Top Items:
Washington Post:
Iraq Blast Kills Two On Crew For CBS — Reporter Wounded; Dozens Are Dead In Other Attacks — BAGHDAD, May 29 — A car bomb explosion in central Baghdad Monday killed two CBS News crew members, an Iraqi interpreter and a U.S. soldier, and severely wounded the news team's correspondent …
RELATED ITEMS:
Krista Larson / Associated Press:
2 CBS crew members killed; reporter hurt — NEW YORK - Cameraman Paul Douglas had spent more than a decade covering the world's hot spots for CBS News. Freelance soundman James Brolan was part of a CBS team honored for its dispatches on the earthquake in Pakistan.
White House:
President Bush Honors Memorial Day at Arlington National Cemetery — THE PRESIDENT: Thank you all. Laura and I are honored to join you today. Thank you for coming. Mr. Secretary, thank you for your kind words. Members of my Cabinet, General Pace, Members of Congress …
RELATED ITEMS:
New York Times:
Bush Invokes the Fallen, Past and Present — ARLINGTON, Va., May 29 — President Bush paid homage to fallen members of the nation's military on Monday, using his annual Memorial Day speech at Arlington National Cemetery to draw a link between those who fought in an earlier era and those killed in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Discussion:
Roger Ailes
John Solo / Associated Press:
Reid Accepted Free Boxing Tickets While a Related Bill Was Pending — Senate Democratic Leader Harry M. Reid (Nev.) accepted free ringside tickets from the Nevada Athletic Commission to three professional boxing matches while that state agency was trying to influence him on federal regulation of boxing.
Mark Leibovich / New York Times:
Talk of Pelosi as Speaker Delights Both Parties — WASHINGTON, May 29 — Hoping to win a Congressional majority in November, some optimistic Democratic lawmakers have taken to referring to Representative Nancy Pelosi as "speaker," as in speaker of the House. So have some optimistic Republicans.
Discussion:
Booman Tribune
Carlotta Gall / New York Times:
Afghans Riot After Deadly Crash by U.S. Military Truck — KABUL, Afghanistan, May 29 — A deadly traffic accident caused by a United States military convoy quickly escalated into a full-blown anti-American riot that raged across much of the Afghan capital on Monday, leaving at least 14 people dead and scores injured.
RELATED ITEMS:
Reuters:
French youths clash with police in Paris suburbs — PARIS (Reuters) - Around a hundred youths clashed with police during the night after setting fire to cars and rubbish bins in a Paris suburb that was the scene of violent riots last November, a local official said on Tuesday.
Margaret Talbot / New Yorker:
THE AGITATOR — "Yesterday, I was hysterical," the Italian journalist and novelist Oriana Fallaci said. She was telling me a story about a local dog owner and the liberties he'd allowed his animal to take in front of Fallaci's town house, on the Upper East Side. Big mistake.
Discussion:
Atlas Shrugs
Washington Post:
Memorial Day — DOES REMEMBRANCE matter? The Greek playwright Aeschylus was the author of dozens of works, and while most of them are lost to us, his "Oresteia" trilogy and "Seven Against Thebes" are among those that survive as jewels of world literature.
Discussion:
Polimom Says
Sebastian Mallaby / Washington Post:
Bush's Talk And Results On AIDS — The Bush administration's critics should give credit where it's due. And when it comes to the global AIDS crisis, it is due — big-time. — Five years ago, the U.S. government's total contribution to fighting HIV-AIDS abroad stood at $840 million.
US News:
Washington Whispers — The CIA's class of '85 must have been a doozy. Three alumni of that year's fall career training class are much in the news these days. There's Valerie Plame, the now retired spy whose outing is being investigated by special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald.
Matt Volz / Associated Press:
Knowles to run for governor — JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) - Former Alaska Gov. Tony Knowles said Monday that he will run for a new term. — In an interview with The Associated Press, the two-term Democrat invoked Alaska's only three-term governor, fellow Democrat Bill Egan …
BBC:
Gore in Hay climate change plea — Former US vice-president Al Gore owned up to failing to get his climate change message across as a politician when he appeared at the Hay Festival. — In his first UK speech on the subject, Mr Gore promised to devote himself to the task of warning people about the impending "planetary emergency".
Discussion:
Anti-Idiotarian Rottweiler
David S. Hilzenrath / Washington Post:
From public life to private business — William Cohen, the former defense secretary, made the transition lucrative — WASHINGTON - After more than 30 years in politics, Defense Secretary William S. Cohen was saddled with credit card debt. — The baker's son from Bangor, Maine …
Discussion:
David Sirota