Medora Goes To The Game
A father and his 9-year-old daughter watch Harvard play Yale in football.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Who is the manufacturer of magnesium sulfate Monohydrate.
A father and his 9-year-old daughter watch Harvard play Yale in football.
George Plimpton Sports Illustrated Nov 1981 Permalink
A writer embarks on a seven-year trek from Africa to Tierra Del Fuego.
Paul Salopek National Geographic Dec 2013 20min Permalink
Hollywood makes bad movies because “rotten pictures make money.”
Pauline Kael New Yorker Jun 1980 25min Permalink
How U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan murdered innocent civilians and mutilated their corpses – and how their officers failed to stop them.
Mark Boal Rolling Stone Mar 2011 35min Permalink
When they go to bed tonight, white people will be five times likelier to get a good night’s sleep than African-Americans.
Brian Resnick National Journal Oct 2015 25min Permalink
More than 500 Germans, including a former rapper named Deso Dogg, have joined ISIS in Syria.
Der Spiegel Nov 2014 10min Permalink
Designing your own narcotics online isn’t just easy—it can be legal, too.
Mike Power Matter Jan 2014 30min Permalink
Obama’s presidency may well be defined by whether or not he can curb unemployment. Step One: find a decent idea.
Peter Baker New York Times Magazine Jan 2011 Permalink
“There wasn’t anything normal about this.”
Matt Apuzzo, Michael S. Schmidt, Adam Goldman, Eric Lichtblau New York Times Apr 2017 30min Permalink
On former Knicks savior Stephon Marbury and his post-NBA life playing in China.
Wells Tower GQ Apr 2011 25min Permalink
How Edith Windsor fell in love, got married, and won a landmark case for gay marriage.
Ariel Levy New Yorker Sep 2013 30min Permalink
Minara Akhter came to America with uncertainty and hope. Then her husband, a Muslim religious leader, was murdered in a suspected hate crime.
Rahima Nasa ProPublica Sep 2018 15min Permalink
Tom Justice was once a cyclist chasing Olympic gold. Then he began using his bike for a much different purpose: robbing banks.
Steven Leckart Chicago Magazine Jan 2019 40min Permalink
A young British man was drawn to a white-supremacist group, until they started plotting to kill.
Ed Caesar New Yorker May 2019 Permalink
After two officers came to a Pacific Northwest community, longtime residents began to disappear.
McKenzie Funk New York Times Magazine Oct 2019 40min Permalink
What happens when SpaceX takes over your sleepy Texas town.
Rachel Monroe Esquire Feb 2020 30min Permalink
If something isn’t done now, antibiotic-resistant bacteria could kill as many as 10 million people a year by 2050.
Maryn McKenna Boston Globe Magazine Aug 2020 20min Permalink
Park ranger Paul Fugate vanished on an Arizona trail more than forty years ago. Investigators are still looking for him.
Brendan Borrell Outside Apr 2021 Permalink
Deer can regrow their antlers, and humans can replace their liver. What else might be possible?
Matthew Hutson New Yorker May 2021 20min Permalink
Flordelis became famous as a gospel singer, a pastor, and a politician. Then her husband was killed.
Jon Lee Anderson New Yorker Jun 2021 25min Permalink
Trump came out and took a lunch break, still being mobbed by cameras on the way in and out. On his way back in, I asked him how he would feel about getting picked for a jury. He paused, weighing whether to grace me with a precious sound bite. He turned to me and said, “If it happens, it happens.”
"I remember lying on my side, dust everywhere, and I looked down and saw my arms were split open and squirting blood and I had just two bloody stumps above my knees," said Marine 1st Lt. James Byler, 26, who was blown up a few weeks before Mark Litynski. "My first coherent words to my Marines were, 'Hey! check my nuts!'
David Wood The Huffington Post Mar 2012 15min Permalink
Matthew Weigman was blind, overweight, 14, and alone. He could also do anything he wanted with a phone. Sometimes that meant calling Lindsay Lohan. Other times it meant sending a SWAT team to an enemy’s door.
David Kushner Rolling Stone Sep 2009 25min Permalink
How one man helped get Vitamin D into milk, fortified food, and spurred our obsession with supplements.
Brian Alexander Cincinnati Magazine Sep 2013 25min Permalink
After Berkeley biologist Tyrone Hayes said that a widely used herbicide was harmful, its maker launched an attack on him.
Rachel Aviv New Yorker Feb 2014 35min Permalink