23 October 2008: Morning
By The Morning News
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Imprisoned GOP strategist explains how he tried to rig an election.
Surowiecki: The American state that's the closest to a socialist paradise is, of course, Palin's own Alaska.
On commitment contracts and social pressure, the psychology of encouraging friends to vote.
With U.S. home foreclosures up 71 percent, Americans try and redefine where the heart is.
Op: Magaret Atwood on debt, sin, and the chance to remember old values.
To be confident of a successful scare, you'd lay some groundwork first. How to scare children, stock markets.
Roe v. Wade v. Bush v. Gore: Legal experts weigh in on the question Palin couldn't answer--what's the worst Supreme Court decision?
Video: Hollywood directors' attack ads for McCain, Sarah Palin meets Woody Allen.
They couldn't have popped into J. Crew or Ann Taylor? Palin's clothing spree matters because her public image relies on her not being a Neiman's shopper.
Where Obama's putting all those funds: owning the airwaves, practically removing McCain from the election.
Surely you remember that scene in Election, when Matthew Broderick's character tossed a couple of ballots in the trash bin and changed the outcome of the election? Yeah, that happens in real life, too.