9 December 2002
By The Morning News
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New York's currently: doing homework for the wedding
Top Iraqi General says they were close to developing bomb after invading Kuwait.
At least 13 men convicted in 11 NYC murder cases have had their convictions overturned since 1998.
Serbia fails to elect a president for the second time, as only 45 percent of the population turned out to vote, below the required 50 percent. Related: 21 percent of Americans in 1996 were 'too busy' to vote.
Despite the U.K. Culture Minister decrying all Turner Prize short-listed entries as evidence of Britain's dying relevance in art, artist Keith Tyson wins big prize with sci-fi fantasies.
Rooster-owners crank-called between four and six a.m.
Quick interview, good photographs: Twins, courturiers Viktor & Rolf.
10 songs for this week, with insufficient commentary.
For those outside New York, here's Times Square.
How to grow enough herbs for your restaurant on your roof in Hell's Kitchen.
Susan Orlean on the dead but amusing technology of party-phones.
Swell dresser Gordon Parks celebrates 90th birthday.
Interview with Alexander Payne, director of Election, the bard of Omaha. Related: Anthony Lane on Payne's new film, About Schmidt.
The Best Food Stuff of 2002.
Los Angeles opens Hollywood information booth, learns that tourists just want to see George Clooney in good weather.
Michael Shapiro on the state of magazine writing and the curse of Tom Wolfe.
Paper snowflakes for the holidays.