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Cunningham, Storch win key legislative contests Print E-mail
By Bill Smith and Robert W. Duffy, Beacon staff   
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 05 August 2008 )
cunningham.jpgUpdated 12:09 a.m. Aug. 6 - Missouri Rep. Jane Cunningham (right) won a hard fought race for the 7th district state Senate Republican nomination. The seat was held by John Loudon, whose wife Gina was trailing Cunningham. In another high profile state legislative contest, Rep. Rachel Storch cruised to victory over Michael Roberts Jr. in the Democratic contest for the 64th district state representative nomination.
 
Words from home: Newspapers Print E-mail
By Amelia Flood, Special to the Beacon   
Last Updated ( Friday, 08 August 2008 )

foreign100newspapers.jpgBookstores, libraries and newspapers provide new immigrants with access to reading materials. In the second of three parts, the Beacon looks at the newspapers that serve those new to the area and those who want to learn the language. The first was on libraries .

 
Initiative petitions win Nov. ballot spots Print E-mail
By Beacon staff   
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 05 August 2008 )

vote100.jpg Two statutory amendments -- one regarding home care, and the other concerning casinos and gambling -- will appear before Missouri voters in November, Secretary of State Robin Carnahan has announced. Carnahan said Tuesday that the two measures have been certified to appear on the ballot.

Ballot language in full text for the issues is available on the secretary of state’s website: www.sos.mo.gov/elections/2008petitions/08init_pet.asp.

 

 
Words from home: Libraries help new immigrants Print E-mail
By Amelia Flood, Special to the Beacon   
Last Updated ( Thursday, 07 August 2008 )

elged100.jpg

Bookstores, libraries, and newspapers provide new immigrants with access to reading materials. In the first of three parts, the Beacon looks at how libraries try to serve new constituents.

 
Heat puts a damper on voter turnout Print E-mail
By Bill Smith, Beacon staff   
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 05 August 2008 )

novoters100.jpg

As the temperature soars, the estimates of voter turnout plunged. The Missouri secretary of state had predicted a 31 percent turnout for today's primary election, but election officials in St. Louis city and county said the number could be closer to 25 percent. The scorching heat has kept some usually dedicated senior citizens at home. (Photo by Rachel Heidenry | The Beacon)

 
It takes a subsidy to raise a village Print E-mail
By Dave Drebes, Special to the Beacon   
Last Updated ( Wednesday, 06 August 2008 )

clark_street_cordish.jpg

It's been a long and winding road to Ballpark Village, with many miles yet to go. The Cordish Co. project is going to be looking for approval from both the city of St. Louis and the state of Missouri. And in politics, approval is spelled s-u-b-s-i-d-y. Will politicians balk -- or will they do whatever it takes to make Ballpark Village a reality? (Illustration of revamped Clark Street from the Cordish website)

 
The voters speak Print E-mail
By Amelia Flood, Kristen Hare, Joy Resmovits, Bill Smith   
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 05 August 2008 )

ethical100voting.jpgOn a sweltering election day in Missouri, voters arrived at St. Louis area polling places with chilled bottles of water, cardboard fans and agendas as varied as their backgrounds.  A man from Lake St. Louis said he votes against anyone who supports the war, in honor of a brother who was killed in Vietnam. A woman from Ballwin says she leans toward candidates who share her Christian values. And a man from the city, who said he wanted to shake up the political status quo, threw his support to "all the women" on his primary ballot. Polls opened at 6 a.m. and will close tonight at 7 p.m. Turnout appeared light, with little or no waiting at most locations. 

 


 
 
Primary campaigns wind up as voters decide who to support Print E-mail
By Robert Joiner, Beacon staff   
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 05 August 2008 )
voteprimary100.jpgU.S. Rep. Kenny Hulshof and state Treasurer Sarah Steelman wrapped up their contentious primary campaigns for governor on Monday with each arguing for the chance to take on Missouri Attorney General Jay Nixon, the presumptive Democratic nominee, in the fall general election.
 
