In a boneheaded move to rival all his other boneheaded moves, former Giants star running back Tiki Barber made an incredibly ill-advised analogy between himself and Anne Frank in an interview in the latest Sports Illustrated. In it, he discussed the fallout from his new relationship with Traci Johnson, and moving into the house of his agent, where he said they were hiding out in his attic. "Lep’s Jewish, and it was like a reverse Anne Frank thing," he said.
Tiki Barber Fumbles An Awkward Anne Frank Comparison
Anne Frank Museum To Be Neighbors With "Ground Zero Mosque"?
The Park 51 project, better known erroneously to some as the Ground Zero Mosque, has had a controversial incubation period over the last eight months, as critics have protested it, Imams have come and gone, and funding has been hard to get. But despite all the roadblocks, the project is still moving forward allegedly. And now it seems it might have a strange next door neighbor: the Anne Frank Center.
Coming Soon: Anne Frank's Tree Sapling
The Anne Frank Center USA in Lower Manhattan has chosen the eleven sites that will receive saplings from the horse chestnut tree that Anne Frank used to gaze upon while in hiding at 263 Prinsengracht. They announced their idea earlier this year, and now say that "the saplings are currently in a nursery outside Amsterdam and will be shipped to the United States before year’s end. They will be quarantined for two years to make sure they do not carry certain plant diseases." In New York, the sapling will go to the World Trade Center site.
Anne Frank Tree Coming to NYC?
The horse chestnut tree that Anne Frank wrote about in her diary while hiding from the Nazis has been battling fungus infestations, and at just under 200 years old it may get a new lease on life. CityRoom reports that the Anne Frank Center USA (run out of an office in SoHo) wants to plant ten saplings from the tree in U.S. cities, including New York. Executive director Yvonne Simons told the site, “What we really hope to do is plant them in areas across the U.S. as a symbol of the growth of tolerance,” and noted that the aim is to plant one around the National September 11 Memorial and Museum at the World Trade Center. In the '60s, Anne's father Otto said in a speech, "How could I have suspected... how important the chestnut tree was to her, as I recall that she never took an interest in nature. But she longed for it during that time when she felt like a caged bird."

