The Morning News
Headlines for 28 August 2008: Morning
"I think it is a demonstration of complete confusion." E.U. considers sanctions against Russia.
The newly independent Georgia inflicted a vicious war on its minority nations. Medvedev ops.
Obama's moment: made possible by M.L.K., made possible by L.B.J.
The new trend in cosmetic dentistry: teeth that aren't too white, and just crooked enough.
Feds arrest blogger for posting tracks from forthcoming Guns N' Roses album, may face fines, prison.
The war over library fines encompasses public shaming, Guitar Hero duels.
A Christian version of Guitar Hero--Guitar Praise--will soon hit U.S. shelves.
"Teenagers and their parents debated it for weeks. Every teenager was furious." In 1965, Israelis were denied Beatlemania.
Photos: In L.A., uprooting and transporting a Richard Neutra house.
Click here to visit The Morning News.Headlines for 27 August 2008: Afternoon
Obama tells the Journal his plans for Thursday night's speech.
Castro expresses "total solidarity" with Olympic referee-kicker, says he was right to be upset.
Gallery: Anti-U.S. propaganda posters from North Korea.
Video of Richard Dawkins reading his hate mail.
How to make your brain believe in a fake hand.
How law schools game the U.S. News & World Report rankings system.
A few details on how to build your own $50,000 walking beast.
People here seem to be happier with a little bit of middle management. How a dot-com CEO came to love some hierarchy.
Exhaustive though incomplete list of problems solved by MacGyver.
Dear Adobe...Why does Photoshop cost as much as a pre-owned small car?
Your new favorite fashion photography: The Catorialist.
Will Self's journeys up French mountains may prove he's the best blogger blogging.
Click here to visit The Morning News.Headlines for 27 August 2008: Morning
As Bush's final term winds down, so too does tourist, protest traffic in Crawford, Texas.
Dowd: The energy of the D.N.C. is being absorbed by those who lost, rather than the person who won.
If this is not the edge of the political universe, it is somewhere close. Interactive guide to Appalachia's relationship with Obama.
So how old are those Chinese gymnasts, anyway? Let's ask Google.
Michael Jackson duets to record a "modern music take" of Robert Burns's poetry.
We went to Jermaine's house and made s'mores and drank many, many Coca-Colas. Sarah Hepola's record recollection: Thriller.
As a child it tastes like: You know, cotton candy; as an adult it tastes like: Cotton root canals. And other tastes that evolve.
Click here to visit The Morning News.Headlines for 26 August 2008: Afternoon
Blogging from inside the "Hillary suite," i.e., "ground zero for the still-not-totally-over-it."
"I don't care about his beer, I care about his intelligence." Rednecks for Obama.
Did Rice's intimate knowledge of Russian society and politics fail her during the Georgian conflict?
Rice criticizes Israel after report says Jewish settlement construction has doubled.
The full story on Shai Agassi's plan to put Israelis into electric cars.
"When you meet a Muslim who says he's an independent, it means he used to be a Republican." It's a strange time to be an American Muslim.
Full explanation of Nicolas Sarkozy and Carla Bruni's various marriages and affairs.
Print for the commute: Reconstructing the Pentagon's decision-making process to shoot down a satellite.
The attractions of (neuro)anatomy in one of London's biggest strip clubs.
How neuroscience explains spirituality and out-of-body experiences.
Large collection of graphed networks.
Such a conceptual work can exist simultaneously in two separate realms. Artist Cai Guo-Qiang responds to Olympics fireworks controversy.
The book to read before going to business school.
Click here to visit The Morning News.Headlines for 26 August 2008: Morning
"Thanks for giving us Stalin." On the Georgian-turned-Russian dictator, and how Putin is resuming his work.
Dipping world economy forces Russians to kick their milk habit, Brazilians to stay at home.
Photos: The 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago, when desperation switched to violence.
Mercifully they realize I've no time to give autographs, and so they ask only the cast members. Woody Allen's diary from the set of Vicky Cristina Barcelona.
Op: Catcher in the Rye is no longer the book it was--why are we still teaching it?
