Friday, July 3, 2009

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Today's Top Stories

Beaten Back, Iran's Opposition Looks To Reform From Within

By ANDREW LEE BUTTERS

Having lost the battle for the streets, those who lead the opposition to the reelection of President Ahmadinejad are now forced to fight on within the regime where the hardline security establishment is ascendant

5 Media Myths Debunked by Michael Jackson's Death

By BELINDA LUSCOMBE

Michael Jackson's death should have provided a blueprint for how new media has overthrown old. But what it actually did was shine a white hot spotlight on the myths of the current media landscape

Goldman Sachs vs. Rolling Stone: A Wall Street Smackdown

By STEPHEN GANDEL

Rolling Stone magazine calls Goldman Sachs a "vampire squid sucking the face of humanity." Goldman fires back

Afterbirth: It's What's For Dinner

By JOEL STEIN

My wife ate her own placenta. I had to watch. And then I had to write

Swine Flu in Britain: Nothing to Party About

By EBEN HARRELL / LONDON

Reports of 'swine flu parties' have British health officials warning parents of "seriously flawed thinking", even as the country shifts its policy on treating the pandemic in the face of the virus' rapid spread

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Swampland

By Ling Woo Liu

It's taken me a week, but I've finally found my 2002 Halloween photos. Yes, that's me in a "Beat It" costume cobbled together with my dad's old sunglasses.

Special Package

5 Media Myths Debunked by Michael Jackson's Death

Michael Jackson's death should have provided a blueprint for how new media has overthrown old. But what it actually did was shine a white hot spotlight on the myths of the current media landscape

Quotes of the Day

"I know a lot of people in the black community. I haven't heard that."
President BARACK OBAMA,
dismissing reports that African-Americans were angered that Obama did not issue a formal public statement after Michael Jackson's death
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Postcard from...

Tegucigalpa

Hondurans Take Sides and Hit the Streets

By Ioan Grillo

In the wake of the military coup that ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya on June 28, the country is split between those who support his return and those who are glad to see him gone. Now both sides are protesting in the streets

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