23 August 2010: Afternoon By The Morning News — 23 Aug 2010 People want to move to Singapore and New Zealand, get out of Liberia and El Salvador. Currently thriving, Lance Armstrong's foundation and its supporters face the unknown as a federal investigation looms. After two years of negotiations, Israel allows surfboards to enter Gaza. Right-wing Israeli groups conduct Zionist Wikipedia-editing classes. Burlington Coat Factory would like all publications to quit mentioning it in connection with the N.Y.C. mosque. Brief history of stoning: even under the Ottoman empire, viewed as a crude remnant of the past. Lunchtime long read: Wells Tower works in an Amsterdam weed bar. Writer investigates the mystery of cocaine tainted with a deadly cutting agent. From the archives: What to do when you're taken prisoner by a drug lord. Profile of Earth's most well-established isolated man: survivor of an uncontacted Brazilian tribe living in a protected 31-square-mile zone. See also: Life in the world of counterfeit sneaker fabrication. The Thousand, new novel by TMN's Kevin Guilfoile, to be published tomorrow; enter to win Kevin's illustrated notebook. History of humans' attempt to catch lightning. Frederick Forsyth, author of The Day of the Jackal, claims the N.S.A. hacked into his wife's laptop "and totalled all her lunch dates." Interview with the Chicago Manual of Style's principal reviser. Online-dating research provides the first real glimpse of people behaving candidly during matchmaking.