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11:35 AM ET, December 18, 2006

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Michael Moss / New York Times:
Former U.S. Detainee in Iraq Recalls Torment  —  One night in mid-April, the steel door clanked shut on detainee No. 200343 at Camp Cropper, the United States military's maximum-security detention site in Baghdad.  —  American guards arrived at the man's cell periodically over the next several days …
RELATED:
Atrios / Eschaton:   Journamalism  —  I wanted to highlight what I think is a pretty …
John Fund / Opinion Journal:
Not So Fast  —  Why Barack Obama may not run.  —  Just about everybody seems convinced that Sen. Barack Obama is going to run for president.  The Chicago Sun-Times, his hometown paper, is writing as if his candidacy is an established fact.  Newsweek magazine cites sources close to him who claim that he's …
New York Times:
After Bankruptcy Filing, Recriminations Fly at Air America  —  In its search for a new chief executive this past summer, Air America Radio interviewed seasoned media executives in an effort to revive the faltering network.  One interview took a bizarre turn, however, when the executive got …
RELATED:
Brian Maloney / The Radio Equalizer:
Al Franken Departure, Air America Network Purchase
Discussion: Sister Toldjah
Times of London:
Litvinenko's killers used polonium worth $10m to give massive overdose  —  British investigators believe that Alexander Litvinenko's killers used more than $10 million of polonium-210 to poison him.  Preliminary findings from the post mortem examination on the former KGB spy suggest …
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Times of London:
Tsunami survivors given the lash  —  Michael Sheridan and Dewi Loveard, Banda Aceh  —  Disaster donations help Islamic vigilante force impose punishments on women  —  WHEN people around the world sent millions of pounds to help the stricken Indonesian province of Aceh after the Boxing Day tsunami of 2004 …
RELATED:
Captain Ed / Captain's Quarters:   How Foreign Aid Hurts Rather Than Helps
Karen DeYoung / Washington Post:
Powell Says U.S. Losing in Iraq, Calls for Drawdown by Mid-2007  —  Former secretary of state Colin L. Powell said yesterday that the United States is losing what he described as a "civil war" in Iraq and that he is not persuaded that an increase in U.S. troops there would reverse the situation.
RELATED:
Washington Post:
Conservatives' Grip on Key Virginia Court Is at Risk  —  A growing list of vacancies on the federal appeals court in Richmond is heightening concern among Republicans that one of the nation's most conservative and influential courts could soon come under moderate or even liberal control, Republicans and legal scholars say.
Discussion: ACSBlog, Amygdala and Daily Kos
Silvia Spring / Newsweek:
Blood and Money  —  In what might be called the mother of all surprises, Iraq's economy is growing strong, even booming in places.  —  Newsweek International  —  It may sound unreal, given the daily images of carnage and chaos.  But for a certain plucky breed of businessmen, there's good money to be made in Iraq.
Discussion: Argghhh!, Don Surber and Rising Hegemon
New York Times:
Murdoch Is Said to Have Ordered Editor's Dismissal  —  Rupert Murdoch personally ordered the dismissal of Judith Regan, the publisher of a widely criticized O. J. Simpson book, after he heard reports of a heated conversation Ms. Regan had with a company lawyer on Friday that included comments …
RELATED:
David Carr / New York Times:
This Time, Judith Regan Did It  —  When the News Corporation …
Discussion: Firedoglake
Oliver North / Washington Times:
Winning the war  —  RAMADI, Iraq.  —  "We're here to win."  That's how a U.S. Marine corporal put it when I asked him what he was doing in Iraq.  He spoke looking squarely into our TV camera — a more intimidating experience for him than the rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) …
RELATED:
Deacon / Power Line:   RAMADI OR BAGHDAD?  —  Oliver North, reporting from Ramadi, says we are winning there.
Robert Tait / Guardian:
Iranian students hide in fear for lives after venting fury at Ahmadinejad  —  Iranian student activists who staged an angry protest against President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad last week have gone into hiding in fear for their lives after his supporters threatened them with revenge.
Eric Bailey / Los Angeles Times:
Pot is called biggest cash crop  —  The $35-billion market value of U.S.-grown cannabis tops that of such heartland staples as corn and hay, a marijuana activist says.  —  SACRAMENTO — For years, activists in the marijuana legalization movement have claimed that cannabis is America's biggest cash crop.
Discussion: PoliBlog (TM) and Andrew Sullivan
Tina Kelley / New York Times:
Talk in Class Turns to God, Setting Off Public Debate on Rights  —  KEARNY, N.J. — Before David Paszkiewicz got to teach his accelerated 11th-grade history class about the United States Constitution this fall, he was accused of violating it.  —  Shortly after school began in September …
Discussion: Althouse and Pharyngula
Clifford Coonan / Independent:
After surviving 20 million years, China's goddess of the river is driven to extinction  —  For 20 million years, the white-fin dolphin, or baiji, swam China's longest river, the Yangtze.  But a few years of breakneck development, overfishing and a massive increase in shipping have reduced sightings …
Discussion: Mathew Gross and The Strata-Sphere
John Londregan / Weekly Standard:
Don't Cry for Pinochet  —  Chile succeeded despite him.  —  The death of Augusto Pinochet Ugarte marks the definitive end of his efforts to associate himself with conservatism.  It also marks the ultimate success of his efforts to avoid accountability for his murderous behavior as a leader …
Mark Steyn / Chicago Sun Times:
And merry Xmas to you all  —  I passed through Shannon Airport in Ireland the other day.  They've got a "holiday" display in the terminal, but guess what?  It says "Merry Christmas."  The Emerald Isle has a few Jews, and these days rather a lot of Muslims, and presumably even a militant atheist or two …
Karen DeYoung / Washington Post:
U.S. Sees Growing Threats In Somalia  —  Al-Qaeda's Influence, Possible War With Ethiopia Are Concerns  —  Six months ago, the Bush administration launched a new policy in war-torn Somalia, putting the State Department in charge after secret CIA efforts failed to prevent Islamic fundamentalists from seizing power in Mogadishu.
 
 
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 More Items: 
Alan Reynolds / Opinion Journal:
The Top 1% . . . of What?  —  Jim Webb might want to find …
Discussion: The Remedy
Sarah El Deeb / Associated Press:
Gaza weapons smuggling flourishes
Molly Moore / Washington Post:
On the Prowl in Provence With the Truffle Enforcer
Deepak Chopra / The Huffington Post:
Get Ready for Segregation — Again
John Hawkins / Right Wing News:
The "Person Of The Year" Is "You?" So Lame!
Richard A. Serrano / Los Angeles Times:
Padilla terror case gets closer look
Frances Harrison / BBC:
Where Holocaust denial is welcomed
Discussion: Daniel W. Drezner
Josh White / Washington Post:
U.S. Sends Home 33 Detainees From Guantanamo Bay
Discussion: FP Passport and TalkLeft
 Earlier Items: 
Chris Wallace / Fox News:
TRANSCRIPT: SEN. EDWARD KENNEDY ON 'FOX NEWS SUNDAY'
Discussion: LiberalOasis and The Corner
BBC:
China awards massive nuclear deal
Elaine Ganley / Associated Press:
France to pull troops from Afghanistan
Michael Theodoulou / Times of London:
Hardliners defeated in Iran's twin elections
Los Angeles Times:
In jail and in danger  —  Violence has left 14 dead …
MSNBC:
MTP Transcript for Dec. 17
Maria Cereghino / New Yorker:
THIS WEEK IN THE NEW YORKER  —  For Immediate Release: December 10, 2006
Randy Kennedy / New York Times:
An Atheist Can Believe in Christmas