The Murders Down the Hall
393 Powell Street was a peaceful home until residents started dying in brutal, mysterious ways.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Magnesium Sulfate Monohydrate Manufacturers in China.
393 Powell Street was a peaceful home until residents started dying in brutal, mysterious ways.
Greg Donahue New York Oct 2021 35min Permalink
Since she first started working in the hospitality industry two decades ago, Vida Afram has cleaned nearly 60,000 hotel rooms.
Maddy Crowell Afar Nov 2021 10min Permalink
How online sales of highly regulated, super-toxic rodenticides exploit gaps in the law and imperil wildlife.
Chris Sweeney Audubon Dec 2021 Permalink
On why the Anthony Weiner story makes people more uncomfortable than simple cheating, the shifting meaning of faithfulness in marriage, and the relationship ideals espoused by Dan Savage:
In Savage Love, his weekly column, he inveighs against the American obsession with strict fidelity. In its place he proposes a sensibility that we might call American Gay Male, after that community’s tolerance for pornography, fetishes and a variety of partnered arrangements, from strict monogamy to wide openness.
Mark Oppenheimer New York Times Magazine Jul 2011 20min Permalink
The author interviews England in prison:
By now, people all over the world have heard of Lynndie England. She's the "Small-Town Girl Who Became an All-American Monster," as one Australian newspaper headline described her, or "the girl with a leash," as Mick Jagger calls her in the song "Dangerous Beauty." Yet England remains a mystery. Is she a torturer? A pawn? Another victim of the Iraq war? While the world weighed in, England said very little.
Tara McKelvey Marie Claire May 2009 Permalink
Rule #5: “Be unflappable.”
In that first New York City apartment, not once but twice, cops came to bust brothels operating on our floor. When they attempted to batter down our door instead of our neighbors', we opened up, pointed them in the right direction, and explained cheerily, "Oh, we're not hookers!" To our great satisfaction, the mystery of why that man was always washing sheets in the shared laundry room had finally been solved.
Jen Doll Village Voice Nov 2011 15min Permalink
Stylistically speaking, in terms of clothing, they arrived in shirts and pants and shoes (there’s really no other way to say it). They had haircuts, but it didn’t really look it. While other bands were mumbling or over-enunciating their dreary positions or penny-candy philosophies, Pavement kind of screamed for a generation. But they did it in a way that was so deeply American that it was almost Scandinavian.
Playwright Will Eno profiles the band and their cult as they grow up and prepare for a reunion.
Wrestler Jimmy ‘Superfly’ Snuka was one of the WWF’s first high-flyers in the 1980s. In 1983, his girlfriend, Nancy Argentino, died in a hotel room with a head injury. The case remains unsolved 30 years later—and after this article was published it was reopened.
The case against Snuka was dismissed earlier this month after a judge ruled him incompetent to stand trial. Snuka died on January 16th.
Adam Clark, Kevin Amerman The Morning Call Jun 2013 20min Permalink
Tristan Ahtone is the former Indigenous Affairs editor at High Country News and is currently the editor-in-chief at The Texas Observer. His High Country News article “Land-Grab Universities,” co-authored with Robert Lee, won the 2021 George Polk Award for Education Reporting.
This is the first in a week-long series of conversations with winners of this year's George Polk Awards in Journalism.
Apr 2021 Permalink
When I was 27, I quit my job to travel and ski-bum, and by that point I had managed to save a small sum that could float me for a year. I called it my fuck-you money, because if I was ever in a situation I didn’t like—stuck in a job or with a boyfriend I wanted to leave—I could say fuck you and go. Living in ski towns is how I learned the dirtbag lifestyle, and to my surprise I took to it naturally and with enthusiasm.
Gloria Liu Outside Jul 2021 Permalink
On a basketball coach starting over at the lowest levels of the game after his ascendant NCAA career ended in a hazy tabloid scene at a Cleveland crackhouse.
Scott Raab GQ Dec 1992 25min Permalink
The story of Max Factor, a Polish immigrant who revoltuionized Hollywood cosmetics starting in the 1920s, and his “Beauty Calibrator” machine.
Sasha Archibald Cabinet Jan 2014 20min Permalink
The city’s drop in crime has been nothing short of miraculous. A year-long investigation into the numbers.
David Bernstein, Noah Isackson Chicago Magazine Apr–May 2014 55min Permalink
What led to the death of a 5-year-old boy, “the Everychild in the state system.”
Patricia Wen Boston Globe May 2014 20min Permalink
A final visit with late boxer Teófilo Stevenson, who could have fought or even been Muhammad Ali had he not stayed in Cuba.
Brin-Jonathan Butler SB Nation Jun 2014 30min Permalink
Untangling the aftermath of a United States drone strike in Yemen.
Gregory D. Johnsen Buzzfeed Aug 2014 30min Permalink
A profile of the highest-paid female executive in America, who was born male.
Lisa Miller New York Sep 2014 25min Permalink
The profile of a 34-year-old woman named Charity Johnson who tricked people all over the country into believing she was still in high school.
Katie J.M. Baker Buzzfeed Sep 2014 20min Permalink
The writer is reluctantly whisked away to to a small house in upstate New York to attend an ayhuasca ceremony with six strangers.
Thomas Leveritt Harper's Oct 2014 30min Permalink
Monaco’s richest woman was shot in ambush outside a hospital. Her heirs stand to inherit over a billion dollars each.
Tom Metcalf Bloomberg Oct 2014 Permalink
A judge on the history and injustice of the plea bargain in America.
Jed S. Rakoff New York Review of Books Oct 2014 15min Permalink
Sex and status disclosure in the age of Grindr and undetectable HIV-levels.
Rich Juzwiak Gawker Aug 2012 15min Permalink
How one woman is monitoring the jihadi network from a home office in Montana.
In the 1970s, Chile was on the verge of developing sophisticated technology to monitor its economy. Then America intervened.
Alan Bellows Damn Interesting Oct 2012 15min Permalink
On William Cockford and his 1800s gambling hall in London, where much of the British aristocracy lost its fortune.
Mike Dash Smithsonian Nov 2012 Permalink