Author Glenn Murray, a co-writer of the children's book 'Walter the Farting Dog' during a book signing in Chicago. (CP/AP - Aynsley Floyd)
Para Cpl. Jean-Sebastien Bouchard, 21, of Deux Montagnes, Que., patrols on a windy day south of Kabul. (CP/Stephen Thorne)
A North Korean worker hangs micro nutrient enriched noodles on a drying rack at a UN World Food Program supported factory in Chongjin, April 23, 2004. The WFP is seeking to feed 6.5 million hungry North Koreans but has had to stop distributions to many of the most vulnerable owing to a downturn in donations. Picture taken April 23, 2004. REUTERS/World Food Program/Gerald Bourke
New Yorkers run for their lives as a tsunami floods the streets of New York City in the wake of a catastrophic climatic shift in a scene from 20th Century Fox's 'The Day After Tomorrow,' in this undated promotional photo. After decades spent tackling volcanoes, aliens, earthquakes, asteroids and every other disaster imaginable, Hollywood has turned its attention to one of the hottest scientific and most debated political issues of the day: catastrophic climate change. (AP Photo/ 20th Century Fox)
Competitive eater 'Crazy Legs Conti' tries to eat his way out of a telephone booth-size structure filled with popcorn as a stunt to promote a documentary film about himself in New York, May 3, 2004. Conti, 33, donned a diving mask and snorkel inside the lobby of the Manhattan movie theater that will show the film and lowered himself into a 'popcorn sarcophagus,' a wooden, windowed structure, to begin munching. (Chip East/Reuters)
Flames dwarf a fire truck as the Cerritos Fire burns near Corona, Calif., Tuesday, May 4, 2004. (AP Photo/Steven K. Doi)
'Shibuya girls' pose on a street in Tokyo's Shibuya district, popular among Japan's young people, May 4, 2004. The crowded area is sometimes a showcase of people, ranging from businessmen in suits to sweatshirts, tank tops, and today's hippest teenage looks. Picture taken May 4, 2004. REUTERS/Eriko Sugita
A July 22, 1997 file photograph shows Max the Gorilla, who became one of South Africa's crime victims and elected Newsmaker of the Year for 1997 by the Johannesburg Press Club, died May 5, 2004. In this photograph Max makes his first public appearance after he underwent emergency treatment at a Johannesburg trauma clinic. An armed robber, fleeing from police, jumped into Max's enclosure and shot him during a struggle with the pursuing policemen. The man, fleeing from police, scaled a moat and jumped into Max's enclosure at Johannesburg zoo. When Max tried to defend his turf and his partner Lisa, the robber fired two shots at him, lodging one bullet in his shoulder while the second went through his neck. Max, who managed to corner the suspected murderer and rapist in his den, was elected Newsmaker of the year for 1997 by the Johannesburg Press Club. REUTERS/Stringer