Published from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekdays, our headlines contain links to the most pressing, interesting, or odd stories and sites we find around the web.
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New York’s currently: playing tourist
A horrific account of the current state of Tyre, in Southern Lebanon.
Bakeries in Baghdad are at the center of the sectarian strife.
Every year, 1.5 million Americans are injured or killed due to medication errors.
But I’m like, Dude, maybe I didn’t go to film school but I know what sells, right? I invented the friggin iPod, okay? Have you heard of it? The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs.
Form some sort of opinion about your personal originality by comparing clicks.
Mimi Demayo, porn star running for NV governor, afraid voters are not taking her seriously.
New Zealand policewoman is still taken seriously despite second job as prostitute.
Son who avoided defrosting his mother not in so much trouble.
King Tut’s gem is just glass, but from there on it gets real freaky.
Brookings Institution finds that low-income families pay far too much for food and housing.
It’s those pesky kids—not journalists—who are writing those “Web logs, known as blogs.”
Congress gets its stem cell facts wrong.
When public figures curse, the asterisks become confusing.
“In some ways, people are a lot like animals.” Kevin scratches himself and doesn’t shower. That’s like an animal. Britney’s poetry improved by running commentary.
Sarah Hepola on the week in videos.
Red Rover, Musical Chairs, Slip and Slide: The most violent children’s games.
One-man panty raid ends quickly.
The Athanasius Kircher Society’s Lesser Known Museum Week wraps up; highlights include Leila’s Hair Museum, the Museum of the Counterfeit, and the Swedish Nose Academy.
Pet gators are no good if they don’t have the name of our Lord on their side.
New York’s currently: sitting on the engine driver’s lap
Whoa! I can sure feel the glory bumps after reading this thread! The current Mideast conflict has message boards very excited about the second coming of Christ.
Author’s autobiography claims she is the living Da Vinci Code.
Iran promises answer on nuclear incentives package in a month.
Scattering ashes on golf courses and from the backs of Harleys: Baby boomers plan their funerals.
TMN T-shirts—not appropriate for burial, but in 50 years, who knows?
Buddhism experiences revival in steppes of Mongolia.
Jack Sparrow (Johnny Depp), is wanted by the Crown for falsely impersonating a Rolling Stone. Anthony Lane loves a good pirate joke.
Keith Richards to receive pardon from governor for Arkansas traffic stop 30 years ago.
Japan will predict the weather 30 years from now.
The 50 albums that changed the course of musical history, with examples of their lasting influence.
Mp3s: The unofficial albums of Brian Eno.
A look at the classic 1920s California homes that were originally built from mail-order kits.
Video: The crew of the Enterprise visit Monty Python’s Camelot.
New York’s currently: storing cold air behind closed doors
Israel’s strategy: a continued military campaign in Lebanon—toppling Hezbollah is the objective.
Bush supports Israel’s campaign to stop Hezbollah, says Iran must be isolated.
Isn’t this a lot of bloodshed over two soldiers? “Proportionality is not compared to the event, but to the threat, and the threat is bigger and wider than the captured soldiers.”
Andrew Womack on sort-of cover versions.
I transferred it to an iPod and discovered that Mozart requires 9.77 gigabytes. Alex Ross listens to Mozart—all of it.
Airport cell phone lots replace obsessively circling for hours, probably for the better.
A racist ringtone is offending South Africans.
Just like in The Poseidon Adventure: Cruise ship bound for New York lists, seemed about to flip over.
Just like in The Omen: Wal-Mart hires ex-nun.
Video: F-bombing with The Big Lebowski.
New York’s currently: panting, just to see if it works
As the Senate gets ready to approve federal funding of stem-cell research, Bush readies his veto button.
Op: The President’s morality is holding back our scientific advancement; no, that would be the fault of scientific patents.
France and Italy have evacuated 1,600 Europeans from Lebanon to Cyprus; Americans, on the other hand, may need to pay the U.S. government to get a ride out.
