1 December 2010: Morning
By The Morning News
—
Senate approves food-safety bill, which many believe doesn't reach far enough, but is better than serving poisoned peanut butter.
With Congress deadlocked on jobless benefits, two million people will go unpaid this month--a potentially serious blow to the U.S. economy.
With competing billboards near the Lincoln Tunnel, atheists, Catholic League spar over the meaning of Christmas.
The day after shuttering its Fiji facilities and firing all its workers over a tax hike, Fiji Water agrees to the new tax.
Consumer Reports releases its lists of retailers with "naughty" and "nice" holiday return policies.
"When it's hard to sell your home... it's hard to sell your snake ranch." Roadside attractions face tough decisions.
An exhibit of the "degenerate" art Nazis sought to eradicate, excavated from Berlin nearly 70 years later.
Among the Wikileaks: Fearing "thin-skinned" Sarkozy's ire, advisers diverted his plane so he wouldn't see the Eiffel Tower lit like the Turkish flag.
With speculation Bank of America is next for Wikileaking, its stock price dropped more than 3%.
Mr. Assange found a possibly more predictable ally--his mother...who runs a puppet theater in Australia's Queensland state.
Bullying isn't a "sticks and stones" situation, but one as neurologically harmful as domestic abuse.
Scientists reverse aging in mice--next up, humans.
Study suggests the T.S.A.'s racial profiling is less effective than if they searched random people.