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Associated Press:
Pluto gets the boot — Pluto no longer a planet, say astronomers — PRAGUE, Czech Republic (AP) — Leading astronomers declared Thursday that Pluto is no longer a planet under historic new guidelines that downsize the solar system from nine planets to eight.
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William J. Kole / Associated Press:
Pluto Is No Longer a Planet, Astronomers Say — PRAGUE, Czech Republic (AP) — Leading astronomers declared Thursday that Pluto is no longer a planet under historic new guidelines that downsize the solar system from nine planets to eight. — After a tumultuous week of clashing over the essence …
Gardiner Harris / New York Times:
'Morning After' Pill Is Cleared for Wider Sales — The Food and Drug Administration today approved over-the-counter sales of the "morning-after" contraceptive pill to women 18 and older, resolving one of the most contentious issues in the agency's 100-year history.
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Herb Keinon / Jerusalem Post:
Israel may 'go it alone' against Iran — Israel is carefully watching the world's reaction to Iran's continued refusal to suspend uranium enrichment, with some high-level officials arguing it is now clear that when it comes to stopping Iran, Israel "may have to go it alone," The Jerusalem Post has learned.
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Opinion Journal:
The Ayatollah's Answer — Iran's nuclear strategy is to divide and conquer the U.N. — Two months ago the U.N. Security Council offered Iran a choice: Stop enriching uranium in violation of its treaty agreements, and the world would negotiate better diplomatic and commercial relations.
Victor Davis Hanson / Real Clear Politics:
Relearning Lessons in the War on Terror
Relearning Lessons in the War on Terror
Discussion:
Hyscience
Nicholas Wade / New York Times:
In New Method for Stem Cells, Viable Embryos — Biologists have developed a technique for establishing colonies of human embryonic stem cells from an early human embryo without destroying it. This method, if confirmed in other laboratories, would seem to remove the principal objection to the research.
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Times of London:
Stem cell breakthrough to challenge Bush objections — By Nigel Hawkes, Health Editor of The Times — A stem cell breakthrough by American scientists is set to overturn ethical objections to potentially live-saving research. — They have found how to make stem cells from embryos without destroying …
Minneapolis Star Tribune:
NWA flight disrupted; 12 arrested — A passenger on the India-bound plane — the man who first alerted the FBI to Zacarias Moussaoui five years ago — said the tense situation was handled well. — WASHINGTON - A Northwest Airlines plane flying from the Netherlands to India was escorted …
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Lolita C. Baldor / Associated Press:
General: Iran Training Shiite Insurgents — WASHINGTON — The Iranian government is training and equipping much of the Shiite insurgency in Iraq, a senior U.S. general said Wednesday, drawing one of the most direct links by the Pentagon. — Brig. Gen. Michael Barbero also said it was too soon …
Discussion:
Political Animal, Balloon Juice, Seeing the Forest, Blue Crab Boulevard and Liberty and Justice
Vickie Welborn / RSS - LSUBEAT:
Black students ordered to give up seats to white children — Status of Red River Parish bus driver is unknown. — vwelborn@gannett.com — COUSHATTA — Nine black children attending Red River Elementary School were directed last week to the back of the school bus by a white driver who designated the front seats for white children.
PittsburghLIVE.com:
The race tightens — A Tribune-Review poll shows Republican U.S. Sen. Rick Santorum closing the gap against Democratic challenger Robert P. Casey Jr., in a contest many analysts see as the nation's premier Senate race. — The Keystone Poll of 551 Pennsylvania voters shows Casey …
Discussion:
Suburban Guerrilla
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Taegan Goddard's Political Wire:
Candidates from Both Parties Shun Partisan Label — Newsflash! President Bush is unpopular. No wonder Democrats across the country are dutifully attempting to tie every Republican candidate to their unpopular leader. — But most Republicans are under no illusions about the President's standing or mood of the electorate.
Michael Noer / Forbes:
Careers and Marriage — Forbes.com published a story Aug. 22 by editor Michael Noer on two-career relationships that provoked a heated response from both outside and inside our building. Elizabeth Corcoran, a member of our Silicon Valley bureau and principal author of the magazine's current cover story …
Discussion:
Salon, Polimom Says, Slate, Media Blog, The Happy Feminist, SIVACRACY.NET, Vox Popoli, Feministe, Feminist Law Professors, Fraters Libertas, BlondeSense, Pandagon, Romenesko and Boing Boing
Glenn Reynolds / Instapundit.com:
MCCAIN IS BASHING BUSH ON IRAQ, and some people are pretty angry at him for backstabbing. — The substance of McCain's claim is pretty weak: I don't recall Bush ever saying that Iraq would be a "day at the beach," and in fact casualties to date are considerably lower than what was generally expected …
Peter Baker / Washington Post:
Bush's New Iraq Argument: It Could Be Worse — Of all the words that President Bush used at his news conference this week to defend his policies in Iraq, the one that did not pass his lips was "progress." — For three years, the president tried to reassure Americans that more progress was being made in Iraq than they realized.
Discussion:
Redstate, Bull Moose, The Heretik, MyDD, The Peking Duck, Liberal Values, The Next Hurrah and The Reaction
New York Times:
A Matter of Appearances — When Judge Anna Diggs Taylor was given the job of deciding whether the Bush administration's wiretapping program was unconstitutional, she certainly understood that she would be ruling on one of the most politically charged cases in recent history.
Jane Hamsher / Firedoglake:
Lieberman to Campaign With Republicans Today — Because nobody could have predicted it — Joe Lieberman will be campaigning with GOP candidates Jodi Rell and Rob Simmons today at the Groton sub base (the one that Holy Joe claims to have singlehandedly saved).
Schneier / Schneier on Security:
What the Terrorists Want — On Aug. 16, two men were escorted off a plane headed for Manchester, England, because some passengers thought they looked either Asian or Middle Eastern, might have been talking Arabic, wore leather jackets, and looked at their watches — and the passengers refused to fly with them on board.