Public Death, Private Life- March 30, 2008 What should a newspaper print about a person's most private life in a story after his deathhttp://feeds.washingtonpost.com/~r/wp-dyn/rss/linkset/2005/03/25/LI2005032500838_xml/~3/26... When The Post Was Late to Church- March 23, 2008 The Post -- and some others in the news media -- came late to reporting on the controversy surrounding the Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr., Barack Obama's former Chicago pastor. The story, long there for the picking, touched raw nerves -- racial, political and religious -- among readers.http://feeds.washingtonpost.com/~r/wp-dyn/rss/linkset/2005/03/25/LI2005032500838_xml/~3/25... A Reporting Coup and Its Critics- March 16, 2008 A hard-to-get Page 1 story and photos from the mountains of northern Iraq, near the Turkish border, gave Post readers a rare and valuable inside look at the guerrillas of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). The March 8 package also brought strong criticism from the Turkish Embassy and angry e-mail from Turks and Turkish Americans, some of it driven by a Turkish newspaper.http://feeds.washingtonpost.com/~r/wp-dyn/rss/linkset/2005/03/25/LI2005032500838_xml/~3/25... The Outrage Over an Outlook Piece- March 9, 2008 Thousands of women -- including this one -- were offended by an Outlook opinion piece last Sunday by writer Charlotte Allen. Complaints flooded my in-box, letters to the editor, the comment board linked to the article on washingtonpost.com, and the blogs. Outlook editors thought the piece was humorous and knew it might be controversial, but they were stunned at the outpouring of outrage.http://feeds.washingtonpost.com/~r/wp-dyn/rss/linkset/2005/03/25/LI2005032500838_xml/~3/24... Immigration Coverage in the Crossfire- March 2, 2008 Readers who oppose illegal immigration often complain that The Post has too much sympathy for those living in the United States illegally and too little for those who oppose such residents.http://feeds.washingtonpost.com/~r/wp-dyn/rss/linkset/2005/03/25/LI2005032500838_xml/~3/24... |