9 March 2011: Morning
By The Morning News
—
Yemeni police shoot at least 50 attempting to join larger protest group at Sanaa University.
Malta, with strong business ties to the region, delaying E.U. sanction-setting against Libya.
Arab women "massively" participating in current revolutions, determined their efforts won't be forgotten.
Smithsonian curator sent to Wisconsin to collect protest signs.
Notes from "Nuclear Security in Pakistan: Issues and Implications," about the future's most likely apocalypse.
West Africa, where peace is fragile, fears civil war spreading from Ivory Coast.
Proven: Old people more likely to run you over.
"Slugging," or, the opposite of road rage: where people cooperate to commute in D.C. for access to high-occupancy vehicle lanes.
Court ruling supports cycling's new antidoping program: biological passports that track blood values.
Chart: If you don't have a passport, you may have diabetes.
Google engineers slowly--actually, very quickly--approaching Babel fish: true simultaneous machine translation.
"You Are Listening to Los Angeles"--ambient music mixed with live police radio.
Music streamed from 469 artists on Bandcamp playing at this year's SXSW.
Better yet: Paul Ford's six-word reviews of 1,302 SXSW mp3s from 2009, same for 2008 (763 songs).
Researchers confirm almost everyone can distinguish between abstract art and art made by animals (quiz included).
Video: Kinetic wave sculptures.