
Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, left, meets Mayor Shimon Lankri, right, during a visit to the mixed city of Acre, northern Israel, Friday Oct. 10, 2008. Jews and Arabs swept up broken glass and replaced punctured tires Friday after two days of rioting has shaken this working-class town on the Mediterranean coast and bared the ethnic fault lines that divide Israeli society. Jewish and Arab residents said they wondered whether the brittle coexistence between them had been irreparably damaged.
This photo provided by Swiss company AFS shows guests posing in a room of the 'zero-star hotel' in Sevelen near St.Gallen, Switzerland on Friday, Oct. 10, 2008. Tourists in Switzerland can soon sleep in the world's first "zero-star hotel," a former nuclear bunker several yards below the ground. A group of 15 guests inaugurated the hotel, sleeping the night from Thursday to Friday in the former bunker embellished with artistic decoration and real hotel duvets.
This photo provided by Swiss company AFS shows a guest pretending to sleep in a bed of the 'zero-star hotel' in Sevelen near St.Gallen, Switzerland on Friday, Oct. 10, 2008. Tourists in Switzerland can soon sleep in the world's first "zero-star hotel," a former nuclear bunker several yards below the ground. A group of 15 guests inaugurated the hotel, sleeping the night from Thursday to Friday in the former bunker embellished with artistic decoration and real hotel duvets.
Israelis chant anti-Arab slogans during a protest in the mixed northern Israeli city of Acre, Friday, Oct. 10, 2008. Jews and Arabs swept up broken glass and replaced punctured tires Friday as others clashes with police after two days of rioting shook this working-class town on the Mediterranean coast and bared the ethnic fault lines that divide Israeli society. Jewish and Arab residents said they wondered whether the brittle coexistence between them had been irreparably damaged.