Things You May Have Missed (Sept. 26)

Sept. 26, 2003 -- Isabel. A beautiful name for a deadly storm, and we covered in depth, with video reports on ABC News Live, weather reports on our MyABCNEWS pages, and written and photo reports on the damage and destruction.

On the entertainment front: Much of our audience was very interested in the deaths of Johnny Cash and John Ritter. Today, in the unexpected death of Robert Palmer. If you don't know who "J.Lo" is, you probably won't care that she's said to be feeling "good" but not "great" right now about the situation with Ben. That was an exclusive, courtesy of ABC News Radio.

On the Iraqi border, John Yang got al Qaeda fighters to describe their deadly operations and why they consider the U.S. invasion of Iraq a good thing. And 9/11 continued to bring a lot of people to our special page, and to our video coverage, as well.

Plus, an array of human interest, useful info, and surprising news. Read on.

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Exclusive: Al Qaeda Organizing Attacks in Iraq. "The porous borders of Iraq are allowing foreign al Qaeda fighters from other countries to attack Americans." In exclusive interviews with ABCNEWS' John Yang, imprisoned al Qaeda fighters describe their deadly operations.

Bin-Laden images in video were two years old. By Christopher Isham, who heads our investigative unit, which writes our weekly note of investigative news, the I-Team Insider.

Sept. 11, full coverage. Audio, video, slideshows, terror tracker graphic, stories, analysis, more.

A tragic and yet heartwarming story:"4-Year-Old Girl Shields Younger Sister in Fiery Plane Wreck."

"Real-life War of the Roses."

Is it any wonder these mouth-watering recipes were among our most-viewed features? "Emeril's Recipes for Apple-Raspberry Crisp and Apple Pie."

And, after trying the deserts, you might try "Sarah Ferguson's Top 5 Stay-Slim Tips."

"Las Vegas Returns to Its Adults-Only Roots." This PrimeTime story was one of our most-viewed of the period. Check out the video, too.

And among our most e-mailed, day after day: "How MIT Students Broke the Bank in Vegas."

"Flag-Flying Man Could Lose His Home."

Our full coverage of Hurricane Isabel.

"Doubts Drag Bush Back Down to Earth." Original analysis of an ABCNEWS/Washington Post poll, only on ABCNEWS.com.

"Should Tires Have an Expiration Date?" World News Tonight on dangers you may not have known.

Cash and Ritter pass away.

Robert Palmer dies at age 54.

Exclusive: "J.Lo, Ben Working Things Out."

Taking care of stress: Two ABCNEWS.com originals:

"Qigong Anyone? Trying to Quash Stress."

"Stressed Out? Try These Techniques."

For the high-tech economy, happy days are here again, says Mike Malone, our "Silicon Insider", in his regular column.

"More than Terrorism." Mideast expert and ABCNEWS consultant Fawaz Gerges says what's going on in Iraq is much more complicated than the president makes it out to be.

These two stories, part of regular "Corner Office" feature, are for bosses who may have to interview people for positions in their companies. (Could another part of the reason they was among our most e-mailed stories be that job hunters also wanted a peak at questions they might asked?):

"Twenty-Five Great Questions to Ask During the Interview."

"Questions to Avoid During the Job Interview."

"Christian Goods Big Seller for Wal-Mart."

"How Can Brides Keep From Going Broke?" From Good Morning America personal finance editor Mellody Hobson.

Love those Sea-Lions. One of our most e-mailed.

If we have two incomes, how come we feel so broke? (Could it be because both of us are working?)

A rob-you-blind date, part of our regular Crime Blotter feature. Plus: "First the judge sentenced Marcus Washington. Then she married him."

We hope you'll enjoy these stories, find them informative, and useful. To subscribe to this e-mail, or manage your subscriptions, click here, our e-mail center. And you can view this note online, here.