guardian.co.uk: The Guardian newspaper: Editorials & reply:
The appalling injustice done to wrongly accused Lofti Raissi (Secret files show UK courts were misled over 9/11 suspects, 23 November) of course demands an apology from Jack Straw and former ministers. It also justifies the payment of considerable compensation from taxpayers for sins perpetrated under the New Labour regime (Read More)
www.ft.com:
The sound of industrial activity may have returned but questions remain about how long the welders' torches will light up the vast sheds against competition from South Korean and China. (Read More)
FT.com - Arts & weekend, Film:
Returning to New York after a worldwide tour, the band dubbed by New York magazines as the definitive Brooklyn sound was virtuosic, if not brimming with energy, writes Emily Stokes. (Read More)
Gizmodo:
We've heard that just about anything could give you ED, so what to do when things down below just aren't working? You could pop lil' blue pills or you could go with something more reliable: Shockwaves to the crotch. According to research done at the Rambam Medical Center in Haifa, Israel, low-intensity shockwaves can actual (Read More)
The Guardian:
Few would disagree with Jay-Z's boast about being the 'best rapper alive' after hearing this gloriously epic albumIt was billed at the time as his swansong. During a playback at his Baseline Studios in New York, shortly before its release in 2003, Jay-Z was adamant that after this, his eighth album in eight years, he was re (Read More)
The Guardian:
It's not supposed to be this way. Carlos Marchena's not supposed to score and he's certainly not supposed to score the same day David Albelda doesSomething was rotten in the Kingdom of Navarre. Really rotten. Vegetable drawer rotten. A furry, greying blob wallowing in some unidentified liquid, stuck to the bottom of your fr (Read More)
www.guardian.co.uk:
Pessimism about a climate change deal in Copenhagen is not merited. Vitally so for developing countries, there is all to play forWaking up one drearymorning in Copenhagen (where I've recently moved to prepare for the upcoming climate talks in December), I was met with a barrage of headlines, mostly from US media, telling me (Read More)
BBC:
What kind of technology does the modern multimedia reporter need to master - and where is the boundary these days between the professionals and amateurs? Two questions I've been debating over the last couple of weeks with journalism students at the Cardiff School of Journalism, and with colleagues from other broadcasting or (Read More)
washingtonpost.com - Metro Business:
I was a toddler during the Apollo missions. They were very exciting to watch as a child. By the time I graduated from high school, an engineering degree really attracted me. And while the fields of aerospace and health sound very far apart, in terms of complexity and security of our country, they're...
. (Read More)
Gizmodo:
When Roku released their new HD-XR box, they mentioned that big new features would be launched in the coming weeks via software update. Now the Roku Channel Store is finally here, but it's awfully short on excitement. The Roku Channel Store is an open platform for delivering content to Roku boxes beyond the already-integrat (Read More)
The Guardian:
Until David Moyes can reassemble his top midfield, life will continue to be a toil for EvertonShapeDavid Moyes is in handcuffs at present. Denied his defensive holder Phil Neville, his wide worker Leon Osman and the left-footed balance of the recently introduced Diniyar Bilyaletdinov, the Everton manager opted for a cautiou (Read More)
The Guardian:
The credit crunch has changed everything, says the Archbishop of York. Now people are beginning to realise that there are more important things than choice and the free marketThis is not going to be easy. John Sentamu, the Archbishop of York, is all for pulling out of the interview the day before we meet. Whereas he want (Read More)
Comment from Times Online:
Poor Toad would howl in despair if he knew what the world was doing to his precious motor car. You will recall how the bumptious Toad of The Wind in the Willows, was spell-bound by the sight and sound of a “magnificent motor-car, immense, breath-snatching, passionate”. (Read More)
World News from Times Online:
If even a fraction of the stories tell the truth about how Iraqi football was run by Uday Hussein, Saddam’s elder son — the punishment for missing a penalty in an important match was said to be a sound whipping — they vividly illustrate the country’s ancillary sufferings, aside from the death and destruction of war. (Read More)