Records that indicate a freelance writer is dead turn out to be tough to correct.
France in a tizzy over its first black anchorman.
Wal-Mart set to begin MySpace-like social web site, in-store healthcare.
Guy who does yoga finds a way to mention that he does yoga.
He did show a knack for connecting to the basest impulses of the crowd by deploying his most effective licks at key moments to elicit a powerful crowd reaction. Pat Metheny on Kenny G.
People avoid highbrow movies whenever possible.
Converse footwear as waistwear.
Stock-car kid too young to enter the go-kart arena at local amusement park.
A map depicting the growth of the U.S. obesity epidemic over the past 20 years.
How to “prost” in 50 languages.
New York’s currently: buttered
The reason Arab nations are blaming Hezbollah for the current Israel conflict: fear of Iran.
Gunmen kill 42 in market south of Baghdad.
Washington Post’s Dana Priest says the paper possesses better intel resources than the spooks.
Business reporters at big-wig conferences have little choice but to report the weather.
Video clips of newscaster gaffes.
Urine could hold and/or be the key to extended space travel.
List of villains unlikely to battle Superman in future sequels.
Head-buttering experts agree: Zidane showed pro form.
New proposal would offer $1 million to one lucky voter in Arizona.
Why do we dream? Scientists don’t know, but they have some ideas.
Vive la Force! Star Wars in Paris.
Like movie studios, some restaurants chop up their reviews to sound scrumptious-er.
Publishers want higher billing in movies based on their books.
Robert Birnbaum on the week in books.
Mr. Coors caught drinking and driving—the real shame would be if it was after a Bud or five.
Saddam’s nine-day hunger strike more of a “sweet coffee and other liquids” strike.
Nebraska no longer the progressive bastion of the midwest it used to be.
Because of global outsourcing, the Mumbai train bombings have companies around the world concerned.
Berlin Love Parade back after two year break/recovery period.
Ernst Choukula was born the third child to Estonian landowers in the late autumn of 1873. Count Chocula in Wikipedia.
New York’s currently: and the way you look will always be a very special thing to me
Israel and Hezbollah trade bombs and rockets; Hezbollah: “They said they wanted to hit Beirut and Dahiyeh so we threatened to hit Haifa.”
So whatever happened to the Iran nuclear offer? They’re still mulling it over.
South Korea will block food aid to North Korea until it agrees to return to nuclear talks.
Fawlty Towers to reopen as four-star hotel; tycoon to introduce budget hotels—in space.
Day laborers band together, demand $15 an hour, get favorable looks from AFL-CIO.
WFMU’s World Cup Death Count tops out at 78.
Wildfires blaze through Pioneertown, live-in Western movie set built in 1946.
Sarah Hepola on the week’s best videos.
New York to soon reach critical mass of Apple Stores.
Some would argue it’s not creepy to exhume 18th century singers to see how a castrato is built.
“Cortically coupled computer vision system” uses non-thinking people to sort images.
Beat the heat with U.S.B-powered air-conditioned dress shirts.
Dress worn every day for one year by Seattle woman “needs some space.”
How to toilet train your Japanese baby.
Dogs have meat-water; men have makeup; Snakes on a Plane finally has a soundtrack.
Sometimes your office births a new civilization and you’re like, damn, I wish I could go home.
Average American worker responsible of $2,000 in lost productivity due to hangovers.
New York’s currently: practicing its ayuhs
Following Hezbollah attack, Israel hits Beirut airport while imposing sea and air blockade.
Why now? Hezbollah and Hamas are close friends, and both are funded by Iran.
Senior U.S. commander in Iraq says more troops may be necessary in Baghdad.
Novak conceals one source for Plame name, reveals Rove as another.
Sometimes charging more for fancy blueberries puts profits in farmworkers’ pockets.
After introducing an array of new flavors, KitKat’s sales in the U.K. dropped 18 percent.
