27 October 2009: Morning By The Morning News — 27 Oct 2009 Ex-A.I.G. chief builds a competitor that may impact A.I.G.'s means to repay taxpayers. Interview with a man who trains rats to detect landmines. Dementia experts dismiss N.F.L.'s future analysis of players' cognitive decline. Numerical evidence proves Derek Jeter is in fact a horrible shortshop. A modern history of neuroscience. How a man built a replica of a Pan Am first-class cabin in his garage (see photos). A submersible boat can be yours for $165,000. After publishing his Law of Universal Gravitation in 1687, Newton devised a novel way to demonstrate his concept to the public. Other notable balloons. Writer visits a libertarian seastead off the coast of California, finds giant floating bubbles, soundtrack of New Wave hits. For this month's "Of Recent Note," tell us about the first time you saw a horror movie. Color photography from Russia in the early 1900s. Obama's war on Fox News is nothing compared to F.D.R.'s rage against newspapers in the 1930s. A graphic history of newspaper circulation since 1990 depicts unpleasant dives.