Check out Mini-memeorandum for simple mobiles or memeorandum Mobile for modern smartphones.
3:30 PM ET, November 13, 2007

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Jeff Zeleny / The Caucus:
A Not-So-Perfect Picture of Party Unity  —  On both sides of the ticket, the presidential nominating contest is growing increasingly combative, as voters may well witness Thursday during a debate in Las Vegas among the Democratic candidates.  —  So how is John Edwards feeling …
RELATED:
Rasmussen Reports:
Just 25% Believe Democratic Candidates Are Piling On Hillary  —  Just 25% of Americans believe that the Democratic candidates are piling on Senator Hillary Clinton and attacking her unfairly.  A Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that 57% disagree and say there has been no piling on.
Roger Simon / The Politico:
Note to HRC staffers: Trust your candidate  —  Does Hillary Clinton really need to plant questions?  —  Does the Clinton campaign really need to twist a college kid's arm to ask Clinton a question about climate change at a climate change event?  —  After Clinton toured a biodiesel plant in Newton …
Ben Smith / The Politico:
Vultures circling in Iowa
Discussion: Taylor Marsh
Jennifer Loven / Associated Press:
Bush vetoes health and education bill  —  NEW ALBANY, Ind. - President Bush, escalating his budget battle with Congress, on Tuesday vetoed a spending measure for health and education programs prized by congressional Democrats.  —  He also signed a big increase in the Pentagon's non-war budget although …
RELATED:
Robert Pear / New York Times:
Bush Vetoes Domestic Programs Spending Bill  —  President Bush today vetoed a bill that would have provided $150.7 billion for education, health care, job training and other domestic programs.  —  Dana Perino, the White House press secretary, said the measure exceeded the president's budget request …
Peter Baker / Washington Post:
Bush Veto Sets Stage for Budget Battle  —  President Bush vetoed a $606 billion spending bill Tuesday that would have funded education, health and labor programs for the current fiscal year, complaining that it was larded with pork and too expensive as he took aim at a top priority of the new Democratic Congress.
Washington Wire:   Veto Marks Shift in Funding Fight
The Politico:
Democrats remain stalled on Iraq debate  —  As the congressional session lurches toward a close, Democrats are confronting some demoralizing arithmetic on Iraq.  —  The numbers tell a story of political and substantive paralysis more starkly than most members are willing to acknowledge publicly, or perhaps even to themselves.
RELATED:
Brian Faughnan / Weekly Standard:   Dems Fool Netroots: Quietly Fund Iraq While Talking Tough
Josh White / Washington Post:
'Hidden Costs' Double Price Of Two Wars, Democrats Say
Ezra Klein:
His Ideas Are Good, But I Want More Bullet Points  —  So we're back to arguing about John Edwards' plan to strip members of Congress of their health care if they don't pass comprehensive reform.  I'm always astonished at how bizarrely literally pundits act when they approach this idea.
Discussion: The Politico and Political Machine
RELATED:
Tim Grieve / Salon:
Clinton, McCain and the B-word  —  At a campaign event in South Carolina Monday, a female supporter asked John McCain: "How do we beat the bitch?"  —  If the Arizona senator objected to that particular characterization of Sen. Hillary Clinton, he didn't exactly say so.
RELATED:
Jonah Goldberg / The Corner:
Say It Enough Times It Must Be True  —  First the Clinton campaign whines that the other candidates were picking on the girl.  Then, standing up to Russert is like standing up to Hitler.  Then Bill Clinton compared Russert to the Swift Boat Vets.  Now the Clinton campaign is warning Wolf Blizter that he better not "pull a Russert."
Lyle Denniston / SCOTUSblog:
Court takes no action on gun case  —  The Supreme Court on Tuesday announced no action on a new case testing the meaning of the Second Amendment — an issue the Court has not considered in 68 years.  The Orders List contained no mention of either the District of Columbia's appeal (07-290) …
Kevin J. Martin / New York Times:
The Daily Show  —  IN many towns and cities, the newspaper is an endangered species.  At least 300 daily papers have stopped publishing over the past 30 years.  Those newspapers that have survived are struggling financially.  Newspaper circulation has declined steadily for more than 10 years.
RELATED:
Marty Kaplan / The Huffington Post:   Your FCC At Work  —  In the most bizarre example yet …
Opinion Journal:
Movin' On Up  —  A Treasury study refutes populist hokum about "income inequality."  —  If you've been listening to Mike Huckabee or John Edwards on the Presidential trail, you may have heard that the U.S. is becoming a nation of rising inequality and shrinking opportunity.
WJXT-TV:
Man Found Dead, Stuck In Cat Door  —  \32-Year-Old Trying To Get In Girlfriend's Home  —  ST. JOHNS COUNTY, Fla. — St. Johns County deputies recently launched an investigation into what they called one of the strangest accidents they've ever seen when a man was found dead after getting stuck in a cat door.
GOP.com:
HILLARY CLINTON LIBRARY CARD  —  On the campaign trail, Hillary Clinton consistently speaks to her level of experience; yet, she will not allow details of that experience to be reviewed by the public.  —  The American people deserve to know what information is being guarded in her libraries.
Howard Kurtz / Washington Post:
Post Critic Page Apologizes for E-Mail Remarks To Barry Aide  —  A Pulitzer Prize-winning writer for The Washington Post has apologized to D.C. Council member Marion Barry for sending an intemperate e-mail to his spokesman.  —  "It's the stupidest thing I've done in 30 years in journalism," music critic Tim Page said yesterday.
Carrie Budoff Brown / The Politico:
Senate GOP leaders target earmarks  —  A multilevel operation aimed at harnessing the power of the Internet represents the most coordinated attack yet on earmarks, considered a cornerstone of legislative dealmaking for the way they have been used to induce votes and curry favor with supporters.
 
