31 January 2011: Morning
By The Morning News
—
"The people advance as Mubarak starts his retreat." Egypt's Sunday front pages.
Wanting to avoid unrest, Syrian president considers his anti-Americanism a grassroots win.
Bush adviser says Cairo is proof his former boss was right about the "freedom deficit."
Preliminary counts from South Sudan show 99% voting for secession--with a 98% turnout.
"I saw nonsense, I saw lies." In Cairo, a jeweler's family protests together.
With a shortage of lethal injection drugs, U.S. delays executions.
Dedicated to finding life, observatory locates "Goldilocks zones"--where it is neither too hot nor too cold.
Op: The periodic table is trendy, but as a teaching tool it is chemistry's angel of doom.
Composer Milton Babbitt, who challenged the public's beliefs of the avant-garde, died on Saturday.
Babbitt's "All Set."
We take "working from home" for granted, but the phrase signifies a recent attitude shift.
In the world of sports reporting, "family-focused" recruiting serves as a cover for underlying homophobia.
"Whatever their private feelings, they made me proud to be an American." The gay Marine's husband.
You get one word and 60 seconds to write about it. Go.