30 June 2009: Morning By The Morning News — 30 Jun 2009 The crisis in Honduras...is pitting Mr. Obama against the ghosts of past American foreign policy in Latin America. Op: Following weeks of political theater, photo ops, and a baited coup, Chávez emerges as the winner in Honduras. Six years and three months after the March 2003 invasion, U.S. combat troops withdraw from Iraqi cities. The court's decision...seemed to ensure much more litigation over the explosive issue of employment discrimination. The problem with philosophy: inherent racism. "It's a well-kept secret." The increasing incidence of height augmentation ushers in a weird new era of cosmetic surgery. Video: How increased life expectancy is making retirement an impossibility. We can attribute the human predisposition for sleeping around (and in more extreme cases, raping and killing) to pieces of genetic code. Twenty visualizations that explore publically available crime data. New findings prove that our brains are constantly functioning on the brink of chaos. An interview with architect and editor Michael Sorkin, whose latest book came to fruition from walking around New York. From the attic: How to walk in New York; a walk up the length of Manhattan. Though Sonic Youth may not make hits, they've been remaking our culture for the past 28 years.