Archive for September, 2009
Best from the Sunday Papers
While Roman Polanski was the big story on Sunday, I don’t think anyone got the news into their actual morning editions. But below is what I found interesting from more than 100 Sunday papers across the United States this weekend.
…Fed bungled financial oversight
While it doesn’t actually sound like a scoop, the Washington Post uncovers proof that the Federal Reserve was looking the other way when it came to laws protecting the consumers.
…New angle in health care debate
Charles Lane, in the Washington Post, introduces a new angle to the health care debate revealing why the labor movement might not want to lend its support to the Baucus bill.
…Spies in the Southwest
The Santa Fe New Mexican had the most interesting story of the week with this enterprise piece on the various locations in Santa Fe where some of the most sensative nuclear secrets of Cold War were bought and sold.
…Fantastic foliage forcast
The feel-good story of the week has to go to the Boston Gobe with their scientific-based prediction for a particularly vibrant fall foliage this year. Let’s hope so, since leaf-peeping is one of the best parts of living in New England.
…Tune in, turn on, test again
Acid tests are making their way back into the laboratory, reports the San Francisco Chronicle. But not the kind Ken Kesey organized in and around the Bay Area in the 1960’s. These studies are more akin to the ones that studied the human mind that LSD was first invented to explore.
…eUnitary executive
The Arizona Star is one of a few newspapers to run on its front page an Associated Press story about whether or not the White House should have emergency control over the Internet in case of national emergency.
…Comedy connection
Abbot and Costello, Laurel and Hardy, Martin and Lewis, Akroyd and Belushi, Ferril and Vaughn. Now add Homer Simpson and Seth Rogan to that list of great comedy duos. According to the Chicago Tribune, Rogen is not only guest staring on the long running cartoon comedy show, but he also co-wrote the episode.
…Social marketing
Always ahead of the curve, in its reporting if not its actual technoogy, the New York Times reports on how social networking is changing how we market products.
…Race relations
The Kansas City Star has a great piece on how all the rhetoric can seem racist to some and just plain political to others.