRD PARTIES
    Reuters - Nov 25 3:32 PM


  17. Retired general Manuel Contreras, the former head of the DINA secret police during the Augusto Pinochet regime, shows his old passport during an interview with Reuters at his home in the Penarolen neighborhood, Santiago, on November 24, 2004. Contreras saw his final hope for amnesty evaporate after Chile's Supreme Court upheld his 12-year sentence for his role in the disappearance of a political prisoner 19 years ago. The court decision sets a precedent for many other unresolved disappearances that took place under Pinochet's brutal military crackdown on dissidents. Picture taken November 24, 2004. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
    Reuters - Nov 25 9:54 AM


  18. Retired general Manuel Contreras, and former head of the DINA secret police during the Augusto Pinochet regime, talks during an interview with Reuters at his home in the Penarolen neighborhood, Santiago, on November 24, 2004. Contreras saw his final hope for amnesty evaporate after Chile's Supreme Court upheld his 12-year sentence for his role in the disappearance of a political prisoner 19 years ago. The court decision sets a precedent for many other unresolved disappearances that took place under Pinochet's brutal military crackdown on dissidents. Picture taken November 24, 2004. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
    Reuters - Nov 25 9:39 AM


  19. A priest in Auburn, Alabama carries the torch carried by runners during the pilgrimage on foot by family members of Mexican migrants in the U.S., to New York November 24, 2004. The Guadalupan torch relay is run every year from Mexico City to New York City, via all the large migrant states in Mexico, to highlight the plight of Mexican migrants in the US. The pilgrimage will arrive in New York on December 12, the day Mexicans celebrate their religious patron the Virgin of Guadalupe. Picture taken November 24, 2004. REUTERS/Luis Cortes
    Reuters - Nov 25 6:29 AM


  20. A pilgrim runs with a torch past a row of post boxes decorated for Thanksgiving on a road to Auburn, Alabama, during the pilgrimage on foot by family members of Mexican migrants in the U.S., to New York City, November 24, 2004. The Guadalupan torch relay is run every year from Mexico City to New York through Mexican states from which many migrate, and through the U.S. to New York to highlight the plight of Mexican migrants in the U.S. The


TOPICS: Extended News; News/Current Events
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1 posted on 12/09/2004 2:35:13 PM PST by RWR8189
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To: RWR8189

> Indonesian Muslim boys hold their sarongs up to let in cool air as they recover from circumcision

Too Much Information.


2 posted on 12/09/2004 2:36:36 PM PST by orionblamblam
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To: RWR8189
The real Picture of the Year:


3 posted on 12/09/2004 2:39:04 PM PST by Always Right
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To: RWR8189

Typically, Reuters has no place for a photograph of the funeral of the man who won the Cold War.


4 posted on 12/09/2004 2:42:50 PM PST by Interesting Times (ABCNNBCBS -- yesterday's news.)
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To: Interesting Times

I just noticed that.

How dispicable that a picture of a Druid or other nonsense they put in there is more important than the passing of a President, a great one at that.


5 posted on 12/09/2004 2:48:21 PM PST by RWR8189 (Its Morning in America Again!)
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To: RWR8189

bttt


6 posted on 12/09/2004 2:54:36 PM PST by Pagey (Hillary talking about the bible is as hypocritical as Bill carrying one out of church for 8 years)
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To: RWR8189

The World throught the filter of Liberalism


7 posted on 12/09/2004 2:56:55 PM PST by digger48
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To: Always Right
And his truck


8 posted on 12/09/2004 3:13:15 PM PST by Michael Barnes
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To: digger48

exactly correct.


9 posted on 12/09/2004 3:13:24 PM PST by Rightone
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To: RWR8189

Great photographs. But question, is Nicholas Cage gay?
Not that there's anything wrong with that.


10 posted on 12/09/2004 3:14:50 PM PST by Elephino
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To: RWR8189
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat , who rose from guerrilla icon to Nobel prize-winning peacemaker

Over a dozen pictures of Arafat and fellow murderers, but not one picture of Ronald Reagan, the greatest U.S. President of the 20th Century.

Not to mention this little gem:

45,000 Christian people who have fled Muslim violence in western Sudan's Muslim-controlled troubled Darfur region.

11 posted on 12/09/2004 3:37:03 PM PST by Alouette ("Who is for the LORD, come with me!" -- Mattisyahu ben Yohanon, father of Judah Maccabee)
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To: RWR8189

I vote for Marlboro man. But he's not here.


12 posted on 12/09/2004 3:39:35 PM PST by GVnana (If I had a Buckhead moment would I know it?)
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To: GVgirl

Me too. Where is the Marlboro Man?


13 posted on 12/09/2004 3:44:23 PM PST by Dante3
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To: RWR8189

Liberal crap shots.


14 posted on 12/09/2004 3:49:13 PM PST by Ron in Acreage (Kerry is (no longer) a threat to national security)
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To: RWR8189

WE WANT MARLBORO MAN!


15 posted on 12/09/2004 3:49:14 PM PST by GVnana (If I had a Buckhead moment would I know it?)
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To: GVgirl
Today's HERO and Veteran


16 posted on 12/09/2004 4:05:09 PM PST by Wolverine (A Concerned Citizen)
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To: Always Right
"...and so I face the final curtain...."
17 posted on 12/09/2004 4:39:24 PM PST by Solamente
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To: Wolverine

Does anybody know who that guy is? I wanna buy him a case of beer.


18 posted on 12/09/2004 5:30:28 PM PST by dsc
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To: RWR8189
My personal favorite:


19 posted on 12/09/2004 5:33:20 PM PST by FierceDraka ("Megatons Make It Fun!")
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To: Always Right

true but I really like #11 above. Kerry windsurfing.


20 posted on 12/09/2004 5:41:02 PM PST by Mercat (Thank you freepers.)
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