2 October 2007: Morning
By The Morning News
—
Hersh on the administration's plans for Iran, and the world's shared anxiety about what Bush can do.
Hersh on Bush: "The president has accepted ethnic cleansing, whether he's talking about it or not."
New group Freedom's Watch, the neoconservative's MoveOn, has big plans to push for attacking Iran.
Op: One of the converted lays out the past, present, and future of neoconservatism.
New country-music hit has a message for terrorists: You can't hurt America by blowing up New York City.
Asia's almost-forgotten crisis: How Burma went from embarrassing disaster to serious security threat.
Thirty percent of Japanese don't have flush toilets connected to sewage.
Threats when food prices soar, U.S. aid buys less, and small farmers have little chance of succeeding.
Today's long read: How biofuels could starve the poor.
America's most popular diets rated for nutrition and heart health effects; Atkin's loses.
Farmers like me can complain about being misunderstood and ignored--or we can write the news ourselves. You have tuned in to my broadcast. Soil economics, produce news in the Ladybug Letter.
The economics of faking orgasm; economics and penalty kicks; on the lack of economics about strikes; former vice-chair of the Fed can't count his fingers.
Now that the Times archives are open, old articles about old faces: Updike, silicon valley, white collar crime, and hedge funds.
Some people see faces everywhere.