10 January 2011: Morning By The Morning News — 10 Jan 2011 Op: Republicans didn't pull the trigger in Tucson, but they've stoked a firestorm of national anger that finally spun out of control. Last year, Pima Community College campus police responded to five "disruptions" by Jared Lee Loughner. Yet another divide in Arizona forms as the state defends itself against its own accusations. Belarus arrests prominent opposition couple after a protest in Minsk--government signals it also may seize their three-year-old son. Confidence is an evolutionary mystery that must toe the line between too little and too excessive. Professor puts shoes on sheep and monitors pig's food to learn about the evolution of our heads. In overcrowded Asia, the best restaurants hope for fewer customers. U.S. maneuvers to catch up to China's dominance in solar panel production--a new law requires Defense Dept. to buy American. As other nations prepare to claim new Arctic waters, U.S. doesn't have the resources to operate in an ice-free zone. See also: Like you, Anthony Doerr knows where climate change is headed, wonders if our children will grow up to be geoengineers. Doerr watches a luxury Idaho ski resort go dormant, later reopened by local homeowners. "Daddy and I are correcting the manuscript." The emergence and disappearance of prodigy author Barbara Newhall Follett. The latest victim in the war against junk food isn't Happy Meals or trans fat, but the cartoon characters splashed on the boxes.