The Cartel Next Door
How prosecutors tied a brazen murder in an upscale Dallas suburb to one of Mexico’s most violent criminal organizations.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate pentahydrate in China.
How prosecutors tied a brazen murder in an upscale Dallas suburb to one of Mexico’s most violent criminal organizations.
Michael J. Mooney Texas Monthly Aug 2018 30min Permalink
More than 600,000 U.S.-born children of undocumented parents live in Mexico. What happens when you return to a country you’ve never known?
Brooke Jarvis California Sunday Jan 2019 15min Permalink
A collection of picks about the pills we swallow and the people who make them, take them and sell them.</p>
Richard Gere, AIDS anxiety and the search for the “Original Gerbil.”
The battle to contain the Asian tiger mosquito–one suburban, above-ground pool at a time.
Tom Scocca The National Sep 2009 Permalink
Clint Lorance had been in charge of his platoon for only three days when he ordered his men to kill three Afghans stopped on a dirt road. A second-degree murder conviction and pardon followed. Today, Lorance is hailed as a hero by President Trump. His troops have suffered a very different fate.
Greg Jaffe Washington Post Jun 2020 15min Permalink
He was fired from the company he helped create, YouSendIt. Then the cyberattacks started.
‘‘Just imagine what it was like to be him,’’ Walton added. ‘‘It was 50 years of him being 18 inches taller than everyone and having the brain that he had. Imagine being this jazz head coming up during black power. This is just a dude who has a different head.’’
Jay Caspian Kang New York Times Magazine Sep 2015 15min Permalink
For the first time, we’re including a Readers’ Poll with our annual best of the year list.
Click here to vote for your favorite three articles of 2015.
On bareback horse relay racing, a Native American tradition:
“It’s going to be America’s next extreme sport,” he predicts. “Compare it to Professional Bull Riders, PBR. Look how big that got—a million in prize money in every city they go to. That’s how Indian Relay is going to be in 10 years. I look for it to be at every track in the country by 2025.
Steve Marsh Victory Journal May 2018 25min Permalink
A collection of picks by and about the former editor of the New York Observer, who died Friday.</p>
As a right-wing terrorist cell went on a seven-year killing spree, did authorities look the other way?
Jacob Kushner Foreign Policy Mar 2017 30min Permalink
A filmmaker goes to court to fight the television commercial break.
Lillian Ross The New Yorker Feb 1966 1h30min Permalink
We ate in our own restaurants, stayed in our own hotels, and hired our own guides. We moved through a parallel Paris—and a parallel Rome, Milan, and so on.
The reporter takes a whirlwind guided bus tour of a Europe with a group of Chinese tourists.
Evan Osnos New Yorker Apr 2011 30min Permalink
On reservations, where policing hardly exists, bruiser-for-hire vigilantes are often the first choice for justice.
Mac McClelland Mother Jones Nov 2010 Permalink
After an election deadlock that held the country hostage for months, two former rivals confront Afghanistan’s patronage and corruption.
Mujib Mashal Al Jazeera Feb 2015 Permalink
Big-riggers who make sometimes less than minimum wage are locked legal fights with the unregulated leasing industry.
Alan Prendergast Westword Mar 2021 20min Permalink
After the 1919 Black Sox scandal, Ring Lardner, America’s first great sportswriter, walked away from the game.
Douglas Goetsch The American Scholar Apr 2011 25min Permalink
When the Arlee Warriors cleared an astonishing path to the state basketball championship, they brought healing to the community.
Abe Streep Esquire Aug 2021 30min Permalink
They were cousins who grow up in Raqqa amidst parties, beaches, even bikinis. They married ISIS fighters to protect their families, then became morality policers.
Azadeh Moaveni New York Times Nov 2015 Permalink
A collection of reporting from inside slaughterhouses, car dealerships, and an 1800s insane asylum.
Enhanced, castrated, and stolen—a collection of stories about the male member.
Love, Margaret Thatcher and a broken penis.
Jeff Winkler Awl Mar 2012 15min
The case of the disappearing penis.
Frank Bures Harper's Jun 2008
How Steve Warshak made millions selling “natural male enhancement” and lost it all.
Amy Wallace GQ Sep 2009 20min
Meet the medical men who made John Bobbitt whole.
Joel Achenbach Washington Post Oct 1993
In 1967, Dr. John Money transformed a baby boy into a baby girl. For decades, he touted the case as a success. It wasn’t.
John Colapinto Rolling Stone Dec 1997
A look at the foreskin restoration movement.
Laura Novak Good Men Project Jan 2011 15min
The story of soldiers who served their country and paid a horrible price.
David Wood Huffington Post Mar 2012 15min
Oct 1993 – Mar 2012 Permalink
Manic chefs, the first singles bar, and the secret to McDonald’s fries—a collection of stories about the restaurant business, at Slate.
An Oklahoma rehab center puts defendants to grueling, dangerous work in a chicken processing plant. They receive neither pay nor treatment for their addictions.
Amy Julia Harris, Shoshana Walter Reveal Oct 2017 Permalink
Artist Eric Bealer was living the remote, rugged good life in coastal Alaska with his wife, Pam, an MS sufferer, when they made a dramatic decision: to exit this world together, leaving behind precise instructions for whoever entered their cabin first.
Eva Holland Outside Mar 2020 20min Permalink