10 March 2009: Morning By The Morning News — 10 Mar 2009 Not enough Pakistanis have taken a stand against the Talibanisation of their country. Op: Terrorism, extremism left unchecked in Pakistan. The Institute for the Intellectual Development of Children and Young Adults developed sibling dolls named Sara and Dara, Muslim versions of Barbie and Ken. "Mother, look. I have made a doll from a small rock. I will call my doll Rockelle." Confessions of a Pilgrim shopaholic. In-depth look at America's evolving demography--a restless population drifting to perceived opportunity. There is a "green lining" to the global economic downtown: Pollution-happy factories are closing down. In praise of embryo-derived stem cell research--an explanation of the advances that lie ahead. Saletan: The danger of seeing the stem-cell war as a contest between science and ideology is that you bury these dilemmas. Potential baldness cure leads man to reverse position on stem-cell research. "We are trying to build Alexandria 2.0." Internet Archive founder tries to preserve the history of the web, archiving while Google collects. San Francisco riled by increasing frequency, cost of "counter-cultural" flash mobs. Surowiecki: Credit card companies try to shed their worst customers--but determining "best" and "worst" in credit terms isn't so simple. Video: Watchmen as a Saturday morning cartoon. A New York Times graphics editor's collection of map bloopers and other graphic accidents.