Once a Pariah, Now a Judge
The life of Phyllis Frye, a pioneer in the fight for transgender rights.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which China companies manufacture Magnesium Sulfate for Agriculture.
The life of Phyllis Frye, a pioneer in the fight for transgender rights.
Deborah Sontag New York Times Aug 2015 20min Permalink
For decades, airlines failed to turn a profit despite having a monopoly on the sky. This year they’re expected to make billions. Here’s why.
Alex Mayyasi Priceonomics Nov 2015 10min Permalink
What the first-sale doctrine means for the future of copyright.
Doug Kari Ars Technica Nov 2014 20min Permalink
The best-selling young novelist lay dead in a trash-strewn cottage on Ireland’s rugged coast for over a week before she was discovered.
Cahal Milmo The Independent Jan 2015 10min Permalink
David Carr’s advice for the 2014 graduating class at the UC Berkeley School of Journalism.
David Carr UC Berkeley School of Journalism May 2014 20min Permalink
The young people fighting for democracy will be back.
Lauren Hilgers New York Times Magazine Feb 2015 20min 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
Even for a high-powered “A-Type,” living on forged documentation is an endurance test.
Max Abelson Bloomberg Feb 2015 15min Permalink
Lonnie Sue Johnson is an artist who can’t retain a memory for longer than a minute or two.
Daniel Zalewski New Yorker Mar 2015 40min Permalink
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In 1960, the average major corporation lasted for 60 years. Today, it’s done after 15.
Caitlin Curran was fired from WNYC for attending an Occupy Wall Street protest. The author explains why her boss was wrong.
Conor Friedersdorf The Atlantic Oct 2011 10min Permalink
How an up-and-coming Boston surgeon became best known for leaving a patient on the operating table while he skipped out to cash a check.
Neil Swidey The Boston Globe Mar 2004 1h5min Permalink
The making of the “five-thousand-page, five-volume book, known formally as the Dictionary of American Regional English and colloquially just as DARE”:
What joking names do you have for an alarm clock? For a toothpick? For a container for kitchen scraps? Or an indoor toilet? Or women’s underwear? When a woman divides her hair into three strands and twists them together, you say she is_____her hair? What words do you have to describe people’s legs if they’re noticeably bent, or uneven, or not right? What do you call the mark on the skin where somebody has sucked it hard and brought blood to the surface?
Simon Winchester Lapham's Quarterly Mar 2012 15min Permalink
A profile of Robert Caro, who’s been working on a biography on Lyndon Johnson for nearly 40 years.
Chris Jones Esquire Apr 2012 30min Permalink
How a group of men with nicknames like “Emperor” and “Spear Carrier” tipped the balance in South Sudan’s fight for independence.
Rebecca Hamilton Reuters Jul 2012 20min Permalink
Greg Ousley killed his parents and has been locked up for nineteen years.
Is that enough?
Scott Anderson New York Times Magazine Jul 2012 15min Permalink
Hipsters vs. Hasids in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. A skirmish over a bike lane becomes a battle for a neighborhood.
Michael Idov New York Apr 2010 15min Permalink
How the daily e-mail from Mike Allen, Politico’s star reporter, has become a morning ritual for Washington’s elite.
The Great Recession meant great things for Nick Popovich, who gets paid by banks to take planes back from hard-up millionaires.
Marc Weingarten Salon Jun 2009 15min Permalink
Brian Hickey, a journalist who was induced into a coma after being left for dead following a hit and run accident, reports the story of his recovery.
Brian Hickey Philadelphia Magazine May 2009 15min Permalink
The bloody, often surreal, fight for Kosovo’s independence was led by a man moonlighting as a roofer in Switzerland.
William Langewiesche Vanity Fair Dec 2008 35min Permalink
A profile of Jon Stewart, who’s now run The Daily Show for more than a decade.
Chris Smith New York Sep 2010 20min Permalink
What happened next for Harry Whittington, the guy Cheney shot in the face? Not an apology.
Paul Farhi Washington Post Oct 2010 10min Permalink
A tech neophyte looks for answers in Silicon Valley, “the last place in America where people are this optimistic.”
Devin Friedman GQ Dec 2010 Permalink
On the late comedian Bill Hicks, just as a performance on Letterman is deemed unfit for network TV.
John Lahr New Yorker Nov 1993 20min Permalink