The Tragedy That Boston Forgot
The story of streetcar 393, which plunged into Fort Point Channel via an open drawbridge in 1916. Forty-six people were killed.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which are the china suppliers of magnesium sulfate heptahydrate for agriculture.
The story of streetcar 393, which plunged into Fort Point Channel via an open drawbridge in 1916. Forty-six people were killed.
Eric Moskowitz Boston Globe Oct 2016 Permalink
Mary Kuanen escaped the violence of Sudan only to live through her husband’s murder in suburban Denver. This is her life today.
Robert Sanchez 5280 Dec 2016 Permalink
A profile of Sir Dr. NakaMats, who claims to have invented over 3,000 things, including the floppy disk and karaoke machine.
Franz Lidz Smithsonian Dec 2012 1h Permalink
Why the head of Ringling Bros.-Barnum & Bailey hired a former CIA agent to ruin a freelance writer’s career.
Jeff Stein Salon Aug 2001 20min Permalink
The story of a risky management style gone bust.
Mina Kimes Businessweek Jul 2013 15min Permalink
A profile of the girls basketball team at Carroll Academy, a school run by a rural Tennessee juvenile court.
John Branch New York Times Jul 2013 45min Permalink
The saga of Naji Mansour.
Nick Baumann Mother Jones May 2014 25min Permalink
Vivien Thomas was paid a janitor’s wage, never went to college, and still became a legend in the field of heart surgery.
Katie McCabe Washingtonian Aug 1989 35min Permalink
The unexpected evolution of Olympic medalist Debi Thomas.
Terrence McCoy Washington Post Feb 2016 10min Permalink
On the dying city of Port Arthur, Texas, and one man’s fight to save it.
Howie Kahn O Magazine Sep 2011 20min Permalink
Inside the five-year (so far) production of the Ilya Khrzhanovsky film Dau:
Khrzhanovsky came up with the idea of the Institute not long after preproduction on Dau began in 2006. He wanted a space where he could elicit the needed emotions from his cast in controlled conditions, twenty-four hours a day. The set would be a panopticon. Microphones would hide in lighting fixtures (as they would in many a lamp in Stalin's USSR), allowing Khrzhanovsky to shoot with multiple film cameras from practically anywhere — through windows, skylights, and two-way mirrors. The Institute's ostensible goal was to re-create '50s and '60s Moscow, home to Dau's subject, Lev Landau. A Nobel Prize–winning physicist, Landau significantly advanced quantum mechanics with his theories of diamagnetism, superfluidity, and superconductivity. He also tapped epic amounts of ass.
Michael Idov GQ Nov 2011 15min Permalink
The low-key swingers of sleepy Amarillo, Texas find themselves relentlessly harassed by a militant Christian group.
Forrest Wilder Texas Observer Feb 2010 10min Permalink
An oral history of The Right Stuff.
Alex French, Howie Kahn Wired Nov 2014 20min Permalink
Robert Marbut is in the business of helping cities criminalize homelessness.
Arthur Delaney Huffington Post Mar 2015 20min Permalink
The ramifications of a U.S. company’s tourism operation on former Maasai land.
Jean Friedman-Rudovsky Vice May 2015 40min Permalink
The story of Olympic boxing hopeful Quanitta Underwood, who was sexually abused by her father as a child.
Barry Bearak New York Times Feb 2012 15min Permalink
On the complex nature of a presidential second term and what Obama would do if he wins one.
Ryan Lizza New Yorker Jun 2012 40min Permalink
A history of The New Yorker and its editors, from founder Harold Ross through Tina Brown.
William Stingone New York Public Library Jan 1996 15min Permalink
How Cantor Fitzgerald is bringing the principles of day trading to sports betting in Vegas.
Michael Kaplan Wired Nov 2010 25min Permalink
A profile of the late artist and author Norris Church Mailer, who stayed with her husband Norman despite his notorious philandering.
Alex Witchel New York Times Apr 2010 Permalink
When (temporary) cities swell; a short history of the Burning Man festival.
Nate Berg Places Journal Jan 2011 15min Permalink
He used to weigh 1,000 pounds. Now he has to figure out what to do with the rest of his life.
Justin Heckert GQ Mar 2017 20min Permalink
DNA evidence exonerated six convicted killers. So why do some of them recall the crime so clearly?
Rachel Aviv New Yorker Jun 2017 35min Permalink
The town welcomed hundreds of Somali refugees. Then a private militia decided to go “ISIS hunting.”
Jessica Pressler New York Dec 2017 30min Permalink
“Watching the cells populate, it rapidly became clear that many of us had weathered more than we had been willing to admit to one another.”
Moira Donegan The Cut Jan 2018 15min Permalink