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10:45 AM ET, August 1, 2008

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
David Willman / Los Angeles Times:
Apparent suicide in anthrax case  —  Bruce E. Ivins, a scientist who helped the FBI investigate the 2001 mail attacks, was about to face charges.  —  A top government scientist who helped the FBI analyze samples from the 2001 anthrax attacks has died in Maryland from an apparent suicide …
RELATED:
Glenn Greenwald / Salon:
Vital unresolved anthrax questions and ABC News  —  (updated below)  —  The FBI's lead suspect in the September, 2001 anthrax attacks — Bruce E. Ivins — died Tuesday night, apparently by suicide, just as the Justice Department was about to charge him with responsibility for the attacks.
David Willman / Los Angeles Times:
Anthrax suspect dies in apparent suicide  —  The Justice Department was preparing to file criminal charges against Bruce E. Ivins in the anthrax mailing assaults of 2001 that killed five.  —  One of the nation's top biodefense researchers has died in Maryland from an apparent suicide …
Carrie Johnson / Washington Post:
Report: Anthrax Scientist Dies in Apparent Suicide
Discussion: Eschaton, Raising Kaine and Corrente
The Board:
Say What?  John McCain, Barack Obama, and the “Race Card”  —  We know that operatives in modern-day presidential campaigns are supposed to say things that everyone knows are ridiculous — and to do it with a straight face.  —  Still, there was something surreal, and offensive …
RELATED:
Hugh Hewitt / TownHall Blog:
The New York Times Demonstrates Why It Is Bleeding Money
Discussion: protein wisdom
New York Times:
McCain Camp Says Obama Is Playing ‘Race Card’
Mark Finkelstein / NewsBusters.org:
Unanimous: Hardball Panel Agrees Obama Playing Race Card
Discussion: Commentary and CNN
Wall Street Journal:
Wal-Mart Warns of Democratic Win  —  Wal-Mart Stores Inc. is mobilizing its store managers and department supervisors around the country to warn that if Democrats win power in November, they'll likely change federal law to make it easier for workers to unionize companies — including Wal-Mart.
Paul Krugman / New York Times:
Can This Planet Be Saved?  —  Recently the Web site The Politico asked Nancy Pelosi, the speaker of the House, why she was blocking attempts to tack offshore drilling amendments onto appropriations bills.  “I'm trying to save the planet; I'm trying to save the planet,” she replied.  —  I'm glad to hear it.
RELATED:
Charles Krauthammer / Washington Post:
Pelosi: Save the Planet, Let Someone Else Drill
Discussion: Betsy's Page
New York Times:
Pakistanis Aided Attack in Kabul, U.S. Officials Say  —  WASHINGTON — American intelligence agencies have concluded that members of Pakistan's powerful spy service helped plan the deadly July 7 bombing of India's embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan, according to United States government officials.
RELATED:
Joby Warrick / Washington Post:
U.S. Officials: Pakistani Agents Helped Plan Kabul Bombing
Discussion: Firedoglake
Amy Chozick / Wall Street Journal:
Too Fit to Be President?  —  Facing an Overweight Electorate, Barack Obama Might Find Low Body Fat a Drawback  —  Speaking to donors at a San Diego fund-raiser last month, Barack Obama reassured the crowd that he wouldn't give in to Republican tactics to throw his candidacy off track.
Matthew Yglesias:
Good Advice  —  As sometimes happens when I read Marc Ambinder's blog, today I'm puzzled by the mentality of the campaign reporter: … Here's my understanding of the sequence of events.  Gas prices are on the rise.  Consumers are feeling pain, harm is being done to the economy.
Discussion: Sadly, No! and Political Punch
RELATED:
Michael M. Grynbaum / New York Times:
Jobless Rate Climbs to 5.7% as 51,000 Jobs Lost in July  —  The nation's employers eliminated 51,000 jobs in July, the seventh consecutive contraction in the labor market, as the unemployment rate reached a four-year high, signs that the pressure on business owners and consumers is likely to continue.
Discussion: Think Progress and TIME.com
Robert G. Kaiser / Washington Post:
The Curious Mind of John McCain  —  Ambition and Emotion Color the Complex Intellect of the Candidate  —  In his 2002 book, “Worth the Fighting For,” John McCain offered this confession — an acknowledgment of a restless mind: “Although I seem to tolerate introspection better the older I am …
Discussion: MSNBC and TIME.com
Bill Vlasic / New York Times:
G.M. Loses $15.5 Billion in Quarter  —  DETROIT — The General Motors Corporation reported a stunning second-quarter loss of $15.5 billion on Friday because of a dramatic decline in United States sales and charges for job cuts, plant closings and the falling value of trucks and sport utility vehicles.
Mattathias Schwartz / New York Times:
Malwebolence  —  One afternoon in the spring of 2006, for reasons unknown to those who knew him, Mitchell Henderson, a seventh grader from Rochester, Minn., took a .22-caliber rifle down from a shelf in his parents' bedroom closet and shot himself in the head.
Discussion: The Daily Dish and Cogitamus
Digby / Hullabaloo:
Obama Clark  —  I was disheartened when the village succeeded in chasing Wes Clark out of the campaign.  He's a good guy who brings a necessary combination of military credibility and progressive values into the political arena at a time when we have a chance to change the prevailing paradigm …
RELATED:
Jackie Kucinich / The Hill:
Run against the GOP, Cole tells hopefuls  —  Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.) told GOP congressional hopefuls on Thursday that they should not be afraid to criticize both political parties - including Republican members of the House.  —  During a conference call, the National Republican Congressional …
Billmon / Daily Kos:
The Great White Hope  —  The media's moment of disillusionment with John McCain appears to be at hand.  Even Joe Klein has finally noticed that McCain's profile is beginning to resemble the endomorphic shadow of his backstage advisor, Karl Rove, not one of the faces on Mt. Rushmore.
RELATED:
Rasmussen Reports:
Election 2008: Kentucky Presidential Election  —  Kentucky: McCain Leads 49% to 39%, But Gap Is Narrowing  —  John McCain still holds a double-digit - but narrowing - lead over Barack Obama in Kentucky, a state that went overwhelmingly for President Bush in 2004, according to the latest Rasmussen Reports telephone survey in the state.
Discussion: Daily Kos and FiveThirtyEight.com
RELATED:
Rasmussen Reports:
30% of Conservative Democrats Say They'll Vote for McCain
 