In the game of politics, race card is an easy card to play Print E-mail
By Robert Joiner, Beacon staff   
Last Updated ( Monday, 04 August 2008 )

vote100.jpgLast week, Sen. John McCain's handlers suggested that Sen. Barack Obama was playing the race card when Obama described himself as not like "all those other presidents." As the general election looms, some political observers believe it will be difficult for the two candidates to avoid race since, for the first time, a major political party is likely to nominate an African American to head its ticket. The question is: Will the discussion take the high -- or the low -- road?

 
Evidence against Ivins called circumstantial; anthrax investigation criticized Print E-mail
By News organizations   
Last Updated ( Monday, 04 August 2008 )

Government investigators were still weeks away from possible charges against Bruce Ivins, the government biodefense researcher who had become the main suspect in the anthrax letter attacks of 2001. Some evidence points to Ivins, who committed suicide last week, but other key links are missing. Former Sen. Tom Daschle, a target of one of the letters, was among those who said the invetigation had long been flawed. Read the New York Times story.

Unique genetic signature of the anthrax led to singling out Ivins. Read the Los Angeles Times story. 

 
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Editors' Picks

  • Region
  • Elections
    • State propositions run the gamut: Same-sex marriage, animal rights, physician-assisted suicide and more were decided by voters nationwide on Tuesday. | AP/Washington Times

    • How they voted: A national exit poll shows Obama did better among women than men, better among young than old, better among Jews than Protestants. | New York Times

    • Democrats pick up at least 19 House seats: The gain builds on the 30 seats the party captured two years ago. | AP

    • Democrats gain at least five Senate seats: Several races - Minnesota, Alaska, Georgia and Oregon - were still too close to call on Wednesday morning. But the Dems appeared unlikely to gain attain a filibuster-proof 60 seats. | New York Times

  • Nation/World
    • Obama said to favor Eric Holder Jr. for attorney general: The former judge, U.S. attorney and deputy attorney general will be nominated if he can garner enough Senate support, sources say. He would be the first African American to hold the post. | Washington Post

    • Stevens loses Senate seat in Alaska: The Republican who was found guilty of seven felonies a week before the election was defeated by Anchorage Mayor Mark Begich, who will be the first Democrat to represent Alaska in the Senate in nearly 30 years. | Anchorage Daily News

    • Changes aim to ease holiday travel congestion: In an effort to clear space for crowded planes, airspace typically dedicated to the military will be temporarily opened to commercial airliners. | AP/Chicago Tribune

    • Lieberman retains Senate chairmanship: Despite his support for the GOP presidential ticket, the Connecticut senator -- now an independent -- didn't lose his position as head of Homeland Security committee. | Politico

 

Jazz with Jerome Harris

Video by Christian Cudnik

Jazz musician and educator Jerome Harris talks about the importance of teaching. See a larger version of this video and read a profile of Harris

Voices

  • In the News

    carter100jimmy.jpg

    In his much-maligned "malaise" speech, President Jimmy Carter spoke of a "crisis of the American spirit" and a Congress paralyzed by special interests. He warned that shared sacrifice had been "abandoned like an orphan without support and without friends." Those warning hold true. The United States need to come to terms with its lowered economic position and restore its moral leadership.

  • In the News

    suburban138chevy.jpgThe Big Three automakers may well be facing drastic, forced reorganization, but they do not have the same compelling case for a government bailout as the financial sector had. Business professor Anjan Thakor explains the difference.

  • Editorial Cartoons

    sstantis100transition.jpgThe presidential ransition still gets lots of attention, but the cartoonists are also looking at specific economic and social issues. Find the work of Scott Stantis, John Sherffius, Chris Britt, Marshall Ramsey and Mike Thompson inside.

  • In the News

    soa100puppet.jpgPosted 5 p.m. Mon. Nov. 17 - This weekend, nearly a hundred St. Louisans, many of them high school students, will travel to Fort Benning, GA to protest the School of the Americas. Among its graduates are some of Latin America's most notorious dictators, guilty of some of the continent's most savage human rights violations. Rachel Heidenry, who participated in the protest while a student at Nerinx Hall and Bard College, describes the experience and took the photographs that accompany the story and are in a slideshow at the end of the article.

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The Beacon features links to the latest work by the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.This Washington-based non-profit organization promotes in-depth international coverage of topics that have been under-reported, mis-reported - or not reported at all.

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