1 September 2010: Morning
By The Morning News
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In the past seven years, life for Iraqis has gone from oppressed--but unambiguous--to chaotic and now, apprehensive.
As some mosques invite F.B.I. agents to prayer services, Muslim leaders wonder if protection could be mistaken for surveillance.
It's September, the numbers are in, and it was officially New York's hottest summer.
N.A.S.A. recommends survival techniques for the Chilean miners: Make friends, but avoid cliques; allow privacy, but watch for loners.
Darius McCollum, who's been commandeering subway trains since 1981, is arrested at the wheel of a Trailways bus.
Darius never curses. Excerpts from Jeff Tietz's 2002 Harper's profile of McCollum.
The new legal bounty: suing companies for marking products with expired patent numbers--a common malpractice.
Early-early-morning newscasts compete for advertising worms, as WPIX in New York resets its alarm to 4 a.m.
In 1980, 500 people collapsed without warning; people have debated the cause ever since.
As people age, they repeat the same stories because they forget who they told them to.
Related: Complaints about younger generations brew feelings of confidence.
Since giving the finger doesn't mean much anymore, people are doing it more often.
Op: Now that McDonald's offers free Wi-Fi, offering free Wi-Fi isn't hip anymore.