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[logo] BBC News | News Front Page | UK Edition   more  xml  hide  
last updated: Sun, 08 Jul 2007 16:44:58 GMT

 Sun, 08 Jul 2007 15:57:19 GMT Terror fight 'may take 15 years'
The UK's new security minister says beating radicalisation in the fight against terror could take at least 15 years.
 Sun, 08 Jul 2007 16:11:35 GMT 'Foreign fighters' in Red Mosque
A Pakistani minister says wanted militants, including some from abroad, are inside a besieged Islamabad mosque.
 Sun, 08 Jul 2007 16:31:48 GMT Soldier dies after Basra fighting
A second British soldier dies from his wounds after heavy fighting in southern Iraq on Saturday.

[logo] Christian Science Monitor | Top Stories   more  xml  hide  
last updated: Sun, 08 Jul 2007 16:35:31 GMT

  Chinese exporters seek to shed taint
To keep their catfish in US markets, some of China's top producers seek independent ratings.

  Ecuador moves to cut Interest rates for poor
Banks and microlenders say Ecuador's leftist president may hurt most those he wants to help with 'financial justice' law.

  Are new passport rules making the US safer?
Security experts urge a fuller vetting of passport seekers, even as big backlog persists.


[logo] NYT > Home Page   more  xml  hide  
last updated: Sun, 08 Jul 2007 16:23:16 GMT

 Sun, 08 Jul 2007 14:26:32 GMT U.S. Aborted Raid on Qaeda Chiefs in Pakistan in ?05
Some top intelligence officials say the U.S. missed a significant opportunity to try to capture senior members of Al Qaeda.
 Sun, 08 Jul 2007 14:27:13 GMT Youth Groups Created by Kremlin Serve Putin?s Cause
A youth movement seeks the ideological cultivation, some say indoctrination, of the first generation to come of age in post-Soviet Russia.
 Sun, 08 Jul 2007 14:32:12 GMT Sensing a Shift, Reid Will Press for an Iraq Exit
Senator Harry Reid and the Democrats are increasingly confident they can assemble majority opposition to administration policies.

[logo] U.S. News & World Report   more  xml  hide  
last updated: Sun, 08 Jul 2007 16:04:13 GMT

 Sun, 8 Jul 2007 12:00:00 EST The Wild-Card Election
As the summer of 2007 begins, the presidential campaign is emulating the season, with fast-moving storms and searing heat. Voters are restless. Seven out of 10 Americans think the country is headed in the wrong direction. Seven out of 10 think the president and Congress are doing a poor job, and George W. Bush is on the verge of becoming a lame duck much earlier than the historical norm. Most oppose the Iraq war, and 67 percent are dissatisfied with the two-party system.
 Sun, 8 Jul 2007 12:00:00 EST The Wild-Card Election
As the summer of 2007 begins, the presidential campaign is emulating the season, with fast-moving storms and searing heat. Voters are restless. Seven out of 10 Americans think the country is headed in the wrong direction. Seven out of 10 think the president and Congress are doing a poor job, and George W. Bush is on the verge of becoming a lame duck much earlier than the historical norm. Most oppose the Iraq war, and 67 percent are dissatisfied with the two-party system. Something fundamental seems to be changing as the nation prepares for the election of 2008. "It's such a wide-open race," says historian Robert Dallek, "and the public is so unsettled and discontented." The campaign has started months earlier than usual because, for the first time since 1952, no incumbent president or vice president is running. "Looking back over the last 50 or 60 years," says Rutgers political scientist Ross Baker, "the range of politically available people was very narrow. But today, to a very great extent, the old mold of political availability has been broken." America itself is undergoing profound change. More of us are single; fewer are married with children. The growth of the Sun Belt continues. A surge of new immigrants is altering communities and stirring angst nationwide. Frustration with the Iraq war permeates our politics. Fear of another terrorist attack is palpable. Many are doing well economically, but millions are concerned about their jobs. H With all this uncertainty, it is no wonder that the presidential campaign has become such an unconventional race, full of fascinating characters, unending surprises, and wild cards of every sort. H It could be on par with the most important elections in history, such as 1932, when Franklin Roosevelt won and greatly expanded the scope of the federal government; 1960, when John F. Kennedy grasped the torch of leadership passed to a new generation; and 1980, when Ronald Reagan led America on a more conservative path. "Time marches on," says Frank Donatelli, former White House political director for Reagan. "You might argue that the era of Ronald Reagan is finally ending, that the conservative era is ending. ... Different factions in both parties are trying to break through." So there are new kinds of candidates and new kinds of issues. A compressed primary schedule and a changing political calculus in many regions of the country. It's certainly not your father's presidential campaign, or your mother's, or your grandparents'. In fact, it may be one of a kind.
 Sun, 8 Jul 2007 12:00:00 EST Bedbug Bloopers
"History is repeating itself," says Michael Potter, an entomologist from the University of Kentucky and a leading bedbug expert. Before the widespread use of DDT, he notes, many American homes were crawling with the bugs. U.S. News wondered exactly what a bedbug-infested America would look like, so we leafed through archives of old news reports. The battle against these bugs, it turns out, has been lengthy. What follows is a sampling of the nearly countless references in major American dailies to what a Washington Post reporter called "that horrid and caddish little cimex[sic] lectularius."

