PARTING SHOTS: Judge shoots down Obama stem-cell policy

Here's our daily roster of stories that evaded full-on blog treatment:

• A federal court has issued an injunction against further federal funding for human embryonic stem-cell research in a rebuke to President Obama's guidelines on the issue. (Reuters)

• Texas Rep. Ron Paul has broken with his son, Kentucky Senate candidate Rand Paul, as well as most Republicans in supporting the proposed mosque and community center near Ground Zero. (CBS)

• The U.N. says the number of Pakistanis in need of basic shelter from floods has jumped from 2 million to 6 million. (BBC)

• An Iowa member of the Republican National Committee said today she believes President Obama is a Muslim, and that he said so in a speech in Cairo. In the speech, Obama actually said he was a Christian. (Des Moines Register)

• Members of the Mexican army claim they shot and killed a U.S. citizen in self-defense after he fired on them near the resort town of Acapulco. (AP)

• Scientists and park staff say the Grand Canyon is threatened by "factors ranging from climate change to mining to aircraft flyovers as well as management of the Colorado River upstream from the canyon." (CNN)

• The city of Minneapolis will pay $165,000 to seven people dressed as zombies and arrested in 2006. (Star Tribune)

• A copy of the Pentagon survey that asks 150,000 spouses about the repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell has been leaked. "Assume Don't Ask, Don't Tell is repealed. Would repeal affect your family readiness?" one question asks. (Politico)