Astronauts spackle in space with a spatula; spatula floats away from spacewalker.
Army cancels multibillion-dollar deal with Halliburton.
Field recordings from audio journals, answering machines, aural ephemera (hear samples).
No panicking when the Department of Homeland Security texts you.
Overeducated, underpaid New York professionals find like-minded youngsters in “dorm for adults.”
2006 Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest winners announced.
Attention twenty-somethings: Park Avenue Cafe lets you pay your age, no matter what you order.
Authors’ names remain on history textbooks’ spines longer after the text has been changed.
Governor pardons only Virginia witch who didn’t drown.
For headline’s sake: Irvine’s Munchkin orgies rile disability campaigners.
Warnings that weren’t worked into the fine print during commercials.
Again, really? Del Hampton wins National Cluck-Off competition for ninth year in a row.
New York’s currently: qualifying for super saver shipping if it’s the last thing it does
White House backtracks on previous position on detainees, retrieves Geneva Conventions from toilet.
When public transit anywhere is attacked, it’s time for the NYPD to dig in subway riders’ bags.
In clashes at Israeli-Lebanese border, Hezbollah has captured two Israeli soldiers.
Colorado judge rules it’s a violation of copyright to sell sanitized versions of feature films.
One step toward peace in Iraq could be finding out which side the phone dispatchers are on.
Joe Boyd, Rick Moody remember Syd Barrett.
How to win at sudoku every time.
The Advice Blender finds stereotypes and fear of disease in advice columns.
Why insults that involve your mother are considered the worst.
Do buck teeth and a poor command of English fraud make?
Onion columnists are the bold truth tellers we seek.
The worst part of global warming: bad wine.
Dinosaurs not warm- or cold-blooded, but kind of a nice medium.
New York’s currently: mostly lab directors
Shamil Basayev, Chechen child-killer, dies after truck explodes.
Analysis of the White House’s position now that everyone opposes its post-9/11 tactics.
Pentagon shifts policy: All detaineees in U.S. military custody are entitled to Geneva protections.
An astounding day of violence in Iraq.
Doctor suspected of blowing up his Manhattan townhouse was on the verge of losing it in a divorce.
Rise in identity theft tied to meth users.
Not a myth, rogue giant waves cruise the oceans seeking ships to destroy.
Studying the difficult-to-grasp “nocebo” effect, placebo’s evil twin.
Though force-feeding women is declining in Mauritania, many take pills to gain much-prized fat.
What it’s like to be the only black female sports columnist.
Man successfully ends quest to trade paperclip for a house.
Bureaucrats the world over have unhappy expressions.
PBS goes beyond bleeping curse words to blurring them.
Robert Birnbaum on the week in books.
No Italian necessary to play the Zidane headbutting game.
Stories of deep poverty in upscale suburbs.
Space exploration can be about planetary domination, or it can teach us to wonder and be humble.
Mystery solved: why gorillas eat rotting wood.
New York’s currently: laughing and sleeping
In Baghdad, Shiite gunmen kill more than 50 in Sunni neighborhood, leaving bodies in the streets.
Senator Orrin Hatch helps out fellow musician Dallas Austin.
The evolving face of blanket technology, including Blanc-o-matic.
Passing its damage assessment, space shuttle is cleared for return.
Polish President Lech Kaczynski to appoint twin brother as Prime Minister.
Women lure men to college with promises of football teams, then dust them in the smarts department.
Multi-instrumentalist (and Tournament of Books judge) Nell James releases her first album, Tempus.
The non-Anglo roots Americans have, but didn’t know existed.
Two years and one gastric bypass later, overweight opera singer is rehired.
Welcome to MoFA, the Museum of Food Anomalies.
Since 1957, Christians have been praying their weight away, and it looks to be working.
Graphic: Living in a trailer, 1958 vs. today.
Inquire now and someday you too could snag a spot in the Bodies exhibition.
