21 September 2010: Afternoon By The Morning News — 21 Sep 2010 Ciudad Juárez newspaper asks crime leaders for publishing instructions after intern is killed. Special report on the devastation of journalism in Mexico (see also: how Colombian media faced danger). Dismaying account of a presidential debate in Haiti, where candidates have no specific plans. Accounting for $100 million spent far in Meg Whitman's quest to govern California. Astounding color-coded segregation maps of 40 American cities. G.O.P. confronts sore-loser, established Republicans going rogue. Op: Barriers falling in our ability to control human evolution; main difference between us and chimps is we control their fate. "Cult of fun" is deepening and widening in international business, meaning much coercion. Insanity plea in a murder case has scientists arguing if caffeine drives people crazy. Related: In one morning, Elisha Cooper does 10 N.Y.C. cafés and 10 coffees. America's record of religious tolerance is spotty, from anti-Catholicism to institutional anti-Semitism. Holocaust denier David Irving leads tour this week of Poland's Nazi camps. Related: Deborah Lipstadt outlines her long fight with Irving for our man in Boston. RIP Leonard Skinner, gym teacher who inspired formation of Lynyrd Skynyrd. Profile of comic improviser as way into understanding how long-form improv comedy is performed. Long read: The comedy writer that helped elect Richard Nixon. Excerpt of Frank Sinatra book shows a waiter becoming the voice of an era.