
The week’s reading, straight off the razor wire:
IRAQ PUT HIS LIFE ON THE TRIGGER
BARDWELL, KY. — When Cody Alexander Morris returned from the war last fall, he carried home a burden — a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder — and a new way of playing with guns.
The gun game was called “Do You Trust Me?” Morris, 19, learned it from his Kentucky National Guard buddies in Iraq. He taught the game to his roommates: best friend and fellow guardsman Casey Lee Hall, 18, and a 16-year-old cousin, Cory Adams. The young men would point unloaded handguns at each other’s heads, ask “Do you trust me?” and pull the trigger.
Sometimes the guns came out while the teenagers drank alcohol, smoked marijuana and played violent video games. They called each other CWB, for “crazy white boy,” and had those three words tattooed on their necks.
“It fit us pretty good,” Morris said recently, “’cause we are crazy white boys. We were potheads — we’d just drink and smoke . . . and play-fight.”
But the carousing masked Morris’ troubled state.
—Um. Pretty thin mask. I guess if the game was called “I’m gonna blow your fucking head off”, alarms would have really gone off.
IRAQ WAR VETERAN WINS MR. CALIFORNIA USA PAGEANT
The new Mr. California USA’s girlfriend had a suitably fond comment after the gold crown was placed on his head.
“It’s really neat,” Yahira Rojo, 20, said when Jeremy Buraglia became the first recipient of the title. “It’s something new, but he’s been there before; we were the prom king and queen” in 2005.
The contestants are divided into four categories: Little Mr., ages 5 to 8; Junior Mr., from 9 to 12; Teen Mr. from 13 to 17; and Mr., ages 18 to 25.
—Next year they’re adding a few new categories: Mr. Deranged Sociopathic Murderer, Mr. Suicidal Depressive, Mr. Nightmares, and Mr. Convicted Felon.
— Scot Crawford
Citing “emotional torture,” representatives of Louis Vuiton compared the use of their logo by 26-year-old Danish art student