18 January 2008: Morning By The Morning News — 18 Jan 2008 Former chess champion Bobby Fischer dies, age 64; from 2005: "Bobby and me." Play-by-play clickthrough of game six of Fischer's 1972 world championship victory. Ross Perot "still has some scores to settle"--by the way, he's voting for Romney. CIA believes Bhutto was killed by the group led by Pakistani Taliban commander Mahsud. White House discredits 2005 report that states 473 days of government emails have gone missing. Yes, pigeons and rats carry disease, but perhaps not as many as expected--and sometimes they'll help clean the apartment, too. Among the responses to an article on what not to wear to a job interview: Women in pants are like men without ties. "It makes it look like we're a responsible business." New American Apparel ads criticized not for skin exposure, but for promoting immigration reform. Study shows over half of Hispanics in the U.S. "worry that they or a loved one could be deported." Curing one woman's musicogenic epilepsy: 10 grand mal seizures per day, and it's all Sean Paul's fault. Audio: The depressing outcome of a study on depressing news about anti-depressants: Articles with negative results are less likely to make it to medical journals. The other, lovely side to the thoughtful "Bra Mitzvah: Becoming a Man Through Lingerie." Kraft introduces new "Kraft Doubles for Couples." Michael Lewis on the unforeseen benefits of a vasectomy.