4 September 2007: Morning
By The Morning News
—
Paul Bremer counters new Bush book claims, shows letters saying the president knew they were going to dismantle the Iraqi army.
In South Korea, notable résumé inflaters face exposure, ask adoring public for forgiveness.
Pentagon says Chinese military hacked into its network, caused a system crash; Chinese official denies the allegation.
North Korea says U.S. agreed to lift economic sanctions, remove it from terror list; White House denies the claim, but says if true, it would be a Bush victory.
Psychological research shows the more myths are repeated, the more people will remember them as true.
At the New Museum, artists draw personal maps of downtown New York.
Public smoking bans are soon to hit even Paris, but smoking is already forbidden at Le Musée du Fumeur.
London tube workers go on strike--New York taxis are planning one too.
New York writer, cabbie Melissa Plaut on why bolting that GPS into her taxi helps no one, not even the fare.
Commuting, partying, reviving friends on San Francisco's rare, all-night trains.
Bill Clinton sure can talk, but can he talk about Hillary?
"Maybe that's a narcissistic tendency." DNA scientist publishes his own genome.