21 November 2007: Afternoon
By The Morning News
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Twenty-five million affected by data leak in Britain, close to half the entire population.
Until the U.S. looks more seriously at the various threats there, Lebanese democracy doesn't have much chance. Why Beirut is not Tehran.
Why a Zagat review can be an appropriate way to catalog a relationship's death, by Noah Baumbach.
Catalog Choice helps you empty your mailbox of unwanted junk mail.
As previously mentioned, a former music addict explains what it's like on the silent side of life.
Celebrating No Music Day with New York bands, e.g., Soft, Vampire Weekend, Chief.
Americans only hear bad news from Africa, versus the success of Rwanda's coffee farmers; see also, Daily Good's positive news.
"Detailed report written after three months of work as foreign call centre worker in Delhi."
U.K. housing development for working "creatives" to be based entirely on cliché movie sets (see estate's plan).
Detroit protests being judged the U.S.'s most dangerous city.
How to clean DNA off a bloody knife.
Dominick Dunne on how Phil Spector "escaped a guilty verdict, for now at least."
Anyone who'd sell his lifelong right to vote should be deported. Half of NYU's students would give up their right to vote for $1 million.
Video because it has nothing to do with Thanksgiving: Natalie Portman learns the Soulja Boy dance.