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Beautiful and Sassy women needed   - Project ID # 38558
Project Type   Episodic Submission Type   SRN
Location   chicago Union   Non-union
Rate/Pay   n/a Release Date   06-14-06
Audition Date   06-17-06 Submission Deadline   06-16-06
Shoot Date   12-31-69    
Casting Category   Episodic TV - Non-Union
Market(s)   Chicago, IL

From the makers of The Real World and A Simple Life
The Oxygen Network and Bunim/Murray Productions are currently casting for a new reality series which will bring together six bad girls from across the country. (ages 24-32.) It will be called The Bad Girls Club. They will put you up in a house for 4 months and film you.

If you think you've got the sass and the spunk, email me your picture and responses to the following questions. They will then be sent to the casting directors in LA and an appointment will be set up for you this Saturday, June 17th. Please get at me asap!

NAME:
PHONE:
EMAIL:
AGE:
CITY AND STATE:
ORIGINALLY FROM:
CURRENT OCCUPATION OR SCHOOLING:
WHAT MAKES YOU A BAD GIRL?
WHAT'S AN ISSUE OR PROBLEM YOU'RE CURRENTLY FACING:
WHAT ARE YOUR 2 BEST AND 2 WORST TRAITS?
BEST #1:
BEST #2:
WORST #1:
WORST #2:
Compensation: to be discussed

This is a contract job.

This is a self-response notification (SRN).
SUBMIT ONLY if you fit the role criteria.
NOTE: ALL TALENT UNDER THE AGE OF 18 MUST BE ACCOMPANIED BY A PARENT OR LEGAL GUARDIAN AT ALL TIMES

Role # 1 - Bad girls. Submit yourself for this role
Seeking 1 talent(s) for this role
Bad girls.

Searchable talent specs:
Gender: Female
Age: from 24 to 32
Ethnicity: Any -
Hair Color: Any -
Built: Any -


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Given the scale of the destruction in Iraq, some doubt authorities will have much luck tracking lost items The Paris-based U Some say theft or destruction of records could indicate a professional job Iraqi museum and library collections chronicled and illustrated the flowering of ancient cultures, as well as Baghdad's later role as an Islamic center It still is not clear whether the tablets were at the museum when it was sacked Walter Sommerfeld, professor of Ancient Oriental Studies at the University of Marburg in Germany, said the artifacts would likely disappear into the collections outside Iraq Such items would be highly prized in the underground antiquities market, which stretches from local bands of looters to larger gangs and networks often linked to drug trafficking Because the trade is clandestine, experts say it is nearly impossible to define the size of the market Looted goods typically are smuggled across borders and change hands many times, making their origins murky by the time they make it to dealers and auctioneers in Europe, the United States and Japan "The Iraqi museums were a bit isolated in the museum world Key to the effort, experts say, will be to collect photographs and descriptions of what's lost and spread the word so customs agents, museums and collectors can identify stolen pieces Estimates of the money changing hands over pilfered antiquities range widely, to as high as $4 billion, said Brodie A preliminary survey provided a limited indication of the types of treasures missing or destroyed: a four-millennia-old copper head of an Akkadian king, golden bowls, imposing statues and ancient manuscripts He is also enlisting the help of Interpol " There are also questions about the quality of Iraqi records "The best we can do is to make the public aware of the importance of the loss "Documentation is very important," said Jacques Perot, president of the International Council of Museums in Paris The museums were low on cash and equipment needed to photograph and otherwise properly document and catalog what they had " "The purpose obviously is you're making it harder for material to be identified and be claimed in the future," said Neil Brodie, of the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research in Cambridge, England " By all accounts, their collections were stunning There is high interest in the art world about damage to Iraqi museum inventories, which contain vital information on the holdings Since the 1970s, organizations like UNESCO have pushed for tighter controls on what museums consider acceptable purchases, and the International Council of Museums has issued ethical guidelines for dealers The network of illicit antiquities dealing in Iraq is also well-developed; thousands of antiquities had disappeared from the country even before the current war The records office of the National Museum, for example, was ransacked, though it was not clear what was destroyed Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization has planned a meeting of 30 experts Thursday to try to catalog what's missing, and Bouchenaki said he has urged Iraq's neighbors to tighten customs checks for pilfered treasures N "When a very important painting of Manet or Van Gogh is taken from a museum, it is very difficult to put it on sale on the market because these objects are very well known," said Mounir Bouchenaki, UNESCO's assistant director-general for culture Modern-day Iraq is home to ancient Mesopotamia, considered the cradle of civilization Exploitation of sites in Asia and Africa is booming "Iraq has no lobby, it can't defend itself," he said But the illegal trade is being fueled by several trends: the Internet has provided a hard-to-control forum for illicit auctions and technology has given looters better tools to find treasures in tombs and other archaeological sites Iraq Looting Puts Spotlight on Art Trade Apr 16, 12:55 PM EST The world has seen it before: looters ransack museums in the aftermath of war, and priceless plunder vanishes into a shadowy â€â€? and highly profitable â€â€? global network of antiquity traffickers and their customers The halls and display rooms of Iraq's ravaged museums and libraries are still littered by the ruins left by rampaging looters Details on the state of Iraq's museums were still sketchy Wednesday, and Bouchenaki and others were hesitant to speculate on what had been lost or whether the looting had been highly organized Among the National Museum's treasures were the tablets with Hammurabi's Code, one of the earliest codes of law But curators, law enforcement and others are already scrambling to assess the damage, document what's missing and try to recover the pilfered "So if there was any organization, that to me is one indication of it