<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>

<!DOCTYPE rss PUBLIC "-//Netscape Communications//DTD RSS 0.91//EN"
 "rss-0.91.dtd">

<rss version="0.91">

<channel>
<title>Todays-Woman - Article Topic - News</title>
<link>http://www.todays-woman.net</link>
<managingEditor>Ms. Rose DesRochers - webmistress@todays-woman.net</managingEditor>
<webMaster>webmistress@todays-woman.net</webMaster>
<description>Today&amp;#039;s Woman Writing Community Inc.</description>
<language>en-us</language>

<item>
<title>Reuters: If you can’t trust their pictures; how can you trust their reporting?</title>
<link>http://www.todays-woman.net/article1445.html</link>
By Steve Yuhas The Internet has proved its value again this week as a group of bloggers exposed a photo shot by a Reuters News Service photographer as a fraud. The photo was not just any photo and the photographer not just any photographer; rather, the photo was allegedly of damage done to Lebanon by Israeli military forces and the photographer, a Lebanese man named Adnan Hajj, a person that supplied other pictures to the news outlet to help turn world opinion against Israel in the most recent conflict.
</item>

</channel>
</rss>