10 June 2009: Morning By The Morning News — 10 Jun 2009 The Pacific nation of Palau agrees to resettle ethnic Uighurs from Gitmo, fearing mistreatment should they be repatriated to China. China mandates screening software for all new computers--it's a "youth escort" program to prevent "poisoned minds." In a twist still unacknowledged by prosecutors, Jackson turned E-Gold for a time into one of law enforcement's most productive honey pots. Photos: Stimulus projects in motion across America. Some Japanese are facing a worse fate than laid-off Americans: working themselves to death. A look into the painstaking work of a biographer--and its impact on the biographee. Op: Lauding athletes as "the greatest" is unfair to their predecessors. Super repo man "steals back" planes, helicopters, cars for six-figure sums. Before you follow the health advice dispensed on Oprah, get a second, medical opinion. "How can you be sold out? It was just on Oprah..." The seven types of bookstore customers. Portion of the Manhattan High Line park has been opened, creating an elevated promenade between Gansevoort Street and West 20th Street. TMN's Rosecrans Baldwin's photo gallery of the same stretch from 2001. Over at the Digital Ramble, Baldwin explores the Venice Biennale by online means. How to gain entry into the Académie Française, the most exclusive club in Paris.