22 November 2010: Morning By The Morning News — 22 Nov 2010 Scientist who helped develop body scanning technology says a software upgrade could silence critics. Op: Few Afghans know about Sept. 11--a sign it's time to forget about winning hearts and minds, and go home. He made millions of dollars as an entertainer in Las Vegas and on cruise ships. Chile's eccentric mining company owner. Report on television programs concludes mental illness is often portrayed flippantly--and characters are unusually violent. TMN's Mike Deri Smith pegs other ways TV gets it dangerously wrong: from drowning to venom sucking. "You can't transfer the twinkle in the eye to the page." Author Norris Church Mailer--Norman's wife and defender--dies at 61. Academics find Burning Man a hotbed for sociological research. Op: The fad of professors "caught on tape" does a disservice to academia by ignoring the story behind the clips. Tracing blonde hair extensions to their impoverished roots in central Russia. If newspapers depended less on advertising, a new book shows, people wouldn't believe the internet was killing publishing. By giving preference to state-funded newspapers, Google News could turn into a propaganda machine. Figures from Aristotle to Einstein have been fascinated by the fundamental debate over nothingness.