Wednesday, October 28, 2015

October 28, 2015


The Morning News http://ift.tt/1N7BM0z

In human terms, the accounting is stark. Deposing Saddam caused brutally destabilizing aftershocks.

Data breaches motivating corporations to hand over more and more responsibility—and sensitive information—to the feds.

Real estate speculator-to-president isn’t exactly a new path. George Washington’s wealth was almost Trumpish.

US students’ math scores fall—Common Core may be why, since it doesn’t teach some of the subjects tested.

University of North Carolina gets homophobic new president, courtesy of state Tea Party.

Before cars can drive, they must be programmed to decide who to kill.

VW posts its first quarterly loss in more than a decade, as the emissions scandal takes its toll.

“The story of a profitable species that survives in the ecological wreckage that unchecked capitalism created.”

Using astrophysics to determine whether real-time predictive technology is a boon or a trap for sports TV.

Plantoid is an artwork that uses blockchain technology to regenerate itself.

This week at TMN: A Manhattan wedding, a cancer scan, and the largest Atlantic hurricane ever recorded.

Fifty-three years ago today, a US airman’s conscience and a disobeyed order helped America avert nuclear war.

An empty canvas upon which to paint your worst fears. Visiting a haunted New Jersey highway with an empath, a ghost hunter, and a trove of memories.

Just in time for Halloween: Mysterious new tales appear at the Palmer Hotel.

The Massachusetts coast is home to America’s biggest witch hunt and the world’s largest black crystal deposits.










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