Check out Mini-memeorandum for simple mobiles or memeorandum Mobile for modern smartphones.
12:10 PM ET, April 23, 2006

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Washington Post:
CIA Officer's Job Made Any Leaks More Delicate  —  The rare firing last week of a CIA officer accused of leaking information to the news media stems both from the sensitivity of the subjects she allegedly discussed and the Bush administration's forceful efforts to block national security disclosures …
RELATED ITEMS:
Andy McCarthy / The Corner on National Review Online:
BALANCE — WPOST STYLE  —  The WPost includes in this morning's predictably sympathetic portrait of Mary O. McCarthy, the CIA officer fired for leaking, the following: … OK.  Let's leave aside that people with access to classified information take an oath not to disclose …
Discussion: Cold Fury, Hugh Hewitt and Wizbang
New York Times:
C.I.A. Director Has Made Plugging Leaks a Top Priority  —  WASHINGTON, April 22 — The firing of a veteran Central Intelligence Agency officer who has been accused of leaking classified information is a rare and dramatic move, yet C.I.A. officials say it is only the beginning of a campaign …
Juan / Informed Comment:
All Right, Not All Right  —  Today at Informed Comment, we are going to play the game of "All Right, Not All Right," known in Washington, DC, as "business as usual," but otherwise castigated by the moral philosophers as hypocrisy.  —  It IS all right for Bush campaign strategist Karl Rove
David Corn:
The Spy Who Voted the Wrong Way
CNN:
Purported bin Laden tape slams West for 'crusader-Zionist war'  —  (CNN) — Parts of an audiotape purportedly from Osama bin Laden aired Sunday on an Arabic-language TV network in which the al Qaeda leader attacks the West for cutting off funds to the Palestinian Hamas-led government and referred to a …
RELATED ITEMS:
Steven R. Hurst / Associated Press:
In Tape, bin Laden Urges Fighters to Sudan  —  Osama bin Laden issued ominous new threats in an audiotape broadcast Sunday, purportedly saying the West was at war with Islam and calling on his followers to go to Sudan to fight a proposed U.N. force.  —  In his first new message in three months …
New York Times:
Corrections  —  A front-page article on Thursday about strain on government services in Texas caused by hurricane evacuees misstated the number of evacuee children in Houston public schools and the amount of Federal aid the state has received.  The most recent count, in late February, showed 5,475 students, not 30,000.
RELATED ITEMS:
Hindrocket / Power Line:
OOPS!  NEVER MIND  —  The reporters and editors who produce the New York Times seem pretty clearly to be word people, not numbers people.  Of course, they often get the words wrong too.  But their problems with numbers are hard to understand or excuse.  —  On April 20, the Times ran …
Discussion: TigerHawk
New York Times:
Call to Escort Service Began a Night of Trouble at Duke  —  DURHAM, N.C., April 22 — The Duke University lacrosse team's troubles began with a phone call.  —  A team captain using an assumed name called an escort service to hire two exotic dancers for a party on March 13.
RELATED ITEMS:
Dan Balz / Washington Post:
Democrats Contour November Strategy  —  Meeting of DNC Focuses on Way To Unseat GOP  —  NEW ORLEANS, April 22 — Democratic Party officials continue to assemble the pieces for their midterm election strategy, but questions about the party's overall message, differences on Iraq …
RELATED ITEMS:
Mark / Decision '08:
Dean Unveils The Democrats' Six-Point Plan
Discussion: The Strata-Sphere and Daily Kos
Ann Scott Tyson / Washington Post:
New Plans Foresee Fighting Terrorism Beyond War Zones  —  Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has approved the military's most ambitious plan yet to fight terrorism around the world and retaliate more rapidly and decisively in the case of another major terrorist attack on the United States, according to defense officials.
Washington Post:
Iraqi Lawmakers End Months of Deadlock  —  BAGHDAD, April 22 — Four months of political paralysis lifted on Saturday when a newly convened parliament chose seven top officials to run Iraq's first long-term government since the fall of Saddam Hussein.  —  In a largely ceremonial meeting …
Discussion: Rantingprofs
RELATED ITEMS:
Reuters:   Iraq's parliament re-elects President Talabani
White House:
President's Radio Address  —  THE PRESIDENT: Good morning.  This weekend I am traveling in California, where I'm focusing on important issues for our Nation's future, including our economy, energy prices, the war on terror, and immigration reform.  —  America's economy is strong …
RELATED ITEMS:
Jennifer Loven / Associated Press:
President Touts Hydrogen-Powered Cars
Discussion: MyDD and AMERICAblog
Will Hutton / Observer:
Why the Euston group offers a new direction for the left  —  A disparate set of left-wing thinkers meeting in a London pub has reopened an essential debate on the nature of democracy  —  To be on the left is to be both temperamentally inclined to dissent and to be passionate about your own utopia, which can never be achieved.
RELATED ITEMS:
Robert D. Kaplan / Washington Post:
Old States, New Threats  —  You know these bad guys.  But there is a whole other world of tyrants, dictators and despots.  —  Crossing a border has always carried a special drama.  Moments after my train crossed from Hungary to Romania in the 1980s — from a country run by a liberal communist regime …
Discussion: Beat the Press and PrairiePundit
New York Times:
Young Officers Join the Debate Over Rumsfeld  —  WASHINGTON, April 22 — The revolt by retired generals who publicly criticized Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has opened an extraordinary debate among younger officers, in military academies, in the armed services' staff colleges and even in command posts and mess halls in Iraq.
Sarah Baxter / Times of London:
Dump Cheney for Condi, Bush urged  —  REPUBLICANS are urging President George W Bush to dump Dick Cheney as vice-president and replace him with Condoleezza Rice if he is serious about presenting a new face to the jaded American public.  —  They believe that only the sacrifice …
Hugh Hewitt:
Another Los Angeles Times Columnist: Baghdad Bob Rutten  —  Sigh.  —  Los Angeles Times' columnist Tim Ruttten writes every Saturday about media, and this morning examines not the sins of his colleague Michael Hiltzik, but the opinions of Bill Bennett, Powerline's Scott Johnson, and me.
RELATED ITEMS:
Tim Rutten / Los Angeles Times:
Reporting so good it's ... criminal?
Discussion: Roger L. Simon
 