In the Alps, a melting glacier reveals neolithic, Bronze Age, Roman, Middle Age artifacts.
A nice collection of 1970s packaging.
For followers of the Feltron Annual Reports, introducing Daytum, where you can chart the minutiae of your life.
Lynch delved deep into his box of oddities for this baffling minute of mind-wrongs. Cool commercials by movie directors.
Click here to visit The Morning News.Headlines for 25 August 2008: Afternoon
Story of how Biden's people pressed hard to get him on the ticket.
I'm a Republican. But we're supposed to serve the people, not the party. Schwarzenegger concedes taxes must be raised to solve budget crisis.
McCain receives Daddy Yankee's endorsement, misunderstands "drill here, drill now" message.
The reality of integrated markets is being underscored. The U.S. and global economies are falling in unison.
Gallery of startling German Beijing photos.
Graphically mapping all the sponsors of the Beijing Olympic. (See also: online course on graphic design history.)
Attention New Yorkers! Buffalo is the new Philadelphia.
Semi-scientific guide by Radar to the worst colleges in America.
Click here to visit The Morning News.Headlines for 25 August 2008: Morning
Biden wastes no time launching into his running-mate role, questioning McCain's originality.
"The American idea is not just an ideal, but a living reality." Biden's op to The Atlantic, last year.
A study of the strong, diverse literary heritage that guides Obama's words of hope.
Investigating the rapidly expanding world of graphic novels--via prose and comics.
Take part in this month's "Of Recent Note" feature: Tell us your hot [blank] of the summer.
"For young people, it's not great fun to join our office." In China, those whose job it was to assign Chinese names to Western athletes.
Strong showing in lack of Olympic spirit as taekwondo fourth-placer kicks ref in the face.
I am confident that I attended the Games of the XXIX Olympiad, in 2008; but I cannot truly say whether I went to China. Anthony Lane wraps up his Olympic fortnight.
Click here to visit The Morning News.Headlines for 22 August 2008: Weekend
When in China: Beijing's orchestration of the world's national anthems is a designer knock-off.
International Olympic Committee launches probe into Chinese gymnast He Kexin's age.
How con artists and imposters earn trust.
Study suggests the unconscious mind of an "undecided" person already knows what it will choose.
Fascinating and frightening: could blast waves be fueling a new breed of war injury?
Assessment of the latest books on global warming.
The new reason to quit smoking: to better prepare for your new face-lift.
If you believe all the Redeem Team talk, I have a genuine Redeem Team tankini to sell you.
Infographic of body parts mentioned in songs, broken down by genre.
Velcro. What a rip-off. List of the best jokes told during the Edinburgh Fringe Festival.
My father taught me to compliment people's shower curtains.
Click here to visit The Morning News.Headlines for 22 August 2008: Morning
Russia's Georgia pullout is "on schedule"--on the Russians' schedule, that is.
Print for the commute: Despite inevitable long-term problems, withdrawal from Iraq can be successful for both sides.
One reason the U.S. departure from Iraq is possible: the new assertiveness of Iraqi soldiers.
The Republican's voice was pitched slightly high, and that it remained flat, or emotionless, even while he was talking about sad subjects. An acoustic analysis of the candidates.
Video: A vast collection of U.S. presidential campaign ads.
Video: A history of celebrity computer endorsements.
"We are dancing naked on the stage of history." Five ways newspapers botched the web.
Click here to visit The Morning News.Headlines for 21 August 2008: Afternoon
Taliban-coordinated suicide bomb attack kills 60 at Pakistan's largest military ordinance plant.
Op: How air-conditioning is to blame for the rise of the Bush administration.
Ahmadinejad is so good for Israel, Mossad couldn't have done better, says former Mossad chief.
By maintaining the status quo, a different kind of apocalypse, the slow-motion kind, is now upon us. Writing from 2016, a futurologist reflects on his 2008 predictions.
Obama and Pepsi share some strong affinities--most strikingly, their logos.
How Jerome Corsi became the court bard of the conservatives, again.
Todd Levin finishes his video-game console series today; see all past episodes here.
The evolutionary advantages of wearing mascara.
The Lost Formats Preservation Society.
