By Andrew P. Napolitano
The president's men trash the Constitution to pursue antagonists
Rafael Nadal wasn't too worried about playing on a hard court Monday night.
"Any Day Now" follows the struggle of a gay couple in late-1970s Los Angeles to adopt an abandoned teenage boy with Down syndrome.

Former President Bill Clinton and current Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton arrived in northern Haiti on Monday at the head of a delegation of foreign investors and a crowd of celebrities to showcase the centerpiece of the U.S. effort to help the country recover from the 2010 earthquake.
"The Dark Knight Rises" stayed atop the box office for the second straight weekend, making just over $64 million. But it's lagging behind the staggering numbers of its predecessor, 2008's "The Dark Knight."
Zoo animals remain hot at the box office. Singing stars and Adam Sandler are not.
Zoo animals remain hot at the box office. Singing stars and Adam Sandler are not.

Google "Madagascar" and two of the top three results will not be the country that lies off the coast of southeast Africa, but the DreamWorks Animation movie franchise.
Circus animals and space beasts have lifted Hollywood to a huge weekend.
It's taken an animated trilogy about a gang of zoo animals to bring Ben Stiller and Chris Rock together.

In the comfort of the Silver Spring Arts and Culture Center, D.C.-area moms can hear a group of fellow travelers tell their own horror stories, bloopers and redeeming moments.
"Neighborhood Watch" will now be known as just "The Watch."
As superhero summers go, this one is truly super.
Kristen Wiig has had confirmed plans for Saturday night for the past seven years, but will her long-running reservation in New York soon be coming to an end?
Twentieth Century Fox has pulled early promotional materials for its comedy "Neighborhood Watch" in light of the Trayvon Martin shooting.
At the first U.S. Secret Policeman's Ball, American and British comics took turns on the Radio City Music Hall stage to showcase the foul-mouthed joy of free speech.
Speaking from Cannes, where the two New Yorkers are promoting the latest installment in the popular DreamWorks Animation franchise, Stiller says: "We've each been doing our own things, but after a while, you have that sort of shared history, which you really value."
"It was a long time ago," says Stiller.