Check out Mini-memeorandum for simple mobiles or memeorandum Mobile for modern smartphones.
4:50 PM ET, June 11, 2007

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Adam Liptak / New York Times:
Appeals Court Orders Enemy Combatant Free by Military  —  In a stinging rejection of one of the Bush administration's central assertions about the scope of executive authority to combat terrorism, a federal appeals court ordered the Pentagon to release a man being held as an enemy combatant.
RELATED:
Lyle Denniston / SCOTUSblog:
President denied authority to detain civilians in U.S.  —  UPDATE at 3:15 p.m. The Justice Department said on Monday that it will ask the full 12-member Fourth Circuit Court to reconsider en banc the panel decision in Al-Marri v. Wright (Circuit docket 06-7427).
Discussion: Balkinization
Zinie Chen Sampson / Associated Press:
Court rules in favor of enemy combatant  —  RICHMOND, Va. - The Bush administration cannot use new anti-terrorism laws to keep U.S. residents locked up indefinitely without charging them, a divided federal appeals court said Monday.  —  The ruling was a harsh rebuke of one of the central tools …
Carol D. Leonnig / Washington Post:
Federal Court Rules in Favor of 'Enemy Combatant'  —  A federal appeals court today ruled that the U.S. government cannot indefinitely imprison a U.S. resident on suspicion alone, and ordered the military to either charge Ali Saleh Kahlah al-Marri with his alleged terrorist crimes in a civilian court or release him.
RELATED:
Cernig / The Newshoggers:
Retrocessive Intellectual Evolution
Allahpundit / Hot Air:
Video: Dennis Miller goes nuclear on Harry Reid  —  The e-mails are flooding in.  You want it?  You got it.  —  If Rasmussen's right, this should resonate broadly.  —  Blowback
RELATED:
Rasmussen Reports:
Harry Reid's Favorables Fall to 19%  —  Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is now viewed favorably by 19% of American voters and unfavorably by 45%.  Just 3% have a Very Favorable opinion while 22% hold a Very Unfavorable views.  —  Reid has been very visible over the past week in the furor over immigration reform.
Sheryl Gay Stolberg / New York Times:
Bush Vows to Get Immigration Bill Passed  —  As he heads home from an eight-day European swing to face a hostile Congress, President Bush today lashed out at Democrats for holding a vote of no confidence on his attorney general, and vowed to get his stalled immigration legislation passed, saying, "I'll see you at the bill signing."
Discussion: Brian Beutler and Truthdig
RELATED:
Byron York / National Review:
The No-Confidence-in-Gonzales Vote  —  The Republican leadership in the Senate is confident it can win a planned preliminary vote on a resolution expressing no confidence in Attorney General Alberto Gonzales.  A vote is scheduled later today on a Democratic attempt to end debate and move on to a vote on the resolution.
Discussion: Brian Beutler
Don Frederick / Los Angeles Times:
New L.A. Times/Bloomberg Poll  —  John McCain's presidential candidacy clearly is struggling, and a just-completed Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg Poll is not going to buoy his camp's spirits.  —  We won't reveal the exact numbers here; for that, you can check The Times website later today for all the numbers and analysis.
RELATED:
Mudcat / TIME: Swampland:
Go Ahead And Shoot At Me  —  I woke up this morning and was going to start my stint as a guest correspondent by trying to kick up a dialogue on how my people in rural America are getting screwed into the stone ages.  As an inexperienced blogger (I think this is the third time I've posted anything) …
Adam Bernstein / Washington Post:
Richard Rorty, 75; Leading U.S. Pragmatist Philosopher  —  Richard Rorty, 75, an intellectual whose often deeply unconventional approach to mainstream philosophic thought brought him wide public recognition as one of the leading thinkers of his era, died June 8 at his home in Palo Alto, Calif. He had pancreatic cancer.
Discussion: The Huffington Post and normblog
RELATED:
Nikki Finke / Deadline Hollywood Daily:
THAAAT'S What We Were All Waiting For?  Angry 'Sopranos' Fans Crash HBO Website  —  The line to cancel HBO starts here.  What a ridiculously disappointing end lacking in creativity to The Sopranos saga.  But if you're one of those who found it perversely interesting, then don't bother to read on.
Robert Stacy McCain / Washington Times:
Reagan's famous line nearly clipped from Berlin speech  —  SANTA BARBARA, Calif. — Top administration officials said the speech was all wrong.  Too provocative, said the National Security Council.  Too tough, said the State Department.  —  The president overruled his advisers and …
Matt / Think Progress:
Huckabee: 'Most' Prisoners In The U.S. 'Would Love' To Be In Guantanamo  —  Former Secretary of State Colin Powell condemned the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay yesterday, calling it "a major problem for America's perception" and charging, "if it was up to me, I would close Guantanamo — not tomorrow, this afternoon."
Jennifer Steinhauer / New York Times:
States Finding Fiscal Surprise: A Cash Surplus  —  State lawmakers across the country, their coffers unexpectedly full of cash, have been handing out tax cuts, spending money on fixing roads, schools and public buildings, and socking something away for less fruitful years.
Discussion: National Review and Bill Hobbs
Howard Berkes / NPR:
Poll: Rural Vote No Longer a Lock for Republicans  —  · A new national poll indicates rural Americans are no longer reliably Republican, and the Bush administration's conduct of the war in Iraq seems mainly to blame.  —  People from the nation's smallest places had the biggest impact in the last two presidential elections.
George F. Will / Newsweek:
Of Tulips and Fred Thompson  —  Tulip mania gripped Holland in the 1630s.  Prices soared, speculation raged, bulbs promising especially exotic or intense colors became the objects of such frenzied bidding that some changed hands 10 times in a day.  Then, suddenly, the spell was broken …
Noam Cohen / New York Times:
Libby's Supporters Who Wrote to Judge Learn That Letters Take on New Life on the Web  —  In what may be a sign of things to come, the lawyers for I. Lewis Libby Jr. last month invoked the rarely used courtroom tactic: the "bloggers can be mean" defense.  —  The issue was whether to release …
 
 
 Archived Page Info: 
This is a snapshot of memeorandum at 4:50 PM ET, June 11, 2007.

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: 
National Review Online:
Derbyshire: R.I.P.
Discussion: Pam's House Blend and Wonkette
Kevin Bogardus / The Hill:
Tauzin is unnamed lawmaker in Jefferson indictment
Discussion: Think Progress
Inside Higher Ed:
DePaul Rejects Finkelstein
Eugene Volokh / The Volokh Conspiracy:
WHAT EXACTLY IS JUDGE WALTON'S BEEF HERE?  I too found it hard …
Joshua Partlow / Washington Post:
Iraq Parliament Votes to Oust Speaker
Discussion: New York Times and Corrente
Jim Burroway / Box Turtle Bulletin:
A Closer Look at Dr. John Holsinger's "Pathophysiology of Male Homosexuality"
Julia Duin / Washington Times:
Suit to decide workplace 'hate speech'
Discussion: Don Surber and PoliPundit.com
CNN:
Appeal blocks release in teen sex case
 Earlier Items: 
Matt Stoller / MyDD:
Rothenberg: Democrats Played Iraq "like a Stradivarius"
Mike Carney / On Deadline:
Today's photo: Palestinians use armored vehicle marked 'TV' to attack Israeli troops
Ian Traynor / Guardian:
Wealth gap grows across EU
Sheryl Gay Stolberg / New York Times:
Thousands Hail Bush in Visit to Albania
ABCNEWS:
EXCLUSIVE: Hilton Calls Barbara Walters from Jail
Robert D. Novak / Washington Post:
Standing by the Wrong Guy