I regularly have newsletters in english! who would like to read in english or english-americain? these are the links:
1- Slate Magazine (newsletters@letters.slate.com)
and Today's Papers is: Fallon Down here is the text:
Now playing: Slate V, a video-only site from the world's leading online magazine. Visit Slate V at www.slateV.com.
today's papers
Fallon Down
By Daniel Politi
Posted Wednesday, March 12, 2008, at 6:14 AM ET
The Washington Post and USA Today lead with the abrupt resignation of Adm. William Fallon, the top commander of U.S. forces in the Middle East. Fallon, who ran the U.S. Central Command, who had publicly disagreed with the Bush administration over Iran and Iraq strategy, issued a statement acknowledging that "recent press reports suggesting a disconnect between my views and the president's policy objectives have become a distraction." A profile in Esquire published last week in the magazine's Web site, said Fallon was "brazenly challenging his commander in chief" and described him as the only person who could stop a war from breaking out with Iran.
The Los Angeles Times and New York Times lead with the Federal Reserve announcing a plan to lend major Wall Street banks and investment houses up to $200 billion in Treasury securities in exchange for mortgage-backed securities. By offering safe securities in exchange for ones that have been difficult to trade lately due to uncertainties in the market, the Fed is hoping to ease the credit crunch and make these financial institutions more willing to lend. The surprise announcement sent the stock market soaring and it had its biggest gain in five years. The Post calls the move, which was coordinated with central banks in Europe and Canada, "the most aggressive step the Fed has taken to address the spreading credit crisis." But as the Wall Street Journal points out, the new effort "won't eliminate the root cause of the economy's problems: falling home prices and a mounting wave of mortgage defaults." The WSJ's world-wide newsbox leads with New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer ignoring calls for his resignation while his lawyers are in talks with prosecutors to avoid criminal charges.
To continue reading, click here.
Daniel Politi writes "Today's Papers" for Slate. He can be reached at todayspapers@slate.com.
I'll give you the second link next time as I have already read and erased everithing!
:sorry:
see you later mammy djaouida
1- Slate Magazine (newsletters@letters.slate.com)
and Today's Papers is: Fallon Down here is the text:
Now playing: Slate V, a video-only site from the world's leading online magazine. Visit Slate V at www.slateV.com.
today's papers
Fallon Down
By Daniel Politi
Posted Wednesday, March 12, 2008, at 6:14 AM ET
The Washington Post and USA Today lead with the abrupt resignation of Adm. William Fallon, the top commander of U.S. forces in the Middle East. Fallon, who ran the U.S. Central Command, who had publicly disagreed with the Bush administration over Iran and Iraq strategy, issued a statement acknowledging that "recent press reports suggesting a disconnect between my views and the president's policy objectives have become a distraction." A profile in Esquire published last week in the magazine's Web site, said Fallon was "brazenly challenging his commander in chief" and described him as the only person who could stop a war from breaking out with Iran.
The Los Angeles Times and New York Times lead with the Federal Reserve announcing a plan to lend major Wall Street banks and investment houses up to $200 billion in Treasury securities in exchange for mortgage-backed securities. By offering safe securities in exchange for ones that have been difficult to trade lately due to uncertainties in the market, the Fed is hoping to ease the credit crunch and make these financial institutions more willing to lend. The surprise announcement sent the stock market soaring and it had its biggest gain in five years. The Post calls the move, which was coordinated with central banks in Europe and Canada, "the most aggressive step the Fed has taken to address the spreading credit crisis." But as the Wall Street Journal points out, the new effort "won't eliminate the root cause of the economy's problems: falling home prices and a mounting wave of mortgage defaults." The WSJ's world-wide newsbox leads with New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer ignoring calls for his resignation while his lawyers are in talks with prosecutors to avoid criminal charges.
To continue reading, click here.
Daniel Politi writes "Today's Papers" for Slate. He can be reached at todayspapers@slate.com.
I'll give you the second link next time as I have already read and erased everithing!
:sorry:
see you later mammy djaouida