Remembering the fallen from Cassino: After the political debate about how many people the Government should fund to go to Italy to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the Battle of Monte Cassino, you can stay at home on Anzac Day and read all about it at Battle of Monte Cassino and BBC.
It's Chickenman: An odd Burger King site featuring a man in a chicken suit has fast become one of the most popular sites of the week.
The human cost: The three Witmer sisters were deployed in Iraq. One is killed just before coming home, and now the other two must decide whether to return to combat after the funeral. Read the family blog. Messages for the family of missing American serviceman Matt Maupin are being placed here, and in the wake of kidnappings in Iraq, American patriotic sites have sprung up at For the Troops and Clermont Yellow Ribbon.
Killing the competition: Director Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill - Vol. 2, starring Uma Thurman, debuted in the US box office at No 1 last week and opens here next week. View the trailer here.
Bowling for cyberspace: The powerful pro-gun lobby, the National Rifle Association, which was the target of Michael Moore's popular Bowling for Columbine, has launched an internet audio news service to influence voters.
Nowhere to hide: America's "adult industry medical healthcare foundation", which screens porn movie actors for STDs, is naming names on its website of those who may have contracted HIV.
It's your tax money: The Government's new site to educate us about the Treaty of Waitangi has been a hot subject on radio talkback this week.
Web week
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