Published from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekdays, our headlines contain links to the most pressing, interesting, or odd stories and sites we find around the web.
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In today’s TMN Gallery, portraits of people who speak to the dead.
Small-town mayors speak of their ideas of Bloomberg.
Loquacity equals good leadership—and other myths about eloquence in politics.
The two largest suppliers of crude to the U.S. are Canada and Mexico, neither known as a belligerent terrorist haven. Myths about the oil habit.
Four things learned about economics in 2007.
Arguments for using the GDP to measure recession-ness.
Print for the commute: Pinker on the current challenges in mixing morals with realism and science.
Another case for printing: terrible details behind the MySpace Suicide Hoax.
In today’s Digest, Robert Birnbaum on Upton Sinclair, Tom Waits, and the week in printing materials.
Completely unrelated video: How to make tofu.
“I asked my mother, who is 80, whether she’d ever seen snow in Iraq before, and her answer was no.” On Friday, it snowed in Baghdad.
Stem cells and cadaver organs may lead to the creation of new hearts: rats now, humans in a decade.
Botox one day, stem-cell skincare and skull lifts the next.
Audio: From Botox to Joan Rivers, the ramifications of the Golden Globes ceremony cancellation.
Golden Globe winners thank the Hollywood Foreign Press, lament a victory without spoils.
“The world will end.” Jolie, Clooney, Day-Lewis in a roundtable on what will happen if the Oscars are cancelled.
They… felt an inevitable attraction. Twins separated at birth meet, marry.
Google’s in-house cafeterias, much-praised for their fare, have a food critic/software engineer.
Much praise for farm-raised abalone, delicacy of Thomas Keller and sea otters.
Bravo to premiere Real Housewives of New York City, including one Cobble Hill wife.
Walter Bowart, co-founder of the radical East Village Other in 1965, dies.