Friday      
August 29, 2003

Bombing in Najaf

A top Shiite cleric is dead in a bomb blast that killed as many as 75 in Najaf, Iraq.

Indian Gaming and the California Recall

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Money from Indian-run casinos has become a key factor in the California recall election. The casinos are a major industry in California, and the tribes that run them have donated more than $120 million to legislative campaigns over the past five years.

Gay Divorce

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When the State of Vermont became the first state to recognize civil unions, gay and lesbian couples flocked to the state for commitment ceremonies. Well now back home, some of these couples are seeking a divorce and their finding untying the knot a difficult issue.

Loise Gluck Named Next Poet Laureate

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Louise Gluck will be the nation’s next poet laureate. Glick is a professor of English at Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts. She has published nine volumes of poetry and won the Pulitzer Prize in 1993 for her book, “The Wild Iris.” Louise Gluck reads one of her poems from that collection titled “The Red Poppy.”

Gas Prices: Editorial Roundtable

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Gas prices nationwide are at record highs, and this holiday weekend there are estimates that more than 33 million Americans will travel 50 miles or more from home, the highest number in nine years. Gassing up the car and the tourism economy is the topic we’re putting before our editorial roundtable this week.

Gillian Welch Sings Hard Country

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Around Nashville, singer-songwriter Gillian Welch is recognized as a purveyor of the “hard country” sound. Welch isn’t nostalgic. She says the best country songs can have as much grit as punk rock.

Videopicks

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Our film panel marks Labor Day with some of their favorite movies about work — Paul Schrader’s Blue Collar, the 1954 film, Salt of the Earth, and Norma Rae.

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Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Singer-songwriter Tom Rush. (Muffett/Flickr)

Ever since folk singer Tom Rush recorded his version of Murray McLauchlan’s “Child’s Song” about a young man leaving home, it’s become not only a concert staple for Rush but also a part of many graduation ceremonies.

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Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Nurses Fatima Guillen, left, and Fran Wendt, right, give Kimberly Magdeleno, 4, a Tdap whooping cough booster shot, as she is held by her mother, Claudia Solorio, at a health clinic in Tacoma, Wash. (AP)

Health officials in Washington have declared a whooping cough epidemic, but the down economy isn’t helping treatment and vaccination efforts.

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Friday, May 11, 2012
Mark Zuckerberg

Some Wall Street investors were rankled when Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg showed up in his signature hoodie. They say it’s a sign of immaturity. But Business Insider CEO Henry Blodget says Zuckerberg has come into his own as CEO, and Facebook is a great buy for people who believe in Zuckerberg’s social mission.

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