September 14, 2011: Morning
- Despite Ahmadinejad's promises of release, fate of U.S. hikers still rests with Iran's judiciary.
- After five years of incarceration, Chinese dissident describes treatment "beyond people's imagination."
- Mother of victim in London's 7/7 bombings suing News Corp over phone hacking.
- U.S. eager to avoid UN Palestinian statehood vote, prefers negotiations instead of wielding veto power.
- Claiming sickness over electromagnetic radiation, WiFi refugees take to a mountain radio-free zone.
- With few other career options, 5,400 congressional staffers turned to lobbying in the last decade.
- Learn your smartphone's dark side with a game that funds lobbying for conflict-free minerals.
- The quest for the Golden Nintendo cartridge and the birth of the video-game athlete.
- Takedown of the billion-dollar business of college sports, where ongoing scandals shake the myth of amateurism.
- National student loan debt is greater than credit card debt—defaults jumped sharply last year.
- Jiang Pengyi builds miniature cities in the rubble of Beijing's decaying, redeveloping landscape.