(via Azzura Piccardi:MistEros | Le Journal de la Photographie)
MistEros © Azzura Piccardi
(via George W. Bush Gradually Becoming a Non-Person — Daily Intel)
The Wall Street Journal editorial page today, having previously recognized the hopeless lack of leverage in budget negotiations, takes to pleading with President Obama not to raise taxes because it will harm growth. The editorial is accompanied by this helpful chart showing what the Journal editorial considers some important historical lessons of recent two-term presidents. Look at the chart very closely:
No George W. Bush! Possibly there wasn’t enough room. Or possibly the lesson of the most recent former president, whose tax cuts are set to expire and who presided over poor economic growth, might not offer the lesson the Journal editorial page is seeking to convey.
our point is not supported by the data!?!?…oh - just leave that part out. Murdoch “journalism” at it’s finest
bastiches…
Photographed by Arthur Elgort, Vogue, November 1998
Movement:
Four dancers from the International Institute of the Margaret Morris Movement rehearsing on the beach at Sandwich.
Photo by: Reg Speller
(via POUR 15 MINUTES D’AMOUR: Vive la crise !)
Actor Tony Curtis and model photographed for a fashion editorial for Life Magazine,1960.
(via Yesterday’s Papers: Harry Murphy)
Not much is known about Harry Murphy except that he was the first editorial cartoonist for the Morning Oregonian. During WWI he was employed by Hearst’s Chicago Examiner on the editorial pages.
(via Yesterday’s Papers: Sorrows of Satan)
Frederick B. Opper’s Sorrows of Satan editorial cartoons in the Chicago Examiner were based on D. W. Griffith’s film adaptation of the novel The Sorrows of Satan by Marie Corelli.
Above, The Flies Got Wise, from the January 22nd, 1913 issue of Puck magazine, proposing a public that has finally got wise to the Wall Street’s traps. Of course, we know this 1913 cover is pure fantasy — the public has since been ripped off, again and again.










