Check out Mini-memeorandum for simple mobiles or memeorandum Mobile for modern smartphones.
5:10 AM ET, June 6, 2006

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
David Carr / New York Times:
Show Me the Bodies  —  FOR war photography, Vietnam remains the bloody yardstick.  During the Tet offensive, on Feb. 9, 1968, Time magazine ran a story that was accompanied by photos showing dozens of dead American soldiers stacked like cordwood.  The images remind that the dead are both the most patient and affecting of all subjects.
RELATED ITEMS:
RELATED ITEMS:
Maria Newman / New York Times:
Senate Debates Gay Marriage Ban Unlikely to Pass
Discussion: the talking dog
Gina Holland / Associated Press:
Supreme Court to hear schools race case  —  WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court agreed Monday to decide whether public schools can consider skin color in student assignments, reopening the contentious issue of affirmative action in a major case that will turn on the votes of President Bush's new justices.
Discussion: joannejacobs.com
RELATED ITEMS:
David Stout / New York Times:
Justices to Rule on Race and Education  —  WASHINGTON, June 5 — The Supreme Court agreed today to consider an issue of enormous importance to parents and educators across the country: the extent to which public school administrators can use racial factors in assigning children to schools.
Discussion: Big Lizards
Associated Press:
Canadian Terror Probe Expands to 7 Nations  —  TORONTO (AP) - Police said Monday more arrests are likely in an alleged plot to bomb buildings in Canada, while intelligence officers sought ties between the 17 suspects and Islamic terror cells in the United States and five other nations.
RELATED ITEMS:
Toronto Star:
The ties that bind 17 suspects?  —  SURYA BHATTACHARYA, NASREEN GULAMHUSEIN AND HEBA ALY  —  In investigators' offices, an intricate graph plotting the links between the 17 men and teens charged with being members of a homegrown terrorist cell covers at least one wall.
TalkLeft:
Jose Padilla Alleges Witness Statements Obtained Through Torture  —  Lawyers for Jose Padilla have filed a motion to suppress evidence and statements in his federal terrorism case.  He alleges that the FBI failed to advise the Court in its 2002 affidavit for his arrest as a material witness …
RELATED ITEMS:
James M Yoch Jr / JURIST - Paper Chase:
Padilla says FBI evidence against him illegally obtained
Discussion: PrawfsBlawg
Adam Nagourney / New York Times:
House at Stake, Midterm Election Gets Early Start  —  WASHINGTON, June 5 — Congressional campaigns have begun early and with unusual intensity this year in many districts across the country, reflecting a consensus in both parties that Republicans could lose control of the House and perhaps the Senate.
Seth Borenstein / Washington Times:
Apocalypse tomorrow?  666 arrives  —  Is tomorrow's date — 6-6-6 — merely a curious number, or could it mean our number is up?  —  There's a devilishly odd nexus of theology, mathematics and commercialism on the sixth day of the sixth month of the sixth year.
John Hawkins / Right Wing News:
The 10 Most Dangerous Democratic Candidates In 2008  —  Just for the fun of it, I decided to put together a list of the Democratic candidates who'd have the best chance to beat a GOP nominee in 2008.  This list is based purely on electability, not on the likelihood the candidate will take the nomination.
Guardian:
Intelligence behind raid was wrong, officials say  —  Vikram Dodd, Sandra Laville and Richard Norton-Taylor  —  Senior counter-terrorism officials now believe that the intelligence that led to the raid on a family house last Friday in a search for a chemical device about to be used …
John Whitesides / Reuters:
Lieberman faces showdown over Iraq  —  MERIDEN, Connecticut (Reuters) - After years of ardent support for the Iraq war, Connecticut Sen. Joseph Lieberman (news, bio, voting record) could become that conflict's first big political casualty in a Democratic primary race fueled by rising anti-war anger.
Washington Post:
In Brazen Roundup, 56 Vanish From Baghdad  —  BAGHDAD, June 5 — "Turn back," a friend told Haji Abu Shamaa as he walked Monday morning toward his money-changing shop in the Karkh neighborhood of central Baghdad, a mile north of the heavily guarded Green Zone.  "The Interior Ministry police are rounding up people."
Washington Post:
Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wisconsin)  —  Interview With The Fix's Chris Cillizza and The Post's Dan Balz  —  A transcript of the interview is below:  —  Let's start with a broad question about the Democratic Party.  There's all this talk about what ails the Democratic Party.
 
 
 Archived Page Info: 
This is a snapshot of memeorandum at 5:10 AM ET, June 6, 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: 
Genghis Conn / Connecticut Local Politics:
Bass Tears Into Lieberman
John F. Burns / New York Times:
Getting Used to War as Hell
CBS News:
Another Terrorist Attack Coming Soon?
Discussion: Stop The ACLU
Juan Forero / New York Times:
Ex-President Wins in Peru in Stunning Comeback
The Skipper / Barking Moonbat Early Warning System:
MARINE'S FATHER SUES WESTBORO BAPTIST CHURCH
Ken Silverstein / Harper's:
Creating the Inevitable  —  The CIA visits Iraq in April 2002
Ellen Knickmeyer / Washington Post:
Iraqis Accuse Marines in April Killing Of Civilian
Agence France Presse:
Dutch Evangelicals calls for pray-in against the Devil
Discussion: Preemptive Karma
 Earlier Items: 
Taylor Marsh / Firedoglake:
STOP THE WAR - Pressure Congress
John / AMERICAblog:
A caller asks: "Has Senator Burns ever had sex with a transvestite prostitute?"
Discussion: AGITPROP
Washington Post:
Outlook: No Plan-B  —  The controversial contraceptive pill Plan-B …
Charles Hurt / Washington Times:
Immigration shapes congressional races
Discussion: QandO and RedState
Observer:
US confronts brutal culture among its finest sons
Peter Wehner / Washington Post:
And Now For Some Good News