Protecting pacemakers from hackers.
Print for the commute: From 1978, profile of Ahmet Ertegun, the founder of Atlantic Records.
Celebrating last-place finishes at the Olympics.
Great Olympic moments on YouTube; Olympic village made from 140,000 cards.
Click here to visit The Morning News.Headlines for 21 August 2008: Morning
"I feel threatened from the East, and I don't regret the decision." Russian aggression changes Polish attitudes toward the missile shield.
New election poll shows candidates in a dead heat--Obama's six points have shrunk to three.
Michael Moore's six easy steps the Democrats can take to lose the election.
Cultural change of this magnitude doesn't occur until millions of people come to a consensus that it is needed, and it's not about race or ethnicity. Thinkers place Obama in the context of U.S. history.
Sullivan: According to the Bush administration's standards, McCain wasn't tortured.
McCain's official blogger continues to lambast Obama's Dungeons & Dragons demographic.
U.S., Iraqi negotiators reach deal: Troops will depart cities by next summer, Iraq in 2011.
The art of the con relies on the reflexivity and necessity of trust.
To me, that magic resonates strongly with my conservative nature. Opping on the politics of the Beatles' magical music.
Click here to visit The Morning News.Headlines for 20 August 2008: Afternoon
Lieberman to speak at G.O.P. convention, named as possible front-runner for McCain's veep.
Perfect for emailing to a relative--you know which one: Obama-smearing emails debunked.
Obama's half-brother found in Kenyan shanty, living for "less than a dollar a month."
Ben Greenman offer fragments from Edwards! The Musical.
India wary about losing Musharraf, their "one-man go-to guy in Pakistan."
Hitchens on Mailer and the 1968 conventions.
Dowd on the fantasy McCain-Clinton strategy sessions.
Losing weight the "evolutionary fitness" way.
Print for the commute: Assessment of the latest books on global warming.
National Geographic's "Map of the Day."
Photographer's angle on what it's like to shoot high-speed athletes at the Olympics.
Behind-the-scenes interviews from our favorite new reality show, Architecture School.
Click here to visit The Morning News.Headlines for 20 August 2008: Morning
N.A.T.O. issues warning to Russia; plans for joint U.S., Russian military exercises canceled.
U.S, Poland sign deal to place missiles 115 miles from Russia--to guard against Iran, North Korea.
Profile of Gavin Menzies, the revisionist historian who insists that the Chinese discovered America.
We could run our economy on sawdust, lawn clippings, and old magazines. How termites could solve the energy crisis.
"We have the stupidest bestseller list in the world at the moment." Britain enters a literary crisis.
The scroll-driven 1920s GPS, toe socks, and other inventions that never caught on.
Click here to visit The Morning News.Headlines for 19 August 2008: Afternoon
"August is a special month for ending dictatorships." Celebrating Musharraf's resignation in Benazir Bhutto's house.
Somali warlord talks about the next step in his career: running for president.
Op: We shouldn't let Russia pick each of our countries off separately.
Those who benefit from Russia-Georgia 2008? Defense contractors and their lobbyists.
Science Monitor starts new year-long series to follow the life of "Little" Bill Clinton.
Print for the commute: Taking the long view, we are running out of dirt.
Four-point evaluation system of this season's caffeinated snacks.
Graphic novel of fall fashion.
The ambiguity of "big penis book" is a familiar one in English linguistics. Linguistic analysis for the rest of us.
Studying the execution orders in a chameleon's program, and how that relates to Michael Phelps.
Click here to visit The Morning News.Headlines for 19 August 2008: Morning
McCain's 1973 U.S. News & World Report article claimed V.C. guards were gay, enjoyed beating him.
Tilting away from windmills: U.S. farmers discover the problems wind-turbines bring a community.
The road to energy autonomy: capturing solar power from asphalt.
John Irving loves it, Vonnegut hated it, Americans distrust it: the semicolon.
Walking in the sky, in the clouds, means a form of ecstasy...There's a truth in it... Werner Herzog talks with tightrope walker Phillippe Petit.
From the attic: Rosecrans Baldwin uncovers Herzog's diaries.
