A refrigerator note. A spark of genius. A classic poem and the senders it inspired.
Read MoreAfter Apollo 14, Edgar Mitchell kept soaring. ESP? Psychokinesis? UFOs? When you’ve been to the Moon, anything seems possible.
Read MoreWhen a radical Mexican muralist began to paint at Dartmouth, some wanted his work destroyed. The college president refused.
Read MoreThe astronauts rehearsed every maneuver for the moon landing, except planting the flag. Oops!
Read MoreWhen The True Believer made his name, Eric Hoffer was a San Francisco longshoreman. Decades later, the zealots he labeled “true believers,” are still “everywhere on the march.”
Read MoreOwing team after team, Bill Veeck loved baseball and fans and fun. Not necessarily in that order.
Read MoreWith soldiers coming home in flag-draped caskets, the Supreme Court considered the Pledge of Allegiance. The ruling may surprise you.
Read MoreWhen Grace Hopper met those beastly first computers, they spoke only in numbers. “Grandma COBOL” soon taught them English.
Read MoreJune 6, 1944 — Sgt. Salinger, with drafts of The Catcher in the Rye in his pack, lands at Normandy.
Read MoreThe streets taught Geoffrey Canada hard lessons. His Harlem Children’s Zone is teaching success.
Read MoreWhen the Massachusetts team went South, its star black player came face-to-face with Jim Crow. And guess what the whole team did for Bunny?
Read MoreTexas has seen the future and it blows. Wind energy, that is.
Read MoreIt took courage to build skyscrapers, and courage to photograph the ones who “built America.”
Read MoreFew battles had been so mismatched. A billionaire tycoon vs. a woman with a pen. The winner?
Read MoreWhen the D.A.R. turned Marian Anderson away, Eleanor Roosevelt and friends found a better venue.
Read More"The future is dark, with a darkness as much of the womb as the grave." -- Rebecca Solnit
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