17 November 2010: Morning
By The Morning News
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In Afghanistan, U.S. troops are systematically destroying hundreds of abandoned, booby-trapped homes.
If a country is going to be colonized, they're better off with the British than the French. How helpful was British colonialism?
British government apologizes for removing body parts from former nuclear plant workers.
Despite the government's best efforts, measuring collective happiness is a muddled game of cause and effect.
The atheist Palestinian blogger's identity is revealed, and the web reacts--petitioners send support, Facebookers call for an execution.
"On the Bro'd" is "every sentence of Jack Kerouac's On the Road, retold for bros."
More on content farms: Formerly homeless writer now makes $100,000 a year blogging about Bieber.
A sneak peek at Bergdorf's holiday windows, set to open later this week.
Related: In 2006, we sent then-intern Erik Bryan to scope the store windows and do all the holiday things one is supposed to do in the city.
British writers love a good walk (so does Billy Bragg, who likes his me time).
To prevent further injuries, safety inspectors will assess flying sequences for upcoming "Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark" musical.
Gallery: Annie Leibovitz shoots the "Spider-Man" cast and set.
Op: Film flops are agonizing but, more than almost anything else, they push the boundaries of art.