 
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 More Items: 
Corey Dade / Wall Street Journal:
Kaine's Versatile Appeal Gives Him a Shot to Run With Obama
Discussion: TIME.com and MSNBC
Carl Bialik / Wall Street Journal:
Press 1 for McCain, 2 for Obama
Avi Zenilman / The Politico:
McCain's camp suffers from a paper gap
Discussion: TIME.com
Erika Lovley / The Politico:
GOP hopes to skirt Minn. bridge issue
Stars & Stripes:
Landstuhl clarifies press rules for aborted Obama visit
Peter S. Goodman / New York Times:
More Arrows Seen Pointing to a Recession
Discussion: D-Day, Don Surber and TIME.com
 Earlier Items: 
David Brooks / New York Times:
Missing Dean Acheson
Discussion: TownHall Blog
Peter Nicholas / Los Angeles Times:
For Clinton supporters, it's a gender issue
NASA:
NASA Spacecraft Confirms Martian Water, Mission Extended
Ellen Nakashima / Washington Post:
Travelers' Laptops May Be Detained At Border
William Saletan / Slate:
BANNING FAST FOOD IN POOR NEIGHBORHOODS.
Kevin Drum / Washington Monthly:
TRIGGER HAPPY....This is weird.  I missed this nugget buried deep …
 

 
From Mediagazer:

Max Tani / @maxwelltani:
Memo: WaPo's Matt Murray lays out plans for WP Ventures, the “third newsroom”; Krissah Thompson will be editor and Samantha Henig will be general manager

Jack Dunn / Variety:
Trump appoints Mark Burnett, the British TV executive who created and produced the reality show The Apprentice, as a special envoy to the UK

Liz Pelly / Harper's:
How Spotify used its Perfect Fit Content program to rig its system against musicians, filling popular playlists with “ghost artists” to cut its royalty payouts

 
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