Short Takes: News From All Over
May 26, 2005
Watch Where You Point That Camera
By Susan Llewelyn Leach, The Christian Science Monitor
When a small-town photojournalist in Victoria, Texas is accused of looking suspicious for shooting pictures of potholes, you've got to wonder what's going on. Using anecdotal evidence, Leach argues that photographers are facing tighter restrictions on where and what they shoot due to the USA Patriot Act. -- Barb Jacobs
http://www.christiansciencemonitor.com/2005/0523/p11s01-ussc.html
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Ten Second Film Fest
By Chris Pennington, TenSecondFilmFest.org
Fear no more! The Ten Second Film Fest is interested in finding a home for all your virtual pieces of cell phone celluloid. Submissions are open to anyone and the rules are simple; films can only be ten seconds long, shot from a non-video camera gadget, and cannot be edited. -- Barb Jacobs
http://www.tensecondfilmfest.org/
All for Peace: A Palestinian-Israeli Radio Station
By Sima Borkovski, Worldpress.org
As of this month, an unlikely radio station, 'All for Peace,' has an FM signal that broadcasts throughout Israel and Palestine. By way of Arabic and Hebrew talk radio, jockeys at 107.2 FM in Jerusalem are attempting to forge an understanding between Israelis and Palestinians to bring peace to this broken land. Their popularity is booming -- in a good way. How are they keeping the peace on this potentially volatile terrain? By discussing everything but politics. -- Marca Bradt
http://www.worldpress.org/Mideast/2079.cfm
http://www.allforpeace.org/
Victoria's (Dirty) Secret
By Leif Utne, Utne.com
How many old growth trees died to bring that lingerie catalogue to your doorstep? According to the Canadian environmental group ForestEthics, every teenage boy's favorite piece of junk mail is printed on mostly virgin paper, 25 percent of it from Canada's ancient boreal forests. At 395 million copies mailed each year that adds up. After activists called on Victoria's Secret to increase its use of recycled paper at a May 16 shareholder meeting, executives at parent company The Limited Brands agreed to talk. 'Victoria's Secret has indicated that it wants to do the right thing for the environment,' said ForestEthics executive director Todd Paglia. '[We] will continue to escalate until this intention is turned into action.' -- Leif Utne
http://www.victoriasdirtysecret.net/article.php?id=66