Column: Did Stripes sling mud at U.S. troops in S. Korea?

For a week each year Daechon Beach in South Korea is turned into a glorious mud hole. Mineral-rich mud is pumped onto the beach and in the ensuing days more than 2 million people frolic in the slimy stuff. As many as 100,000 foreigners may have taken part in this year’s event earlier this month, including a number of U.S. servicemembers.

Column: Examining coverage gap between Obama, McCain

No doubt about it, Barack Obama has been getting the lion’s share of election campaign coverage in the media of late. And that includes in Stars and Stripes.

This is not necessarily a function of political favoritism. The Democrat’s visit in the past week to Afghanistan and Iraq was a newsworthy event involving a candidate whose international and national security credentials are open to question. (At the same time, the decision of all three network TV anchors to accompany him smacks more of a reach for ratings than a search for security smarts.)

Column: The comics bring smiles ... and also frowns

It’s always been known around here that the comics are closely read pages of this newspaper. Their purpose is to elicit a chuckle or two in the midst of our workaday lives. But for some readers they can also evoke a frown. This seems especially true as, over the years, many comic strips have added political and social commentary to the funny lines and drawings. At least they are meant to be funny. And that’s the point: Is humor still the goal and reason for being of comics? For me, the laugh’s the thing, but I don’t have a monopoly on grading comics.

Column: Some readers ‘Prickly’ after attack on GOP

It’s amazing what four words uttered by a little pig-tailed girl in a comic strip can stir up. The character, Carmen, is a regular in the "Prickly City" cartoon strip that appears daily on Stars and Stripes’ Opinion page. In the May 29 entry, an elephant representing the Republican Party is seen getting smaller panel by panel, until in the last one Carmen calls it "the party of torture."

Column: Did a Stripes article help ‘the wrong people’?

A letter writer from Ramstein, Germany, casts shame on Stars and Stripes for a front-page article that ran June 21 [in her edition]. The article quoted an Air Force report as saying that most military bases in Europe that store nuclear weapons do not meet Defense Department security rules. "That kind of information in the hands of the wrong people could result in a catastrophic incident," wrote Betty Schultz.