I made some shots in the last months – please tell me what they tell you:
What are the symptoms of swine flu? Are you for real bitch? What you have are a lot of stds that have been passed on to you by all of those guys who have been having their way with you sexually. They may be paying for you to travel around the world in exchange for sex and giving you money to spend on clothes but despite what you think lindsay you are not special. Your egocentric lawsuit where you claim to be so famous that your first name alone is enough for people to know that when someone mentions the name lindsay that they must be talking about you proves how crazy you really are. I would argue that anyone who is named lindsay should sue you for what you have done to ruin tha name lindsay for all of those who have it. If i were e-trade i would take this a step further and make some commercials where i featured babies at milkaholics anonymous who are seeking to overcome their milk addictions to try to stick to you even more. Dunkin donuts can even get in the game and do some commercials where they show an inept employee named lindsay who for some reason can not overcome her addiction to powdered donuts and is always seen with white powder around her nose as she devours them while she develops a double chin just like yours. I see that your mother dina has drawn a line in the sand and said “i'm not going to let them do this to us anymore.” Oh really dina? So you're going to take on all of your critics bitch? I'd like to see you try to take on everyone who does not like you. If you were to declare war on your critics then what people will have to say about you will get even worse. There will be a lot of blowback for you but then again it should not surprise you because if there is one thing that you and your daughter lindsay know a lot about it's blowing.
PINHEAD: A student wearing a bowling-pin costume smiled in a crowd as results of an entrance exam for Japan’s most prestigious university were announced Wednesday in Tokyo. (Itsuo Inouye/Associated Press)
WAITING: Men detained in the wake of religious violence in Jos, Nigeria, sat in a police waiting room Wednesday. Christian-Muslim fighting left more than 200 people dead in the area; witnesses say police opened fire on a crowd after curfew, killing two people. (Jon Gambrell/Associated Press)
COURT CRASH: The Providence Friars’ James Still crashed into the media table while chasing a loose basketball in his team’s game against Seton Hall in New York Tuesday, during the Big East Tournament. Seton Hall won 109-106. (Henny Ray Abrams/Associated Press)
WOMEN WIN: Middle Tennessee players celebrated their 70-68 overtime victory over Arkansas-Little Rock in the Sun Belt tournament basketball game in Hot Springs, Ark., Tuesday. (Danny Johnston/Associated Press)
MODELING VUITTON: A model wore a dress created by U.S. designer Marc Jacobs for Louis Vuitton’s fall-winter, ready-to-wear collection in Paris Wednesday. (Francois Mori/Associated Press)
LISTENING: A member of the European Parliament listened as European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso answered questions in Strasbourg, France, Tuesday. Mr. Barroso said he would support an initiative to more tightly regulate credit-default swaps. (Patrick Hertzog/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images)
FLYING HIGH: A member of the Indonesian police special forces took part in an antiterror drill in Depok, Indonesia, Tuesday. President Barack Obama will visit the country this month. (Beawiharta/Reuters)
VIGIL ON THE WATER: Lebanese fishermen with torches held a vigil Tuesday for the people who died when an Ethiopian Airlines plane crashed in the Mediterranean Sea near Beirut, Lebanon, in January. All 90 people onboard died. (Hussein Malla/Associated Press)
IN TREATMENT: Judge Dee Anna Farnell uncovered her arm to make a point to woman in drug court: If she’s still shooting up oxycodone after 12 weeks in treatment, “You’re going to die,” the judge said. The exchange occurred Tuesday in a Pinellas County, Fla., courtroom as part of a unique women-only drug program. (Cherie Diez/St. Petersburg Times/ZUMA Press)
OFFICER SLAIN: The coffin of Iraqi policeman Mohammed Flayiey was loaded onto a vehicle during his funeral in Baghdad Wednesday. Gunmen killed Mr. Flayiey at a checkpoint, authorities said. (Hadi Mizban/Associated Press)
CARTOONIST TARGETED: Swedish cartoonist Lars Vilk posed before an interview with Reuters in Stockholm Wednesday. Irish police have detained seven people as part of an alleged plot to kill Mr. Vilk for his depictions of the Prophet Mohammad with the body of a dog. (Bob Strong/Reuters)
CULTURAL CLOTHES: A man from Papua, Indonesia, posed for a photo at a travel trade fair in Berlin Wednesday. (Michael Kappeler/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images)
LOCKED UP: Exiled Tibetans shouted anti-China slogans from inside a police van during a protest in Kathmandu, Nepal, Wednesday. Thousands of Tibetans rallied to mark the 51st anniversary of a failed Tibetan uprising against China. (Narendra Shrestha/European Pressphoto Agency)
BOMB SEARCH: A police bomb squad worker searched for explosives thought to be strapped to the body of a suspected militant who was killed during police raids in Indonesia Tuesday. Authorities later confirmed that the mastermind behind the 2002 Bali nightclub bombings was among the dead. (Kristianto Purnomo/Associated Press)
HEALTH-CARE SUPPORT: Supporters of national health-care legislation demonstrated outside the Ritz-Carlton in Washington, D.C., Tuesday, as an annual health-insurance policy conference took place inside. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)
WILD RIDE: James Sikes, 61, told the media Tuesday in El Cajon, Calif., about his experience with his Toyota Prius’s stuck accelerator. Mr. Sikes says his car reached 94 mph before he was able to stop it with the help of police Monday. (Denis Poroy/Associated Press)
Editor’s Note: We are experimenting with different layouts for Photo Journal. Thank you for your comments on the panel-by-panel layout.
Photos from Wednesday’s first-round Class 2A state tournament game between Grandview and Fife in the Yakima Valley SunDome in Yakima, Wash. All photos by Sara Gettys of the Yakima Herald-Republic.









