28 June 2011: Afternoon
By The Morning News
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Dodgers owner McCourt files for Chapter 11, snubbing Selig, who rejected a deal to pay for McCourt's divorce.
Op: The Dodgers are rich in the fingers of Nancy Bea Hefley.
How a forensic psychologist turned courtroom testimony into big business, severing families for financial gain.
A look at the intersection of medicine and criminal justice, where brain tumors can end in pedophilia or a shooting spree.
LA becomes the latest school district to give up on homework, counting it for up to 10% of a grade.
After a data entry error kills a baby, a look at how hospital technology has resulted in accidental injury and death.
Former mathematics professor to open a museum that will celebrate geometry's inner beauty.
"If this were true[,] adios theory." Online repository reveals Darwin's marginalia.
This summer in Manhattan: An hour-and-a-half lecture on evolution, performed as a rap.
Clear your calendar for 2012, because there's a heck of a lot of LARPing on deck.
Turn-of-the-century films of mundane British activities.
See also: "The Crippling Fear of Corriearklet" by Giles Turnbull.
A documentary--"essentially an 88-minute takedown of tort reform"--shows how a frivolous lawsuit is anything but.
Not even Norma Jennings could save it from mediocrity. Eating out at four of TV's best-known restaurants.
Inside America's amateur football leagues, where players get $150 a game and the halftime entertainment is musical chairs.