10 November 2009: Morning By The Morning News — 10 Nov 2009 Victims' families split whether D.C. sniper Muhammad's scheduled execution today will bring justice. Seventy years after it disappeared during Kristallnacht, a 500-year-old Hebrew Bible travels back to a Viennese library. How the current medical malpractice system is broken--and how in its disrepair, it's saving patients' lives. In Afghanistan, as winter--along with H1N1--sets in, officials worry they haven't dug enough graves. Loneliness: How Russians conquered math. The Germans have a word for when the severance runs out on ex-employees who maintain six-figure lifestyles. Hint: It's the word you dare not spell. A study shows high-carb and high-protein diets both shed pounds, though those who forego carbs also lose their good moods. The New York Public Library unveils its new, web-friendly, Thundercat-friendly logo. TMN's Paul Ford to emcee free Harper's reading this Wednesday in Manhattan. The U.S. military plans to expand its facilities in Guam, to the chagrin of local surfers. Japan angles to create solar power farm in space. Prototype of a space elevator garners big prize from N.A.S.A., but doesn't bring us much closer to space. The newly uncovered Beatles mix tape--with backstory--that proves the band never broke up.