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11:30 AM ET, October 14, 2014

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Maeve Reston / Los Angeles Times:
Ann Romney launches new center to study neurological diseases  —  Let some in the political world obsess over whether Mitt Romney plans to run for president for a third time — Ann Romney has a bigger project in mind.  —  On Tuesday at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston …
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Washington Post:
Can't quit Mitt: Friends say Romney feels nudge to consider a 2016 presidential run  —  CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa — Officially, Mitt Romney returned to Iowa, the quadrennial presidential proving ground, to give a boost to Joni Ernst.  But at a closed-door breakfast fundraiser here Monday …
Mitt Romney / Medium:
Dear Ann,  —  You've come a long way.  It's been over fifteen years since we sat in the first neurologist's waiting room, looking at his office brochures that described ALS, Parkinson's, and Multiple Sclerosis.  We could handle anything, I said, as long as it wasn't terminal.
Discussion: CNN, OnPolitics and Mediaite
Alexander Bolton / The Hill:
McConnell says Ky. healthcare exchange can stay but not ObamaCare  —  Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) said Monday he wouldn't mind if the state healthcare insurance exchange known as Kentucky Kynect stayed but reiterated his call for the full repeal of ObamaCare.
Alec MacGillis / The New Republic:
Republicans Need to Call Off the Voting Wars—for Their Own Good  —  We are now three weeks to Election Day, which means we are deep into another round of the voting wars—the ceaseless legislative, legal and regulatory battle over which Americans can vote, and when and where and with what paperwork they must do so.
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Sahil Kapur / Talking Points Memo:
This Ruling Could Put Texas Back In The Doghouse On Voting Law Changes  —  A federal judge's decision on Thursday to strike down Texas's strict voter identification law is a boost for the Obama administration's effort to once again require the Lone Star State to receive federal pre-approval before making any changes to its voting laws.
The Hill:
Feds rethinking Ebola strategy  —  The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Monday said it is starting to “rethink” its Ebola strategy after the first-ever US transmission of the virus put a “relatively large” number of healthcare workers at risk.
Discussion: Hot Air, Hit & Run, ABC News and Vox Popoli
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Aaron Blake / Washington Post:
Americans want flight restrictions from Ebola countries. And it's not close.
Jonathan Martin / New York Times:
He'll Fight Every Day for the Poetry of South Dakota  —  In my piece today on South Dakota's unpredictable Senate race, I noted how the candidates there represented a departure from the cookie-cutter homogeneity that is now commonplace in races around the country.
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Scott Johnson / Power Line:
New dimensions in racial tensions  —  A cafeteria food fight turned into a riot at South High School in Minneapolis in February last year.  The school's security officers were insufficient to the task.  Police officers dispatched to the scene sprayed mace and placed the school on lockdown to get a handle on the situation.
BBC:
Oscar Pistorius trial: Call for community service angers prosecutor  —  South African athlete Oscar Pistorius should not go to jail over the killing of his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp, his sentencing hearing has been told.  —  A probation officer appearing for the defence said Pistorius should serve house arrest and community service.
Discussion: Mediaite, Shakesville and TalkLeft
Claude Brodesser-Akner / New Jersey Online:
Chris Christie says he would ‘rather die’ than be a U.S. Senator from N.J. (VIDEO)  —  PARSIPPANY — Addressing the NAACP New Jersey Conference on Saturday, Gov. Chris Christie offered no further clues as to whether he'd declare his candidacy for president next year, but one thing …
Discussion: CNN, New York Magazine and OnPolitics
Valerie Richardson / Washington Times:
Obamacare website won't reveal insurance costs for 2015 until after election  —  States with key Senate races face double-digit premium hikes
Discussion: White House Dossier
Cliff Asness / RealClearMarkets:
The Inflation Imputation  —  In 2010, I co-signed an open letter warning that the Fed's experiment with an unprecedented level of loose monetary policy - in amount, and in unorthodox method - created a risk of serious inflation.  Sporadically journalists and others have noted that this risk …
Kristina Wong / The Hill:
OVERNIGHT DEFENSE: Pentagon sees security threat from climate  —  THE TOPLINE: Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel on Monday unveiled a plan to integrate threats from climate change into all defense “plans, operations and training,” signaling a comprehensive effort to tackle global warming.
Discussion: Hot Air and CBS News
The Hill:
In Texas and across the nation, abortion access a sign of women's well-being  —  Last week's decision by New Orleans's Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals to reinstate Texas House Bill 2 (HB2) — the omnibus abortion bill responsible for closing 80 percent of the abortion clinics in Texas …
Hanna Rosin / Slate:
Abortion Is Great  —  A new book argues that the left needs to stop the “awfulization” of abortion and embrace it as a social good.  —  I had an abortion.  I was not in a libertine college-girl phase, although frankly it's none of your business.  I was already a mother of two …
Discussion: National Review and The Federalist
Dana Hedgpeth / Washington Post:
It's more expensive to live in D.C. than New York, study says  —  Updated at 8:10 p.m. to include additional information from the Bureau of Labor Statistics  —  The Washington region ranks as the most expensive place to live in the country, ahead of the pricey markets of New York and San Francisco, according to a government study.
Doron Ben-Atar / Tablet Magazine:
Kafka Was the Rage  —  At a Catholic school, a professor fighting the academic boycott of Israel is investigated on secret charges  —  The email arrived on the last Friday afternoon of the spring term shortly before 5:00 p.m. Anastasia Coleman, Fordham's Director of Institutional Equity and Compliance …
Associated Press:
ALAN SCHER ZAGIER and JIM SALTER  —  FERGUSON, Mo. (AP) — Pounding rain and tornado watches didn't deter hundreds of protesters Monday outside Ferguson police headquarters, where they stayed for almost four hours to mark how long 18-year-old Michael Brown's body was left in a street after he was fatally shot by police.
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 More Items: 
Matthew Burns / WRAL-TV:
Judge orders county to provide early voting site on App State campus
Discussion: Election Law Blog
John Frank / Denver Post:
COLORADO SENATE: IN CLOSE RACE, MOMENTUM FAVORS GARDNER OVER UDALL, POLL FINDS
Discussion: Talking Points Memo and The Spot
Kevin Drum / Mother Jones:
Election Rule #34: Process Gaffes Matter. Policy Gaffes Don't.
Philip Bump / Washington Post:
The disconnect between voter ID laws and voter fraud
Discussion: New York Times and National Review
Byron York / Washington Examiner:
Can Joni Ernst break Iowa's Senate habit?
Theodoric Meyer / The Daily Beast:
The Secret Money Buying Wisconsin's Laws
Glenn Harlan Reynolds / USA Today:
Americans short on reasons to trust: Column
 Earlier Items: 
Jeré Longman / New York Times:
Sierra Leone's Soccer Team Struggles With Stigma Over Ebola Outbreak
Allen McDuffee / The Atlantic Online:
The Religious Effort in Ferguson
Tom Kludt / Talking Points Memo:
Bill O'Reilly Thinks It's Time For A Mercy Killing At MSNBC (VIDEO)
Josh Gerstein / Politico:
Jill Abramson regrets stance on James Risen Iran story