20 November 2007: Morning
By The Morning News
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Flow of migrant money estimated at $300 billion a year, with 60 countries receiving $1 billion or more in 2006.
Bangladesh cyclone toll now estimated over 3,000.
U.N. to announce it's cutting the number of annual new HIV infections by more than 40 percent from last year.
Op: The mission actually has been accomplished in Iraq.
U.S. links Pulitzer Prize-winning AP photographer to Iraqi insurgency, leaving the agency to report on their own man.
Fashionable young Japanese swap roles, blouses, now that cool clothes are designed for the 125-lb man.
I don’t like brussels sprouts. Who knew it was genetic? One woman's story of studying her genetic make-up, now that it's cheap to do so.
Your SEED one-page genetics primer.
Print for lunch: The bureaucratization of psychological treatment, the greed of Big Pharma.
Anthony Doerr's review of new reasons to teach human history beginning with the cave.
Trying to find a sufficient definition, nevermind consistent source for face-blindness.
Why "fixed prayer time" for Muslims doesn't matter in outer space.
Fascinating story of Brooklyn's Slave Theater, fixed in Sharpton's mind, but falling apart.
Why are there fewer conservatives in academics? Possibly because they get fewer Ph.D.'s.
The many, the crappy, and the Beaujolais effect: the world's most overrated wines.
Even though the world's in the crapper, five reasons to be thankful this year.