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+12 +2Friday essay: how the West discovered the Buddha
From talk of a ‘poisonous doctrine’ to mistaken beliefs that he hailed from Africa, Western thinkers got Buddhism wrong for a long time.
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+13 +3A 2000-year-old postcard
Sending greetings to friends and family from places we visit has always been popular. Whether we text, call or just post something on social media, we love to let others know about where we travel and what we see there.
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+9 +2Why the wheels of human history seemed to turn faster for some
Oded Galor examines the drivers of progress and innovation, and the reasons for inequality.
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+23 +4The original Roe v. Wade ruling was leaked, too
Leaks of any kind are rare at the Supreme Court, but in 1973, the original Roe decision was leaked to the press before the court formally announced it. The chief justice was furious.
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+4 +1Judge rules that Tulsa massacre lawsuit seeking reparations can proceed
The three known living survivors of the 1921 Tulsa massacre that saw a white mob murder scores of Blacks and raze much of their neighborhood can proceed with a lawsuit seeking reparations for the death and destruction, a judge in Oklahoma ruled on Monday.
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+11 +2The book that sank on the Titanic and burned in the Blitz
A jewel-encrusted book sank on RMS Titanic on 15 April 1912 - but this was not the end of the story.
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+21 +4A Library's Mysterious Trove of Wax Cylinders Will Soon Break Its Century-Long Silence
Boring chatter. Silly vaudeville acts. Bygone operas. These are just a few of the kinds of sounds that could be buried in a trove of wax cylinder recordings that no one has listened to in 100 years or more. Now, after a century of silence, the rarely-heard recordings will finally become audible—and available to the public. As NPR‘s Jennifer Vanasco reports, the library has acquired a new machine to digitize the priceless sounds.
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+16 +2Dress worn by Judy Garland in ‘The Wizard of Oz,’ lost for decades, to be auctioned
The classic blue and white gingham dress had been missing for decades before it was found last year. It could be sold for anywhere between $800,000 to $1.2 million, Bonhams said.
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+13 +330 Years Later, the Fall of the USSR Still Haunts Xi Jinping’s China.
A documentary, looking like a reminder for the CCP, lists 5 lessons to be learned from the fall of the USSR.
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+4 +1How a Determined Congressional Aide Helped Break Open the Biggest Environmental Scandal in U.S. History
Thousands of Niagara Falls residents lived in a toxic wasteland for years until a whistleblower made a call.
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+14 +4A miniature manuscript written by Charlotte Brontë to go on sale for $1.25 million
A rare manuscript written by Charlotte Brontë when she was 13 years old will go on sale at a New York City book fair later this month.
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+17 +2Before Jerry Sandusky, Penn State football had another serial sexual predator. This is the untold story of his crimes and the fight to bring him to justice.
When Jerry Sandusky's crimes came to light in 2011, the world thought it was the first time Joe Paterno and Penn State had faced a serial sexual predator in their midst. But that was not the case. This is the story of the predator who had come before.
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+14 +2Researchers home in on possible “day zero” for Antikythera mechanism
arXiv preprint suggests December 23, 178 BCE; others think it was summer 204 BCE.
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+16 +4Ancient fashion: 3,200-year-old pants on Chinese mummy are like modern-day jeans
The design was as intricate as that of modern-day, factory-fabricated denim jeans, and just as durable. The ancients had fashion.
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+2 +1Mystery of multiple extinctions in the Jurassic solved
The only halfway realistic aspect of “Jurassic Park” may be that the land was thronged with life, much of which with fangs. One can hardly generalize about the weather 200 to 145 million years ago, but the Jurassic by and large seems to have been warm and wet. The fact is that a lot of new species emerged in that time, from the lumbering stegosaurs and gigantosaurs to the earliest known proper birds – yes, your duck had ancestors back then. Tiny rodents began to emerge. In the Late Jurassic, the fearsome allosaurus arose too. And no, it isn’t a T-rex.
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+4 +1Yes, Colonialism Caused Climate Change, IPCC Reports
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released its final report Monday. The Frontline explores the significance of the sixth report finally naming “colonialism” as a historical and ongoing driver of the climate crisis. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released its first report in 1990. Over 30 years later, the word “colonialism” finally made its way into the IPCC’s sixth assessment report. The panel’s working group two report, which looks at the impacts of climate change on people...
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+25 +4The Traditional Beauty Of Nintendo's Playing Cards
Before there was Mario, Nintendo made Japanese cards
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+22 +5Machu Picchu has been called the wrong name for over 100 years. Historians reveal its true name
Some mistakes are hard to shake. For over 100 years, one of the most famous archaeological sites in the world, Machu Picchu, has been known by the wrong name, according to a report published in Ñawpa Pacha: Journal of the Institute of Andean Studies.
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+12 +1Vanilla-Scented Beaver Butt Secretions Are Used In Food And Perfume
For 80 years, foods and perfumes have contained castoreum, an anal secretion beavers use to mark their territories, which smells like vanilla.
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+18 +4How did Europe become the richest part of the world?
In a time of great powers and empires, just one region of the world experienced extraordinary economic growth. How?
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