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+2 +1
Twelve Biden Administration Resignees Blast 'Intransigent' Gaza Policy
Joe Biden "has prioritized politics over just and fair policymaking" on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, former government officials argued in their first joint statement since quitting. By Akbar Shahid Ahmed
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+7 +1
Looking for Calley
How a young journalist untangled the riddle of My Lai. By Seymour M. Hersh.
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+16 +1
Battle of the Wilderness
When a general worried about Lee's next move, Grant tersely replied, "I am heartily tired of hearing what Lee is going to do. Some of you always seem to think he is suddenly going to turn a double somersault, and land on our rear and on both our flanks at the same time. Go back to your command, and try to think what we are going to do ourselves, instead of what Lee is going to do." By Gregory A. Mertz.
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+10 +1
“The Clock Is Ticking”: Inside the Worst U.S. Maritime Disaster in Decades
A recording salvaged from three miles deep tells the story of the doomed “El Faro,” a cargo ship engulfed by a hurricane. By William Langewiesche.
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+16 +1
How the military took Bowral to protect Commonwealth leaders 40 years ago
Forty years ago sleepy Bowral was occupied by the Australian military with armed soldiers protecting some of the world's most important people. By Justin Huntsdale.
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+1 +1
How One Las Vegas Emergency Department Saved Hundreds of Lives After the Worst Mass Shooting in U.S. History
The night that Stephen Paddock opened fire on thousands of people at a Las Vegas country music concert, nearby Sunrise Hospital received more than 200 penetrating gunshot wound victims. Dr. Kevin Menes was the attending in charge of the ED that night, and thanks to his experience supporting a local SWAT team, he’d thought ahead about how he might mobilize his department in the event of a mass casualty incident.
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+33 +1
Space travel’s mental health toll could endanger long missions
A review of NASA research highlights the risk that prolonged social isolation poses to long-distance space missions, as well as other dangers like radiation. (Jan. 11, 2017)
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+19 +1
The Wreck
On the eve of the Civil War, a nightmare at sea turned into one of the greatest rescues in maritime history. More than a century later, a rookie treasure hunter went looking for the lost ship—and found a different kind of ruin. By David Wolman.
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+13 +1
The Perfect Fire
It started with a candle in an abandoned warehouse. It ended with the men of the Worcester Fire Department in a fight for their lives. By Sean Flynn.
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+9 +1
The Flight from Dallas
From noon to dusk on November 22, 1963, history went dark, locked inside the closed and crowded cabin of Air Force One. Fifty years later, what happened after JFK died has fully come to light. By Chris Jones. (Sep, 16, 2013)
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+8 +1
Solitude and Leadership
If you want others to follow, learn to be alone with your thoughts. By William Deresiewicz.
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+16 +1
Life Aboard a Renovated World War II Tugboat
With help from friends, a transplanted Philadelphian embarks on a voyage of discovery through Alaska's waters. By Brendan Jones.
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+7 +1
Firelight Along the Frontier
The fire department working a desolate New Mexico mesa is made up of 15 anarchists and recluses and led by a friendly giant whose job is to be an administrator in a place that defies administration. By Michael Canyon Meyer.
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+23 +1
The Women Behind the Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Among the institution’s earliest employees were female “computers” whose calculations made the first rocket launches possible. By Nathalia Holt.
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+4 +1
The Problem With Evidence-Based Policies
Many organizations, from government agencies to philanthropic institutions and aid organizations, now demand that programs and policies be “evidence-based.” But the way this idea is being implemented may be doing a lot of harm, impairing our ability to learn and improve on what we do. By Ricardo Hausmann.
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+25 +1
Miss Hobbs and the Gunslingers
“If the sheriff of Baker County would not close down Copperfield's saloons, the governor told the press, then he would send his five-foot-three-inch tall, 104-pound private secretary, Miss Fern Hobbs, to do the work.” By Joe Blakely.
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+21 +1
Is that a gorilla on the International Space Station?
Ape in space: astronaut Scott Kelly celebrates his year in space in an unusual way. By Chiara Palazzo.
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+17 +1
The Sánchez Insurgency
Inspired but isolated, Maria Quiñones-Sánchez is at war with her own party, Latino political bosses and half her [Philly] Council colleagues. Her fighting spirit could make her mayor someday — or leave her career in ashes. By Holly Otterbein. (Jan. 24)
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+25 +1
A Deadly Deployment, a Navy SEAL’s Despair
“‘It’s hard with the secrecy and the way no one is willing to talk to us,’ said his sister, Bronwyn De Maso. ‘No matter how he died, if he did kill himself, he was a casualty of war.’” By Nicholas Kulish and Christopher Drewjan.
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+26 +1
Raising the Dead
At the bottom of the biggest underwater cave in the world, diving deeper than almost anyone had ever gone, Dave Shaw found the body of a young man who had disappeared ten years earlier. What happened after Shaw promised to go back is nearly unbelievable, unless you believe in ghosts. By Tim Zimmermann. (2005)
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