
A Jazz Age Autopsy
The lonesome death of Arnold Rothstein, notorious gambler, inspiration for the character Meyer Wolfsheim in The Great Gatsby, alleged fixer of the 1910 World Series, opiate importation pioneer, mobster.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Magnesium Sulfate Monohydrate Manufacturers in China.
The lonesome death of Arnold Rothstein, notorious gambler, inspiration for the character Meyer Wolfsheim in The Great Gatsby, alleged fixer of the 1910 World Series, opiate importation pioneer, mobster.
Nick Tosches Vanity Fair May 2005 40min Permalink
Atul Gawande’s recent commencement address at Stanford’s School of Medicine graduation. “Each of you is now an expert. Congratulations. So why—in your heart of hearts—do you not quite feel that way?”
Atul Gawande New Yorker Jun 2010 10min Permalink
In July 2008, the director of a Denver non-profit received a package containing house keys, a will, a $100,000 check and what appeared to be a suicide note. She didn’t go to the bank–or to the cops.
Alan Prendergast Westword May 2009 25min Permalink
One of the founders of Google discovered that he carried a gene that meant a 50% chance of developing Parkinson’s. In response, he is working to change and expedite the way that Parkinson’s research is conducted.
Thomas Goetz Wired Jun 2010 30min Permalink
When the Internet made plagiarism harder, Jordan Kavoosi saw a burgeoning market for original essays. But in his empire of fake papers, it’s the writers, not the students, who get the shaft.
Andy Mannix City Pages Jun 2010 10min Permalink
On January 1st, 2011, the U.S. estate tax will jump from zero to around 50%, which gives a lot of very rich elders (or perhaps more accurately, their heirs) millions of dollars in incentive to expedite death.
The story of the “Barefoot Bandit,” a teenage fugitive on the run.
When one of the best young chemists in the world took his own life, Harvard was forced to reconsider the relationship between PhD students and their (often Nobel Prize-winning) advisers.
Stephen S. Hall New York Times Magazine Nov 1998 25min Permalink
In the British sport of “ferret legging,” underwear-less competitors tie their trousers at the ankles, stuff a pair of the carnivores down there, and hold on for as long as possible. Reg Mellor is the world’s best.
Donald Katz Outside Oct 1987 10min Permalink
Movies about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have failed to connect with viewers, but video games on the topic have broken sales records.
The relative prosperity of the Putin-era has thrown Russian bride-introduction tours for a loop, as a group of American bachelors learn in a series of Meet and Greets.
Peter Savodnik GQ Apr 2008 15min Permalink
An interview with Michael Maren, who spent nearly twenty years working in Africa as an aid worker and then a journalist, on why NGOs and “feed an African child” charities do more harm than good.
Michael Maren, Stephen Hubbell Might Magazine Mar 1997 20min Permalink
For the last two decades, the varied personalities behind the Vidocq Society—retired cops, sketch artists, FBI agents—have gathered in Philadelphia to tackled cold-case homicides over lunch. They claim to have solved more than half.
Adam Higginbotham The Telegraph Nov 2008 15min Permalink
An interview with Douglas Hofstadter, who after winning the Pulitzer for Gödel, Escher, Bach retreated into the lab and published only sparingly in technical journals, on what it would mean if a program could generate humor and/or masterful compositions.
Douglas Hofstadter, Kevin Kelly Wired Nov 1995 10min Permalink
The cop says she nabbed an online sexual predator. He says he was just willing to chat whatever it took to get laid in real life. Their story, from both perspectives.
Mark Bowden Vanity Fair Dec 2009 35min Permalink
Arnold Weiss escaped Germany as a kid in 1938, leaving his family behind. He returned seven years later, now a U.S. intelligence officer tasked with tracking down fugitive Nazis. The ultimate revenge story.
Matthew Brzezinski Washington Post Jul 2005 35min Permalink
Money from relatives abroad, the lifeline for many Afghani’s, moves primarily through small hawala</em exchanges, which shift currency through cellphones, fax lines, and trust. When money moves in Afghanistan, however, connections to the heroin trade and terrorist groups are never far.
Kara Platoni East Bay Express Oct 2003 25min Permalink
In 2006, seven men stole £53m. Six were caught, but more than half the money remains at large. On modern money laundering best practices.
Sam Kinght The Financial Times Feb 2011 15min Permalink
On photographing the former Norma Jeane Mortenson. “I think she was the best light comedienne we have in films today, and anyone will tell you that the toughest of acting styles is light comedy.”—Billy Wilder
Larry McMurtry New York Review of Books Mar 2011 10min Permalink
A profile of Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, the Malibu-dwelling, “fantastically corrupt” dictator-in-waiting of Equatorial Guinea. Teodorin, as his friends call him, is considered by U.S. intelligence to be “an unstable, reckless idiot.”
Ken Silverstein Foreign Policy Mar 2011 Permalink
First her best friend was murdered. Then her mother fell from a balcony. And finally a man she had just met was found dead in her house.
Jeannette Cooperman St. Louis Magazine Jan 2017 50min Permalink
Thomas Hargrove is building software to identify trends in unsolved murders that can detect serial killers that police never knew existed.
Robert Kolker Businessweek Feb 2017 15min Permalink
Sheryl Waldman lived a reclusive life with her sister, Lynda, in their family’s old home. Over the years she faded from view until she vanished, and no one seemed to notice—until one cold evening last December.
Patricia Wen Boston Globe Mar 2017 20min Permalink
South Florida is being overrun with cane toads, which can weigh almost six pounds. No one knows why they are swelling in numbers or when their population growth will slow.
Ian Frazier Outside Mar 2017 25min Permalink
How Paul Tollett gets the world’s biggest acts to perform in the California desert.
John Seabrook New Yorker Apr 2017 25min Permalink