28 April 2010: Morning
By The Morning News
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Having mastered the nonstatement, Goldman denies wrongdoing.
Reporters say Obama's White House is distant, petulant, and hostile to the media (except the New York Times).
Op: Portugal isn't Greece, but what makes it different could be crippling under duress.
Scientifically speaking, financial reform will depend on people who can spot a red 10 of spades.
Following a CT scan, Stradivari's secrets to be shared with instrument makers.
Putin says he and Medvedev are just friends; Berlusconi wishes his marriages were equally friendly.
Photos from a debate/brawl in Ukraine's parliament (see video).
Afghanistan's "Talibansky" tags anti-war messages around Kabul.
There's nothing more interesting or more hopeful about America than its poetry. Confessions of a poet laureate.
Le Monde's selections from the past 29 years of French literature.
Story of the boy who didn't exist (officially) until along came a reporter, a librarian, and Facebook.
White-supremacist legal theories employed by black Baltimore drug dealers.
IPhone tour of Chicago mob sites, including still-running businesses; examples of hotel photo fakeouts.
Lunchtime read: Letter from the DMZ.
Corporate strong-arming, acoustic neuroama, and other notes from the dark side of cell-phone and WiFi radiation.