23 July 2003
By The Morning News
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New York's currently: starving all the time
Saddam's two sons killed in gun battle with U.S. forces.
International consumers fed up with U.S. policy now buying fewer Nikes, less McDonald's.
Pieces of legislation introduced during Senator Springer's first 100 days.
Rocco Dispirito never once picked up a pan in the kitchen. Not one time. Not once. Cast members from The Restaurant dish from behind the camera, writing anonymously, though maybe one is Gideon Horowitz?
Incredible: How My Life Changed, by Laura Hillenbrand, author of Seabiscuit.
Wigfield is now on its way to California.
Smear campaign says Democrats oppose William Pryor's nomination because he's Catholic, not because he installed a monument to the Ten Commandments in his courthouse.
Report broken boats, maps, ads to Good Experience.
Explaining the three-tier system of selling alcohol in the U.S., and why wine costs so much in restaurants.
Animal self-medication is plausible.
R.W. Apple Jr. on the posthumous comeback of Bill Neal, former chef at Crook's Corner in Chapel Hill, NC.
Rustboy book nearing completion, interest-measure asked for. [ see 'diary' ]
New York's first Red Lobster appears on 41st Street and Seventh, hoping – no, really – to draw us out from our shells.
The decade that never dies: Many too many 80s commercials to watch. Related: AdTunes tells you what song was playing in that commercial.
Make good oven fries at home, and learn to sharpen and steel your knives.