29 January 2008: Morning
By The Morning News
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The State of the Union is sunshine and lollipops--except for earmarks, which must go, and on which Bush was once silent.
Politicians respond, candidates stump along to Bush's "more of the same."
Democrats let their hair down on Bush's big night, Kennedys jockey for camera time with Obama.
Kathleen, Robert Jr., and Kerry Kennedy cut short the new Camelot, throw their weight behind Clinton.
Senate cobbles its own stimulus package, offering $500 to almost every American, one big headache for the House.
Germany announces plans for monuments to honor gays and lesbians killed in the Holocaust, murdered Gypsies; 75 years ago tomorrow, the Nazis took power.
New study shows that one joint carries the cancer risk of 20 cigarettes.
In the future, news may not be free--but it will be untethered. Drop the jetpack: how technology will really change our lives in the next decade.
When treating overweight patients, doctors can miss a true diagnosis when diet is their number-one prescription.
"In the stem cell area, we have a problem with truth in advertising."
Video: Children reenact NHL fight, injuries abound.
The inner world--and occasional conspiracy--of Amazon reviewers.
Grossman, seventy-one, the foremost English translator of Spanish-language literature, has reimagined the Latin American canon for readers of English.
Fifty years and 400 billion Legos later.