On Monday’s NewsHour…

SUICIDE BLASTS RATTLE MOSCOW | Suicide bombers struck Moscow’s subway system Monday, killing dozens of rush-hour passengers. After a report on the deadly dual attacks, Jeffrey Brown speaks first to William Mauldin, deputy Moscow bureau chief for the Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones Newswires for more details on the story, and next to Miriam Lanskoy, senior program officer for Central Asia and the Caucasus at the National Endowment for Democracy, for insight on the groups that might be responsible.

FBI RAIDS MICHIGAN MILITIA | Margaret Warner reports on an alleged plot by a Christian militia group to kill police officers in the Midwest and talks to Paul Egan, federal court reporter for the Detroit News about the group members arrested by the FBI over the weekend.

THE WHITE HOUSE’S WEB STRATEGY | In the first in a series of reports on how political battles are being waged online, Ray Suarez looks at how the Democrats are harnessing the power of new media to reach voters and constituents, following President Obama’s presidential campaign on the Web.

OBAMA’S RECESS APPOINTMENTS | Over the weekend, President Obama made a series of recess appointments to administration posts that had been stalled for months. Judy Woodruff looks at the process and politics of the appointments with Norman Ornstein, congressional expert and resident scholar with the American Enterprise Institute, and Paul Light, professor of public service at New York University.

HAITI | Adam Davidson of NPR’s “Planet Money” tells the story of entrepreneurs surviving in Haiti’s largest tent city in the aftermath of January’s devastating earthquake. The story is the first of two reports produced in collaboration with PBS’ Frontline and National Public Radio.

Monday’s anchors are Jeffrey Brown and Judy Woodruff. Kwame Holman will have the day’s other top news and a look at Web features, including a preview of Ray Suarez’s series on Peru, space tourism and springtime on Mars from NewsHour Plus and a Global Post update on Venezuela. We hope you join us.

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