November 28, 2011: Morning
- Interactive history in photographs of recent uprisings in the Middle East.
- Voters line up in Egypt, beginning an election timetable that lasts until March.
- China has many female entrepreneurs and high-flying managers, though male attitudes about family haven't changed.
- Beijing graffiti advertises jobs.
- Drought in the South and roaring Chinese appetites find Georgia crawling with pecan thieves.
- Christoph Niemann reinterprets squash as midcentury design classics.
- Painter behind Coca-Cola's Santa Claus, devastated when he was fired, said farewell with Playboy's Yes Girl.
- Roundtable of top Hollywood screenwriters.
- Diane Keaton remembers having Thanksgiving with Grammy Hall.
- Thousands of Occupy LA supporters converge as a park is about to be cleared.
- Kamran Loghman, "who helped develop pepper spray into a weapons-grade material," disgusted by pepper-spray cop.
- Occupy protests to return even bigger and with a vengeance in the spring, possibly to terrorize the institutional left.
- Alan Moore on the V for Vendetta mask that's become all the rage for Occupy protesters.
- Further notes on Strauss-Kahn, the high-fiving dance, and the BlackBerry.
- Strauss-Kahn being investigated for allegedly having prostitutes flown to DC for entertainment.
- Airplane rules about digital devices lack sense—telling passengers to boot up simultaneously may be dangerous.