15 September 2010: Morning By The Morning News — 15 Sep 2010 Across religion, ethnicity and class, many terrorists have one thing in common: They're engineers. The Pope's impending visit to England sparks a lively business in papal memorabilia. Record numbers of lapsed Catholics in Belgium are rushing to the altar to "de-baptize." As France bans the burqa, other European nations consider similar laws to force integration. How Sharia law freed a Muslim woman, where American law failed. Human rights group prepares a reporter's guide on how not to get played by Ahmadinejad. (pdf here) Reporters party with: balloon artists and bug eaters. Tonight in New York: TMN's Rosecrans Baldwin will read from his new novel and answer questions at McNally Jackson. Reggie Bush gives up his 2005 Heisman under allegations of wrongdoing at (and by) U.S.C. When the name "canola oil" replaced "low eurcic acid rapeseed oil" sales went up. Corn industry wants to change "high fructose corn syrup" to "corn sugar." The many ways political candidates and their denizens employ cybersquatting to erode opponents' brands. From Nixon to Bush to Britain's Nick Clegg, how televised debates forever changed politics.