27 June 2008: Morning
By The Morning News
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Citizens of voting age without an inked finger...will be regarded as traitors and subject to reprisals. It's election day in Zimbabwe.
Interviews with former Mugabe henchmen reveal young men motivated by the fear that they'll be the next victim.
Supreme Court rules rifle and pistol bans are unconstitutional; few changes are expected outside of D.C., but expect local litigation.
Op: Obama may not be able to sway the evangelical vote, but he's doing the work to lessen its opposition.
Pyongyang televises its sincerity, demolishing its main nuclear reactor's cooling tower.
Analysis: Bush reversed on N. Korea, but won't credit at home for the diplomatic win--likely the last of his presidency.
He had the grace of Gollum as he quarreled with his questioners. Cheney's chief of staff dragged, kicking into the sunlight.
"Part of the problem with perfectionism is that by nature, you're always failing." As Mad Men returns, a nine-year journey ends.
A photo tour of Olso's Vigeland Sculpture Park, where human birth, life, and death is set to stone.
After a daycare begins fining late parents, parents arrive even later--it became "another commodity they could purchase."
On managing 20-somethings and their needs.
Audio clips and stories from octogenarian working professionals.
Today is Bill Gates's last day at Microsoft.