28 March 2011: Morning
By The Morning News
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Self-restraint sweeps Japan--graduations cancelled, in-store jingles toned down.
Gates: Gadhafi moving dead people to simulate civilian attacks.
Ground report: "After 42 years of Gadhafi... Libyans don't know what their country is, much less what it will be."
Rebels close on Gadhafi's hometown, gateway of western Libya.
Op: Being a Harvard prof means never saying sorry, even when consulting for Gadhafi.
Gingrich's flop on Libya intervention may cost him presidential-candidacy points.
250,000 march on London's Trafalgar Square, demanding end to public sector cuts.
"Sultry Russian secret agent" now the face of Putin's youth movement, with her own TV show.
Bianca Jagger says she didn't ride a white horse half-naked.
Inmates tame wild mustangs for border patrol duty.
Geraldine Ferraro, first Italian-American candidate on presidential ticket, passed away Saturday.
Rereading Roland Barthes' grieving, curious book on photography as he searched for his mother.
Ancient Greek computer rebuilt with Lego.
Socialbots fool humans on Twitter; next phase has "waves of bots" infiltrating communities, followed by "swarms."
Examples of David Lynch's hair compared to art; Lovecraft monsters drawn by children's choir.
Oldie, goodie: Children design their own laptops, including a "friends" key.