"Don't be evil," is put to the test every day. A look back at 10 years of Google.
Op: With films like The Dark Knight and Inglorious Bastards, evil has become post-modernized.
The man who added snaps to the cowboy shirt died last week, age 107.
Click here to visit The Morning News.Headlines for 18 August 2008: Afternoon
McCain: the confused, oil-backed, hot-tempered candidate nobody knows.
Challenges Obama will face in trying to flip North Carolina.
The real politik of reality TV when it comes to Elle editors.
"It is considered too sexy for us." In Malaysia, Islamic party pushes for cancellation of Avril Lavigne concert.
After family picnicked next to two dead girls, Italian Roma population asks, "why do they hate us?"
Print for the commute: Jon Stewart, the man America trusts most with their news.
"We have a subprime financial system, not a subprime mortgage market." Notes from the economic soothsayer who nailed the recession first.
The anthropology of YouTube: the ritual of Numa Numa, et al.
Gallery: Iconic 20th-century photos recreated with Legos.
Click here to visit The Morning News.Headlines for 18 August 2008: Morning
Musharraf announces his resignation as president of Pakistan.
Frame by 100th-of-a-second frame, Michael Phelps's photo finish.
"I don't know if I'd do it again. But I don't have to." Recalling Spitz's record-setting wins in 1972.
Also from 1972: when Mark Spitz visited Doonesbury.
It means watching live sports you didn't know you were interested in, played by countries you've never been to, at three o'clock in the morning. Anthony Lane in Beijing.
Neuroimaging study shows words can elicit sympathy, disgust as effectively as film.
[The booth] features an image of SpongeBob SquarePants saying, "It don't Gitmo better!" Coney Island's "Waterboard Thrill Ride."
Video: "Get Your War On," the animated series.
Click here to visit The Morning News.Headlines for 15 August 2008: Weekend
Russia: We'll be keeping South Ossetia and Abkhazia, thanks.
Fifty million Indian women missing due to “unresisting acceptance of female genocide.”
Antibodies may lead to protection against HIV.
Pressure on South Korean children to get into good universities leads to prison-like cram schools.
Dark inclinations are what make us endlessly fascinating—and essentially human.
What humans have in common: the love of storytelling, that flight simulator for social interaction.
Related: Ira Glass on storytelling.
When comparing human intelligence to animal brains, consider us a software upgrade.
Visualizing science, and watching scientists get pickpocketed.
You need to have an evil streak and be blessed with innate guile. Seeking: A good nemesis.
Where is Bob: Tales of an absentee manager. See also: The Line.
Click here to visit The Morning News.Headlines for 15 August 2008: Morning
Tales of fiscal folly are an acquired taste. A new documentary, I.O.U.S.A, is like a national-debt version of An Inconvenient Truth.
On Heavy Metal Islam: the new film about the growing legions of headbangers in the Middle East.
In TMN's new Digest, Meave Gallagher on SnagFilms, currently hosting Heavy Metal Islam.
Video: Some surprisingly impressive highlights from the U.S. Air Guitar Championship.
From vibraphone to kalimba to bagpipe: MIDI samples of 128 different instruments.
New census projections show minorities will be the majority much sooner than expected--by 2042.
A miniature Manhattan, built with balsa, sweat, and tears.
Click here to visit The Morning News.Headlines for 14 August 2008: Afternoon
Five years ago today, we were in the dark.
Avoiding the humiliation of impeachment, Musharraf is expected to resign.
Samantha Power examines the roots of Russia's wounded pride.
Clinton backers set to make some noise at Democratic Convention, presumably just for spite.
To trick someone with a photograph... you don't need Photoshop... all you need to do is change the caption. Errol Morris on photography as a weapon.
The view that everything is changing for the better is marketing propaganda--Google progressivism. In defense of nostalgia.
Julia Childs' first job: counter-intelligence.
Profile of Rick Warren, a contender to replace Billy Graham as "America's Pastor."
Your roommate's video games can lower your GPA.
Gallery: Drawing non-permanent "graffiti" on buildings with the One Laser Tag Per Child kit.
Click here to visit The Morning News.