[logo] Yahoo! News: Top Stories   more  xml  hide  
last updated: Sun, 08 Jul 2007 16:12:30 GMT

 Sun, 08 Jul 2007 15:59:10 GMT Toll in Iraq bombings could surpass 150 (AP)

People clean up after a car bomb blast in central district of Karrada in Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, July, 8, 2007, which killed six people and wounded seven. In a near simultaneous blast two kilometers away another 2 people died and 8 were wounded, police said.   (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)AP - A flurry of bombings in Baghdad killed 26 people Sunday, and officials said the death toll from a giant suicide truck blast that devastated the market of a Shiite town north of the capital a day earlier could be more than 130.


 Sun, 08 Jul 2007 14:30:28 GMT Nev. wildfires force hundreds to flee (AP)

Los Angeles County firefighters battle a brush fire near Santa Clarita, Calif., Saturday, July 7, 2007. (AP Photo/Dan Steinberg)AP - An 8,000-acre wildfire forced hundreds of people in the town of Winnemucca to leave their homes, one of more than a dozen blazes that charred a combined 55 square miles in northern Nevada.


 Sun, 08 Jul 2007 15:09:26 GMT White House Subpoena battle escalates (AP)

In this photograph provided by 'Meet the Press', Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., is interviewed by moderator Tim Russert during a taping of 'Meet the Press' at the NBC Studios Sunday, July 1, 2007 in Washington. (AP Photo/Meet the Press, Alex Wong)AP - The Bush administration is urging a former White House political director to ignore a subpoena and not testify before Congress about the firings of federal prosecutors, her lawyer says.



ABC News: International   more  xml  hide  
last updated: Sun, 08 Jul 2007 16:27:32 GMT

 Sun, 08 Jul 2007 12:03:31 -0400 Toll in Iraq Bombings Could Surpass 150
Bombings in Baghdad Kill 26; Officials Say Death Toll in Shiite Village Blast Could Reach 130
 Sun, 08 Jul 2007 10:18:25 -0400 U.K. Terror Chief Warns of 15-Year Fight
Britain's New Terror Chief, Sir Alan West, Says 15 Years Needed to Fight Islamic Terrorism
 Sun, 08 Jul 2007 09:23:13 -0400 Israeli Cabinet OKs Prisoner Release
Israeli Cabinet Approves Release of 250 Palestinian Prisoners, Officials Say

[logo] Guardian Unlimited   more  xml  hide  
last updated: Sun, 08 Jul 2007 16:39:26 GMT

 2007-05-11T00:00+00:00 'I did what I thought was right'
Blair to step down on June 27.
 2007-05-11T00:00+00:00 CCTV boosts search for kidnap girl
British-registered vehicle gives police new lead.
 2007-05-11T00:00+00:00 Andrew Marr on curling up with a good ebook
Andrew Marr - who treasures his smelly, beautiful library of real books - roadtests one of the new gadgets.

[logo] CNN.com   more  xml  hide  
last updated: Sun, 08 Jul 2007 16:46:06 GMT

 Sun, 08 Jul 2007 10:33:16 EDT Seven new wonders named
The new seven wonders of the world were named Saturday following an online vote that generated server-crushing traffic in its final hours. Organizers said more than 90 million votes had been cast for 21 sites.

 Sun, 08 Jul 2007 10:31:35 EDT Wildfires force hundreds to evacuate
Read full story for latest details.

 Sun, 08 Jul 2007 11:05:56 EDT 27 killed in Baghdad area attacks
Two Baghdad car bombs exploded in quick succession Sunday morning, killing nine people and wounding 15 others, Iraq's Interior Ministry said.


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