1 June 2007: Afternoon By The Morning News — 01 Jun 2007 Fighting renews in Lebanon as tanks move in on a refugee camp housing Islamic militants. Video of kidnapped--and healthy-looking--BBC reporter surfaces online. His wife, Allyson, had joked that they should name their newborn "Exit Strategy." Bush's top aide resigns to spend more time with the family. Dr. Kevorkian is released from prison, reminding victim-patients’ families of their grief-gratitude. New Hampshire becomes the first state to legalize civil unions without threat of a court order. When airlines are ranked from most to least miserable, Detroit loses and Oakland wins. Airline executives worry that green passengers are losing their inclination to pop overseas. Havana AP bureau chief starts her month on Cuban meal rations. Today's long read: Günter Grass on how he spent the war. Eric Feezell helps a reader outsmart Adam Smith in today’s "Non-Expert." In terms of commenting whether they're accurate, obviously we wouldn't be commenting on that. Architecture firm posts U.S. Embassy Baghdad floor plans online. Policy wonks rejoice as debate roils over the confidentiality of Secret Service visitor logs. Is Fred Thompson too lazy to be our President? In today's Video Digest, Sarah Hepola reminds us why YouTube is King. Dali on Shirley Temple as "The Youngest, Most Sacred Monster of the Cinema in Her Time." Psychics and spirits make the best real estate advisers.