Word: exhibiter
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...terms of good vs. evil. With Iraq, those are the tough arguments he has to make; they are less about what Saddam has than about who he is and what he purportedly wants. To help make the case, the White House is working hard to track down one graphic exhibit: a video, which Saudi Ambassador Prince Bandar bin Sultan has told Bush about, that is said to show Saddam presiding over the execution of political opponents...
...When the Holocaust engulfed Central and Eastern Europe, it erased not only millions of lives but an entire way of life. Now several new projects are under way to recover what was lost. An ambitous research effort titled "Witness to a Jewish Century," launched last week in Vienna, will exhibit on the Internet as many as 1,000 interviews with elderly survivors (Judit Kinszki among them), along with 100,000 never-before-published family photographs. Also this month, and also on the Internet, an actor and part-time researcher in the Czech Republic will begin posting the results...
...make free long-distance phone calls to loved ones at a designated call center. The mayor of Birmingham, Ala., will dedicate the new Memorial Walk, which includes a ribbon-shaped sculpture and a flower garden. In Jerusalem a ceremony will be held at the Israel Museum, followed by an exhibit of Joel Meyerowitz's ground zero photos. In Cincinnati, Ohio, 343 empty pairs of boots will stand at the fire-fighter memorial as a tribute to the comrades who died in the World Trade Center collapse. In St. Paul, Minn., patrol officers will pull over and face their vehicles...
LARGER THAN LIFE Veteran LIFE photojournalist Joe McNally used the world's largest Polaroid camera to create life-size images of some of the people involved in the aftermath of the tragedy. The photos appear in a traveling exhibit called "Faces of Ground Zero," and you can view them online at our website...
...then, do we like these foods so much? For answers, researchers are once again turning to laboratory animals, which exhibit many of the same dietary proclivities we do. Rats, for example, will labor mightily to obtain a sugar pellet even after they have dined on rat chow and aren't particularly hungry. The reason, thinks Allen Levine, director of the University of Minnesota's obesity center, has a lot to do with sugar's impact on mood-enhancing circuits in the brain. Sugar gives rats--and by extension humans--a buzz...