 
 Archived Page Info: 
This is a snapshot of memeorandum at 3:30 PM ET, November 13, 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: 
Carl Zimmer / New York Times:
From Ants to People, an Instinct to Swarm
Michael Yon / Online Magazine:
A Consumer Reports  —  Geared for Combat 2 of 2 : Digital Still Cameras
Jonathan Martin / The Politico:
Staying in shape is primary goal
Discussion: FishBowlDC
Glenn Reynolds / Instapundit.com:
« |  MAIN  —  FRED THOMPSON SPOKE AT THE CITADEL JUST NOW …
Guardian:
Royal insult echoes persecution of Christ, says Venezuelan leader
Greg Sargent / Horses Mouth:
Why Does Camp Hillary Push Back Against Media So Aggressively?
USA Today:
A new page in O'Connors' love story
Richard Benedetto / The Politico:
In wartime, low death toll is news, too
Discussion: Associated Press and Romenesko
 Earlier Items: 
Dahlia Lithwick / Slate:
WHY THE STATES ARE STANDING BY THEIR OUTDATED, MESSY LETHAL-INJECTION PROTOCOLS.
Roger L. Simon / Pajamas Media:
HICKS NIX PEACENIK PIX: MOVIES THAT NO ONE WANTS TO SEE
James Rainey / Los Angeles Times:
Tancredo campaign ad sets off bomb
New York Post:
A 'FORGOTTEN' WAR  —  AS IRAQ IMPROVES, COVERAGE DRIES UP
Discussion: JammieWearingFool
Jonathan Cohn / The New Republic:
Creative Destruction  —  The best case against universal health care.
Darryl Fears / Washington Post:
Panel May Cut Sentences For Crack
Alan Krueger / AMERICAN.COM:
What Makes a Terrorist  —  It's not poverty and lack of education …
 

 
From Mediagazer:

Lachlan Cartwright / The Ankler:
Sources: MSNBC renewed Rachel Maddow's contract early this fall, but with a pay cut; MSNBC bosses' plan to shake up daytime and weekend programming

Caitlin Huston / The Hollywood Reporter:
Internal memo: Hearst Magazines president announces layoffs as part of a decision to “reallocate resources” to “continue our focus on digital innovation”

Jon Brodkin / Ars Technica:
FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel announced she will leave the agency on January 20; she was the first woman to be confirmed to lead the agency

 
Sister Sites:

Techmeme
 Top news and commentary for technology's leaders, from all around the web
Mediagazer
 Top news and commentary for media professionals from all around the web
WeSmirch
 The top celebrity news from all around the web on a single page