The Living Disappeared
Argentina’s grandmothers are still searching for the stolen babies born in the dictatorship’s secret prisons.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Who is the manufacturer of magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules.
Argentina’s grandmothers are still searching for the stolen babies born in the dictatorship’s secret prisons.
Bridget Huber California Sunday Apr 2017 25min Permalink
On the Old Regular Baptists and the joyful sound.
David Ramsey Oxford American Nov 2017 30min Permalink
A Major League umpire learns that his children share the same deadly genetic disease.
Lisa Pollak The Baltimore Sun Dec 1996 20min Permalink
We recommended 1,453 articles this year, from 1,210 writers and 360 publications. They were read nearly 20 million times.
We recommended 1,198 articles articles this year, from 971 writers and 283 publications.
“Now Pynchon hides in plain sight, on the Upper West Side, with a family and a history of contradictions: a child of the postwar Establishment determined to reject it; a postmodernist master who’s called himself a ‘classicist’; a workaholic stoner; a polymath who revels in dirty puns; a literary outsider who’s married to a literary agent; a scourge of capitalism who sent his son to private school and lives in a $1.7 million prewar classic six.”
Boris Kachka New York Aug 2013 25min Permalink
On internships at Disney World, where “labor is meant to have an almost invisible quality.”
Ross Perlin Guernica May 2011 20min Permalink
Danny Caldwell is openly gay. He’s married. And he’s against gay marriage.
James Ross Gardner Talking Points Memo Jun 2015 15min Permalink
A Kiwi entrepreneur is leading a revolution in recreational drugs: he’s trying to make them safe.
Maia Szalavitz Pacific Standard Mar 2015 25min Permalink
On Montana’s Flathead Indian Reservation, basketball is about much more than winning.
Abe Streep New York Times Magazine Apr 2018 35min Permalink
For one writer, “Hot Vax Summer” is a slow climb.
Talia Lavin Vice Jun 2021 10min Permalink
How PCC, once an inmate soccer team and now Brazil’s most notorious prison gang, coordinated seven days of riots throughout São Paulo using mobile phones.
William Langewiesche Vanity Fair Apr 2007 40min Permalink
Alberto Nisman accused Iran and Argentina of colluding to bury a terrorist attack. Did it get him killed?
Dexter Filkins New Yorker Jul 2015 40min Permalink
A month-long tour inside L.A.’s cultish world of wellness.
Rosecrans Baldwin GQ Nov 2018 35min Permalink
At work with Jean-Claude Carrière, screenwriter of choice for an entire generation of top-flight directors.
A profile of former Liberian president Charles Taylor, who was sentenced to 50 years today after being convicted of committing crimes against humanity.
Jon Lee Anderson New Yorker Jul 1998 25min Permalink
A blind man who taught himself to see, a killer obsessed with eyes, and how different animals perceive the world — a collection of our favorite articles about sight.
After losing his sight at age 3, Michael May went on to become the first blind CIA agent, set a world record for downhill skiing and start a successful Silicon Valley company. Then he got the chance to see again.
Robert Kurson Esquire Jun 2005
One killer’s creepy obsession.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly May 1993 55min
Daniel Kish had his eyes removed at age 1 because he was born with retinoblastoma, a cancer that attacks the retinas. But many people would never guess that he is blind.
Michael Finkel Mens Journal Mar 2011 25min
The perspective-bending art of identical twins Trevor and Ryan Oakes.
Lawrence Weschler Virginia Quarterly Review Apr 2009 25min
Captain Iván Castro lost his vision in Iraq, but that didn’t stop him from running marathons.
Brandon Sneed ESPN Oct 2012 20min
The allure of invisibility.
Kathryn Schulz New Yorker Apr 2015 15min
How 3-D images affect the eye, plus proof that viewers have hated the technology since at least 1953.
John T. Rule The Atlantic Jan 1853 15min
How animals see.
Ed Yong National Geographic Feb 2016 20min
Jan 1853 – Feb 2016 Permalink
Colombian traffickers have a new smuggling method of choice: specially designed submarines capable of carrying 10 tons of cocaine and covering 2,000 miles without refueling.
Frank Owen Maxim Apr 2009 15min Permalink
Here’s our complete archive of articles about con men, imposters, and scam artists.
In Cyprus with those who lost big by simply depositing their savings with Laiki.
James Meek London Review of Books May 2013 25min Permalink
Arno Smit bilked millions out of Tulare County dairy workers (and at least one wealthy widow). Then he disappeared.
Tessa Stuart California Sunday Jan 2016 25min Permalink
A trip to Japan and a glimpse of our automated future.
Gideon Lewis-Kraus Wired Mar 2016 30min Permalink
On children accused of sorcery in Congo.
Deni Béchard Foreign Policy Mar 2014 10min Permalink
Why “Father of Botox” Arnold Klein, whose famous clients once included Michael Jackson and Elizabeth Taylor, thinks everyone’s out to get him.
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Mar 2012 35min Permalink
After years of sexual abuse by a neighbor, a teenager takes matters into his own hands.
Maria Cramer Boston Globe May 2015 20min Permalink