 
 Archived Page Info: 
This is a snapshot of memeorandum at 12:10 PM ET, April 23, 2006.

View the current page or another snapshot:


 
 Who's Hiring in Media? 
 
 See Also: 
memeorandum: site main
memeorandum River: reverse chronological memeorandum
memeorandum Mobile: for phones
memeorandum Leaderboard: memeorandum's top sources
 
 Subscribe: 
memeorandum RSS feed
memeorandum on Mastodon
 
 
 More Items: 
rawstory.com:
TIME: Bush's five point plan to 'rescue' his presidency
Robin Toner / New York Times:
Senate Campaign Tests Democrats' Abortion Tack
Jason DeParle / New York Times:
Katrina's Tide Carries Many to Hopeful Shores
Pete Yost / Associated Press:
Libby Defends Releasing Fitzgerald Letter
Chris Cillizza / Washington Post:
Wartime Dissent Is Part Of Patriotism, Kerry Says
William Saletan / Slate:
Big or Me  —  What Big Love teaches about marriage and jealousy.
Senator Bill Frist / National Review:
Back to the Border  —  Democrat obstruction torpedoed comprehensive …
Discussion: Captain's Quarters
 Earlier Items: 
Sydney Morning Herald:
White House knew there were no WMD: CIA
Nubian / black lesbians say what?:
blogging against heteronormativity
Varifrank:
MCCARTHY: SECOND DAY - FIRST THOUGHTS
Discussion: Dr. Sanity
Tim Worstall:
Sky News on Blogs
Juan / Informed Comment:
Al-Maliki Acceptable, Say Kurds, Sunni Arabs
Discussion: Needlenose
Gateway Pundit:
One of Time Mags "Best Senators" Faces Polygraph Test for Leaks
 

 
From Mediagazer:

Peter White / Deadline:
Fox and Hulu extend their content partnership, including in-season streaming rights for Fox's programming; sources: the deal is worth $1.5B over four years

Michael S. Rosenwald / New York Times:
Mike Shatzkin, a publishing consultant who was among the first in the industry to shake publishers into confronting the digital disruption, died on Nov. 7 at 77

Shawn Musgrave / The Intercept:
A federal court allows a claim by The Intercept that DMCA prevents OpenAI from stripping a story's title or byline but throws out its claims against Microsoft

 
Sister Sites:

Techmeme
 Top news and commentary for technology's leaders, from all around the web
Mediagazer
 Top news and commentary for media professionals from all around the web
WeSmirch
 The top celebrity news from all around the web on a single page