14 September 2009: Morning By The Morning News — 14 Sep 2009 It turns out Medicare already has death panels, and they stop paying for anti-rejection drugs after only 36 months. "The more [the public] learned, the angrier they got." How Obama's health bill is like Bill Clinton's crime bill. Big newspapers trumpet the H1N1 vaccine, but the calvary may already be too late. Breaking news, 20 years behind: Margaret Thatcher did not want Germany to be reunified. A year after the Lehman Brothers collapse, many wonder when the government will exit the fray. A new book explores how the Depression killed the corporate dream and ignited inner creativity. The strange story of a blind boy who became a master impersonator and phone phreaker wanted by the F.B.I. Philadelphia to close all libraries in October unless state budget is passed. Tennis-playing special effects masters posit how to make an actor play like a champ. I was dying to find something positive to say, and there was nothing. Why he will not read your fucking script. Attention, people of Earth: If you could just clear off one continent, we think we can keep unintended fatalities to a minimum. A battery-powered, Volkswagen-sized ocean robot is able to stay on the sea's floor for extended periods of time. Scientists levitate mice using superconductors.