Searching for Duke
After years of whispers in her Polish community, Anna finally learned the truth about her father. Then she went to Sri Lanka to find him.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_where to buy magnesium sulfate.
After years of whispers in her Polish community, Anna finally learned the truth about her father. Then she went to Sri Lanka to find him.
Aparita Bhandari Hazlitt Aug 2019 35min Permalink
From Kenya to Amsterdam to New Jersey, an industry collapses in a matter of weeks.
Zeke Faux, David Herbling, Ruben Munsterman Bloomberg Businessweek Apr 2020 10min Permalink
A guide to making sense of a problem that is now too big for any one person to fully comprehend.
Ed Yong The Atlantic Apr 2020 25min Permalink
When the FDA approves lab-grown human organs for patients, Dean Kamen wants to be ready to mass-produce them.
A trip to one of America’s quietest places and the guy who has dedicated his life to keeping it that way.
Kathleen Dean Moore Orion Nov 2008 15min Permalink
Confined mostly to tiny cabins as the pandemic unfolded, crew members struggle to cope.
Austin Carr Bloomberg Businessweek Dec 2020 20min Permalink
“If any of you are around when I have to meet my day, I don’t want a long funeral. And if you get somebody to deliver the eulogy, tell them not to talk too long.”
Martin Luther King Jr. Feb 1968 20min Permalink
Irving Kahn is about to celebrate his 106th birthday. He still goes to work every day. Scientists are studying him and several hundred other Ashkenazim to find out what keeps them going. And going. And going.
Jesse Green New York Nov 2011 25min Permalink
“That learning to cook could lead an American woman to success of any kind would have seemed utterly implausible in 1949; that it is so thoroughly plausible 60 years later owes everything to Julia Child’s legacy.”
Michael Pollan New York Times Magazine Jul 2009 35min Permalink
The subject of a child research experiment tries to get to the bottom of what happened to her.
Michelle Dean The Verge May 2015 15min Permalink
In 1995, the Chicago Reader profiled a little-known professor (and lawyer and philanthropist and author) who had decided to run for office to get back to his true passion: community organizing.
Hank De Zutter Chicago Reader Dec 1995 15min Permalink
For many immigrants coming through Arizona, it’s not enough to pay a coyote to shepherd you across the border. You also need to pay the ransom demanded by your kidnapper after you arrive.
Monica Alonzo The Phoenix New Times Aug 2010 30min Permalink
His wife murdered his mother, tried to do the same to him, and was prepared to orphan their 8-month-old child. The attempt left him blind. Then he defended her in court.
Alan Prendergast Westword Dec 2010 25min Permalink
A visit to Tokyo’s first co-sleeping cafe, where one can pay a set fee to sleep next to a woman in 20 minute increments, though spooning, being patted on the head, and a change of pajamas are extra.
Gideon Lewis-Kraus Harper's Aug 2013 10min Permalink
“Political argument has been having a terrible century. Instead of arguing, everyone from next-door neighbors to members of Congress has got used to doing the I.R.L. equivalent of posting to the comments section: serially fulminating.”
Jill Lepore New Yorker Sep 2016 20min Permalink
Over the past 15 years, three people have attempted to restore the humor brand to its former glory. What happened instead was direct-to-video movies, lawsuits, crippling debt, and two prison sentences.
Benjamin Wallace Vanity Fair May 2017 40min Permalink
The Nxivm initiation was supposed to open up a secret sisterhood. After giving up compromising photographs to the recruiter “master,” each woman was expecting a tattoo. Instead they received 2-inch brands that seemed to suggest the initials of the cults founder, Keith Raniere.
Barry Meier New York Times Oct 2017 10min Permalink
With key U.S.D.A. programs—from food stamps to meat inspection, to grants and loans for rural development, to school lunches—under siege, the agency’s greatest problem is that even the people it helps most don’t know what it does.
Michael Lewis Vanity Fair Nov 2017 50min Permalink
The largest crowdfunding site in the world puts up a mirror to who we are and what matters most to us. Try not to look away.
Rachel Monroe The Atlantic Oct 2019 30min Permalink
I cannot burden my family with worry, because to be a burden worse than not being family at all. Like everyone else, I came to the ballpark to get away from something.
Malt Schlizmann Deadspin Oct 2019 15min Permalink
“You have to ask for food. You have to ask to go use the bathroom. … [Kelly] is a master at mind control. … He is a puppet master.”
Jim DeRogatis Buzzfeed Jul 2017 30min Permalink
How the modern pig farm came to be.
Sujata Gupta Mosaic Jun 2014 20min Permalink
A Texas border town fails to keep up.
Katherine Boo New Yorker Mar 2004 35min Permalink
‘‘That’s something I don’t think I could ever do,’’ she said. ‘‘Send my only girl to another random country to live with people she’d just met. It had to be God that paralyzed Monica Fenty’s emotions so that she’d say, ‘Yes, go.’ To this day, I don’t know how that happened. But thank God it did.’’
Miranda July T Magazine Oct 2015 10min Permalink
“I faced death and all that shit. It’s my responsibility to come back and come back strong. It’s going to take more than a Walmart truck to take that gift away. I can’t wait to make you all laugh. Especially you, Mike. And I already did that today. So all is good.”
Michael Paterniti GQ Nov 2015 15min Permalink