20 May 2011: Weekend
By The Morning News
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Obama deliberately embraces 1967 lines in opposition to Netanyahu; "strong medicine for the Palestinian side too."
Anti-circumcision measure--which would ban the practice for males under 18, no religious exemptions--makes ballot in San Francisco.
World's oldest monument has scientists debating whether religion created civilization, and not vice versa.
"Fervent agonistic" Maud Newton ponders religious fervor--and why the Rapture has to fall on her 40th birthday.
If you're about to be Raptured, TMN's Eric Feezell recommends a helmet before you try to rise.
Why Harold Camping is a pain to Rapture believers.
Putin rhapsodizes on his love for hunting, Hemingway, and good fishing places in Russia.
A look inside a Chattanooga museum dedicated to emergency roadside assistance.
Professor predicts that the internet, gas prices soon will lead to the car's demise.
Op: "Children at Play" signs are ignored, create false security, generally fail at protecting kids.
Why Nyan Cat went viral so quickly: It successfully combines every viral component.
What happened after the IT Crowd creator jokingly started a rumor that bin Laden was a fan.
Burgers from In-N-Out, Five Guys, and Shake Shack meet in a side-by-side taste challenge./p>
TMN's Jennifer Daniel tries her hand at branding lab meat.
Fugazi's drummer would sometimes do a roll around the drums, and not end with a cymbal crash but with the little ting! of a ship's bell.