August 6, 2007: Morning By The Morning News — 06 Aug 2007 A busy Sunday for Bush and a few lobbyists means the government will now have a much easier time snooping on your conversations. A month before presidential elections, opposition candidate beats government-backed rival in Beirut. Return of hoof and mouth in Britain blamed on human error. Spotlight turns again on de Klerk over what he knew about South African murder squads. Pentagon has lost track of 190,000 guns given to Iraq. Islamic belief, however simply or modestly it may be stated, is an extreme position to begin with. Reasons to believe Sarkozy's "Mediterranean Union" won't come about. Robert Ludlum titles for the 20th-century music lover. The value of the C.I.A.’s interrogation and detention program is impossible to evaluate. Inside the agency's black sites. Questions for a pilot after Brazil's "worst-ever" crash. Tragic event forces man to spend rest of life confined to office chair. Newark haunted by homicide, now with three up-and-comers executed in a schoolyard. The mystery of Douglas Anne Munson, aka Mercedes Lambert, L.A.'s unknown hardboiled master. Ballet may be a woman, but it's a man who makes all the major artistic decisions. Musicals performed in Second Life are perhaps not the future of the theater. Fifty must-watch web video clips. Blue bloods also have gas.