Elderly driver in Connecticut hits member of crowd, panics, injures 27 more.
Graphic: Geographical study of the island from Lost. (4.3MB)
Butterstick the Panda turns one.
The perfect wild boar is sought for President Bush’s upcoming visit to Germany.
New York’s currently: having a beautiful summer day
Gay marriage is bad for New York and bad for New York’s children, says state supreme court.
Western Union blocks cash deliveries if sender or recipient’s name is Mohammed or Ahmed.
Terrorists wanted to bomb the Holland Tunnel, says the Daily News.
Israel finds fierce resistance as it pushes into the Gaza Strip.
Op: Both the Israelis and the Palestinians have gone mad.
Conservative candidate wins Mexico’s election, liberal candidate vows challenge.
Applications to AmeriCorps, Teach for America, and the Peace Corps hit record numbers.
Today in the Digest, Sarah Hepola on the week in videos.
One year since the London train bombings, one year later on the London trains.
Two minutes of silence today for London bombing victims; map of London’s most silent spaces.
The exercise habits of New York City chefs.
Chicago police officers detonate old books.
Suicides are common in Indian movies made for Tamil audiences; Malaysian leader wants none of that.
One hundred years ago Dreyfus was vindicated, but what of the French?
1942 U.S. Army manual: “How To Spot A Jap.”
Boardgame tour of the United States.
How to snare the rare $100k nanny.
Menus of healthy foods available at common fast food restaurants.
New York’s currently: a nice place to visit
A state budget standstill means Atlantic City casinos are closed for business.
Twelve killed, 40 wounded in car bombing at shrine south of Baghdad.
Op: As it pushes further into Gaza, Israel’s war crimes are in full swing.
The phonic-addled push for simpler word (e.g., “wurd”) spellings.
Antiquus Morbus is a collection of archaic medical terms and their old and modern definitions.
Initial shuttle scans show no worries, nor any three-week-old bird droppings.
DIY castration is one imprisoned sex offender’s saving grace.
Where to find lunch in the food wasteland of midtown Manhattan.
A collegiate Ann Coulter as her sorority’s token [heh] Dead Head.
Seattle man climbs 13 stories in search of a good vantage point for fireworks.
Video: David Bowie and Cher sing “Young Americans.”
Hattie and Bonny Pinfeathers get hitched.
New York’s currently: feeling freshly squeezed by dinner
Hamas militants fire rocket six miles into Israel; Israel destroys Palestinian Interior Ministry.
Baghdad’s central morgue received 1,595 bodies last month.
Carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is rapidly making the oceans more acidic.
Recount begins today for Mexico’s presidential election.
Kim Jong Il suffocates his people with “20,000 videotapes,” explains the Daily News.
Graphic: Majority of federal billions has been put to progress in the Gulf states.
Senator Stevens’s astonishing explanation of how the internet works.
Wedding planning in Baghdad, or, how to save butter cream frosting from heat and checkpoints.
Wife Swap in Israel confronts stereotypes, stalemates.
The ever-expanding American dream house means you never have to see your family again.
Mezzo-soprano Lorraine Hunt Lieberson dies at 52.
Beatles to be found on YouTube.
New motorcycle gangs in America include evangelists, dykes, SOBs (Semites on Bikes).
Kobayashi holds on to his hot-dog-eating record.
Chinese turn flash mobs into Tuangou, or team buying, to coordinate retail haggling.
Fawns; Fear of death in literature; Geologists’ spouses. The most recent subjects to receive Dewey Decimal numbers.
Reading between the lines while scanning book blurbs—especially since there’s nothing else to read this summer.
When publishers balk, authors go DIY on audio books, enlisting showbiz friends.
Man wakes up after 19 years in minimally-conscious state with rewired brain.
Woman wakes up after stroke with Cano-Jamaco-Slovak accent.
The U.S.A. tribute song you should have played at your cookout yesterday.