How They Do in Oxford
Race and Ole Miss football.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Magnesium Sulfate Monohydrate Manufacturers in China.
Race and Ole Miss football.
Kiese Laymon ESPN Oct 2015 15min Permalink
The changing face of Appalachia.
Chris Offutt Harper's Oct 2016 20min Permalink
The schism at the heart of cosmology.
Ross Andersen Aeon May 2015 35min Permalink
Most of the men were in their 60s and 70s, with heart conditions, diabetes, and replacement hips. They made off with millions in cash and jewels, only to give themselves up by not understanding how technology works.
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Mar 2016 30min Permalink
In January, the body of a 17-year-old athlete was found in his high school’s gym. The authorities ruled it an accident. His friends and family aren’t convinced.
Jordan Conn Grantland Sep 2013 30min Permalink
Rosario Crocetta is a reform-minded leader in a highly corrupt place that hates change. That’s only one of the reasons his life is in danger.
Marco De Martino New York Times Magazine Sep 2013 20min Permalink
How two brothers, born of the same mother but adopted by different families, reunited and used a stolen $50k to fund a ride that started in New Jersey and ended with bullet-ridden cabins in the wilds of Alaska.
Joshua Saul Alaska Dispatch May 2010 Permalink
When Japanese men in their teens and twenties shut themselves in their rooms, sometimes for a period of years, one way to lure them out is a hired “big sister.”
Maggie Jones New York Times Magazine Jan 2006 Permalink
Saudi Arabia thought a bombing campaign would quickly crush its enemies in Yemen. But three years later, the Houthis refuse to give up, even as 14 million people face starvation.
Robert F. Worth New York Times Magazine Oct 2018 35min Permalink
Richard Phillips survived the longest wrongful prison sentence in American history by writing poetry and painting with watercolors. But on a cold day in the prison yard, he carried a knife and thought about revenge.
Thomas Lake CNN Apr 2020 35min Permalink
As mass demonstrations against police brutality continue across the country, thousands gather in New York to demonstrate against generations of police brutality and racial injustice in America.
Tyler Tynes The Ringer Jun 2020 10min Permalink
The challenges of growing up in the modern world as the reincarnation of a famous Tibetan lama.
Tim McGirk The Believer Feb 2013 30min Permalink
“What transpired in the streets appeared to be a kind of municipal version of shock and awe.”
Jelani Cobb New Yorker Aug 2014 Permalink
Exploring the relationship between cats and the Internet in Japan.
Gideon Lewis-Kraus Wired Aug 2012 Permalink
Behind the tabloid story of the “murder orphan” in Queens.
Revisiting a 30-year-old beating death in St. Louis.
Tony D'Souza, Tom Finkel The Riverfront Times Dec 2012 Permalink
Spending time with the Tonya Harding Fan Club in the wake of the assault on Nancy Kerrigan.
Susan Orlean New Yorker Feb 1995 20min Permalink
A visit with Ai Weiwei, Laura Poitras, and Jacob Appelbaum, three people who live in justifiable paranoia of government surveillance.
Kashmir Hill Fusion 20min Permalink
In Guyana after the Jonestown massacre, with the survivors and the dead.
Tim Cahill Rolling Stone Jan 1979 45min Permalink
June 4, 1974: the first and last 10-cent beer night in Cleveland Indians history.
Paul Jackson ESPN Jun 2008 15min Permalink
Mikhail Khodorkovsky, oil magnate and once the richest man in Russia, delivers a speech from prison, where he has lived since 2003.
Mikhail Khodorkovsky The New Republic Nov 2010 10min Permalink
More than 15% of Detroit’s adults have asthma, and 82% of black students go to schools in the most polluted parts of the city.
Zoë Schlanger Newsweek Mar 2016 Permalink
Who authorized the bombing of a Doctors Without Borders hospital in Afghanistan, and why?
May Jeong The Intercept Apr 2016 25min Permalink
After a murder in the California wilderness, the search for the killer raises complicated questions about mental illness.
Ashley Powers California Sunday May 2016 25min Permalink
In the last year alone, over 150,000 people have risked their lives to leave.
Nicholas Casey New York Times Nov 2016 15min Permalink