http://www.nationalphilistine.com/baghdad/

[New York City]-- On February 13, 2003, teams of artists and activists postered New York City with thousands of copies of snapshots from Baghdad. Quiet and casual, the snapshots show a part of Baghdad we rarely see: the part with people in it.
The snapshots were taken by a friend of ours who just got back from Baghdad working with the Iraq Peace Team (link below). Yes, he saw Iraqis suffering and struggling. But he also saw Iraqis dancing and laughing. This moved him because laughing under the weight of the UN sanctions and the threat of an absurd war is no easy task. We were moved because the people in the pictures remind us of our friends & family.
Thousands of snapshot posters now pepper Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens. We want to show New York the people who will get both liberty and death in one fatal stroke if this war begins. We want you to show them in your city. The entire snapshot collection is online as pdfs. Print them out and poster them anywhere and everywhere.
http://www.nationalphilistine.com/baghdad/
For more info:
New York 2 Baghdad Crew
Baghdad Snapshot Action Spots, in no particular order: Manhattan, Queens, Brooklyn, San Fran, Philadelphia, Princeton, Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, Paris, Warsaw, Omaha, (your city here)
Other links:
http://unitedforpeace.orgJoin the movement
http://iraqpeaceteam.orgHelp them in Baghdad
Posted by Brian Stefans at February 14, 2003 01:09 PM3 of us posted from 23rd & 10th to Union Square, pretty heavy coverage, lining them up in multiples sometimes like they do with ads. on the way back to brooklyn we stopped at the flatbush stop and there were 3 nat'l guardsmen with rifles slung moseying up and down the platform. i took some snapshots of the soldiers and we put a few baghdad snaps up in the subway... people would look at the faces and appear to really think and consider... standing face to face with both armed soldiers in brooklyn and images of Iraqi people who may be shortly dead from "shock and awe" was a new & powerful kind of new york moment, i think for everyone in the station...
Posted by: David Perry on February 14, 2003 01:42 PMVery nice website
Posted by: Allan on November 29, 2003 07:13 AMWhen Batman went home at the end of a night spent fighting crime, he put on a suit and tie and became Bruce Wayne. When Clark Kent saw a news story getting too hot, a phone booth hid his change into Superman. When you're programming, all the variables you juggle around are doing similar tricks as they present one face to you and a totally different one to the machine.
Posted by: Dolora on January 18, 2004 09:41 PMEarlier I mentioned that variables can live in two different places. We're going to examine these two places one at a time, and we're going to start on the more familiar ground, which is called the Stack. Understanding the stack helps us understand the way programs run, and also helps us understand scope a little better.
Posted by: Susanna on January 18, 2004 09:41 PMThis variable is then used in various lines of code, holding values given it by variable assignments along the way. In the course of its life, a variable can hold any number of variables and be used in any number of different ways. This flexibility is built on the precept we just learned: a variable is really just a block of bits, and those bits can hold whatever data the program needs to remember. They can hold enough data to remember an integer from as low as -2,147,483,647 up to 2,147,483,647 (one less than plus or minus 2^31). They can remember one character of writing. They can keep a decimal number with a huge amount of precision and a giant range. They can hold a time accurate to the second in a range of centuries. A few bits is not to be scoffed at.
Posted by: Phillipa on January 18, 2004 09:42 PMBut some variables are immortal. These variables are declared outside of blocks, outside of functions. Since they don't have a block to exist in they are called global variables (as opposed to local variables), because they exist in all blocks, everywhere, and they never go out of scope. Although powerful, these kinds of variables are generally frowned upon because they encourage bad program design.
Posted by: Jeremy on January 18, 2004 09:42 PMThis will allow us to use a few functions we didn't have access to before. These lines are still a mystery for now, but we'll explain them soon. Now we'll start working within the main function, where favoriteNumber is declared and used. The first thing we need to do is change how we declare the variable. Instead of
Posted by: Griffin on January 18, 2004 09:43 PM