23 May 2011: Morning By The Morning News — 23 May 2011 Libya teaches journalists how to report news without leaving their hotel room. Ahmadinejad accuses Europe of stealing Iran's rain, but we thought only China had mastered that skill. Willie Nelson's history of political endorsements: If you're a candidate, you don't want it. For years, Texas environmental officials have been directing staff to lower radiation test results on drinking water. In a case with no evidence and contradictory testimony, why are seven defendants pleading guilty to a "sex kindergarten?" Digging up the truth about the Confederate general whose family buried him anonymously in Brooklyn's Green-Wood Cemetery. Jon Ronson investigates the world of the mental institution, and the man who faked his way in. I'm not very flexible--all I do is think about is electronics and computers--which people think is a disability. Life as a free-range Aspergian. History of the rose, the most overly symbolic flower in history. New Yorkers: See Paul Ford talk about sex on Wednesday at Happy Ending. Linguists bicker over discovery of tribe that supposedly has no concept of time. Op: We get all worked up over privacy, but having "data commons" is an old idea that could change the world. California asks if $200,000 is too much to pay for a really good lifeguard. Interpretation of kosher law is often in the rye of the beholder. DC sandwich truck finds it hard to keep its rabbinical certification. "I got a taste of the system." What happened to the bro who got tased?