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11:35 AM ET, October 11, 2006

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
David Brown / Washington Post:
Study Claims Iraq's 'Excess' Death Toll Has Reached 655,000  —  A team of American and Iraqi epidemiologists estimates that 655,000 more people have died in Iraq since coalition forces arrived in March 2003 than would have died if the invasion had not occurred.
RELATED ITEMS:
New York Times:
Iraqi Dead May Total 600,000, Study Says  —  A boy at his father's coffin in Baghdad yesterday.  Death rates were higher outside the capital, the study said.  —  A team of American and Iraqi public health researchers has estimated that 600,000 civilians have died in violence across Iraq since …
Rick Moran / Right Wing Nut House:
A MOST GHOULISH DEBATE  —  It is an unseemly thing to be debating how many Iraqis have died as a result of the invasion and occupation by US troops.  I'm absolutely sure that most opponents of the war feel that way.  They would, I'm sure, wish that we would all just sit back and accept …
Neil King Jr / Wall Street Journal:
Iraqi Death Toll Exceeds 600,000, Study Estimates  —  WASHINGTON — A new study asserts that roughly 600,000 Iraqis have died from violence since the U.S.-led invasion in March 2003, a figure many times higher than any previous estimate.  —  The study, to be published Saturday …
Malcolm Ritter / Associated Press:
Study: 655,000 Iraqis die because of war  —  NEW YORK - A controversial new study contends nearly 655,000 Iraqis have died because of the war, suggesting a far higher death toll than other estimates.  —  The timing of the survey's release, just a few weeks before the U.S. congressional elections, led one expert to call it "politics."
Discussion: NewsBusters.org and NewsHog
Jonathan Bor / Chicago Tribune:
654,000 deaths tied to Iraq war
Discussion: The Huffington Post and Back Talk
Will / Attytood:   601,027: Study suggests twice as many deaths in Iraq since 2003 …
Jimmy Carter / New York Times:
Solving the Korean Stalemate, One Step at a Time  —  IN 1994 the North Koreans expelled inspectors of the International Atomic Energy Agency and were threatening to process spent nuclear fuel into plutonium, giving them the ability to produce nuclear weapons.
RELATED ITEMS:
New York Times:
Rice Asserts U.S. Plans No Attack on North Korea  —  South Korean rice bound for the North.  Sanctions urged by the United States might limit such shipments.  —  Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Tuesday that the United States did not intend to invade or attack North Korea …
Times of London:
Wary neighbours shy away from punishing nuclear North Korea
Discussion: Captain's Quarters
New York Times:
North Korea Warns U.S.; Japan Cuts Ties
Discussion: Liberty and Justice
Charles Babington / Washington Post:
McCain Targets Both Clintons
Wall Street Journal:
Asia Weighs Risk of Sanctions
Discussion: Austin Bay Blog
Jonathan Weisman / Washington Post:
History of Foley Messages' Release Clarified by Players  —  2 Sources Explain Motives, Citing Concern for Hill's Pages  —  Two of the news media's sources of Mark Foley's sexually explicit instant messages to former House pages said this week that they came forward to expose …
RELATED ITEMS:
Margaret Webb Pressler / Washington Post:
Researchers See a Downside as Keyboards Replace Pens in Schools  —  Researchers See a Downside as Keyboards Replace Pens in Schools  —  The computer keyboard helped kill shorthand, and now it's threatening to finish off longhand.  —  When handwritten essays were introduced on the SAT exams …
Dan Eggen / Washington Post:
FBI Agents Still Lacking Arabic Skills  —  Five years after Arab terrorists attacked the United States, only 33 FBI agents have even a limited proficiency in Arabic, and none of them work in the sections of the bureau that coordinate investigations of international terrorism, according to new FBI statistics.
New York Times:
Across Europe, Worries on Islam Spread to Center  —  Europe appears to be crossing an invisible line regarding its Muslim minorities: more people in the political mainstream are arguing that Islam cannot be reconciled with European values.  —  "You saw what happened with the pope," …
USA Today:
FBI investigating actions of Specter staff member  —  WASHINGTON — The FBI is investigating whether a member of Sen. Arlen Specter's staff broke the law by helping her husband, a lobbyist, secure almost $50 million in Pentagon spending for his clients, the senator acknowledged Tuesday.
Discussion: First Read
John Pomfret / Washington Post:
Fence Meets Wall of Skepticism  —  Critics Doubt a 700-Mile Barrier Would Stem Migrant Tide  —  CALEXICO, Calif. — Legislation passed by Congress mandating the fencing of 700 miles of the U.S. border with Mexico has sparked opposition from an array of land managers, businesspeople …
Adam Nossiter / New York Times:
U.S. Says Blacks in Mississippi Suppress White Vote  —  The Justice Department has chosen this no-stoplight, courthouse town buried in the eastern Mississippi prairie for an unusual civil rights test: the first federal lawsuit under the Voting Rights Act accusing blacks of suppressing the rights of whites.
 
 
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 More Items: 
Katherine Gregg / Providence Journal:
Whitehouse winning the money race
Jonathan Karl / Opinion Journal:
So This Is Journalism?  —  Bob Woodward takes a novel approach …
Harold Meyerson / Cato Unbound:
DEMOCRATS, LIBERALS, AND LIBERTARIANS
Discussion: Inactivist, TalkLeft and TAPPED
KAJA-TV:
14-year old shoots suspected burglar inside his home
Discussion: Redstate
Ruth Gledhill / Times of London:
Pope set to bring back Latin Mass that divided the Church
Greyhawk / Mudville Gazette:
AL QAEDA'S "WORKING PAPER FOR A MEDIA INVASION OF AMERICA"
Jacob S. Hacker / Slate:
Better Medicine  —  FIXING THE LEFT'S HEALTH-CARE PRESCRIPTION.
James Wolcott:
RATFINK WRITES NEW BOOK
Discussion: Norwegianity
 Earlier Items: 
Chicago Tribune:
Clerk's role grows in Foley scandal
Glenn Harlan Reynolds / TCS Daily:
Beam Me Up, Osama  —  Last week I looked at a potential …
Discussion: Natalie Solent
USA Today:
Jury awards $11.3M over defamatory Internet posts
Discussion: Wizbang
Rasmussen Reports:
Rhode Island Governor: Carcieri Up Three
Mark Pazniokas / Hartford Courant:
Poll: Lieberman Leads Lamont
Captain Ed / Captain's Quarters:
It's The Economy, Even If The Media Doesn't Report It
New York Times:
Venture Firm Shares a YouTube Jackpot
Jamie Holly / Crooks and Liars:
Olbermann: "Why does habeas corpus hate America"
 

 
From Techmeme:

Lee-Anne Mulholland / The Keyword:
Google files its proposed remedies in the DOJ's search antitrust lawsuit, including letting browser companies have multiple default agreements across platforms

Wall Street Journal:
Gina Raimondo says holding back China in the chips race is a “fool's errand”, and investment, more than export controls, will keep US ahead of Beijing

Timothy B. Lee / Ars Technica:
Exploring the scaling challenges of transformer-based LLMs in efficiently processing large amounts of text, as well as potential solutions, such as RAG systems

 
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