18 November 2010: Morning
By The Morning News
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To critics, the Ghailani verdict--acquitted of all murder charges--proves terrorists cannot be tried in civilian courts.
From a 2007 interrogation, the Ghailani statements jurors didn't hear.
A stunned Jaimy Gordon wins National Book Award for fiction; a poignant Patti Smith wins for nonfiction.
Something in the straightforward nonchalance of Frank O'Hara says that he is willing to be gay in the same way that another man is willing to be a Democrat, or an Episcopalian.
As Crist prepares to pardon Jim Morrison, a look back at the culture war following the Doors' 1969 Miami concert.
Disunion: Tea-party revivalism was stirred up in 1860, too--once the real Revolutionary War figures were out of the picture.
N.Y.U. worries about student privacy after professor embeds camera in the back of his head.
"He lives by a philosophy that nothing is impossible." Ashrita Furman holds the Guinness world record for the most Guinness world records.
"If you say here's a little bit of the autobiography, but you can't see the whole thing for a hundred years, you're gonna sell a book."
Author Ted Gup reveals letters to his grandfather, "B. Virdot."
Nutria--you know, the "swamp rat"--fashion arrives in New York
TMN's Nicole Pasulka profiles Cree McCree, nutria-fur promoter and founder of Righteous Fur.