9 June 2011: Morning
By The Morning News
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Struggling against an economic downturn, Japanese laborers head to Fukushima in search of work.
Klosterman on the quintessential sports underdog story: a team that started with five, ended with three, and won.
Yosemite National Park prepares for summer visitors by blasting away the last remnants of winter.
"Medicine freezes solid, tubing snaps in the icy winds, batteries die--nothing is predictable." Meet Luanne Freer, Mt. Everest's ER doc.
In 1861, weeks after Fort Sumter, a Union commander gave a gun to a black man, who then led troops into battle.
Made of vinegar and molasses, switchel is a "proto-Gatorade" once enjoyed by hard-working American colonists.
Teddy Roosevelt, for instance, was a big fan of photographing his penis, and would pose for hours at a time.
"Oh. OK. So it's not accurate to call it a G spot." Fact checking for Cosmo.
China's cultural divide is alive and well on the internet--and neither side sees the web the same way.
A defense of boredom: a surprisingly new emotion that only comes with comfort.
Super-exclusive Bilderberg club has conspiracy theorists fearing world takeover by the rich and famous.