“Your Guy, Dick”: The Mole Hunt That Shook the FBI
In the spring of 1962 a short, stocky Russian walked into the FBI’s Midtown Manhattan office and offered to spy for the United States.
“Your Guy, Dick”: The Mole Hunt That Shook the FBI Read More »
In the spring of 1962 a short, stocky Russian walked into the FBI’s Midtown Manhattan office and offered to spy for the United States.
“Your Guy, Dick”: The Mole Hunt That Shook the FBI Read More »
In markets, taverns, and public squares across England, a strange ritual unfolded from the late 17th century into the early 20th.
Wives for Sale: An English Custom That Shocked the World Read More »
In August 2011, as Hurricane Irene swept through the Atlantic, a startling photo began circulating online.
Hurricane Shark: From Viral Hoax to Verified Sighting Read More »
In the 1960s, visitors to the I.Q. Zoo in Hot Springs, Arkansas, watched chickens play baseball, macaws ride bicycles, and pigs hit piano keys.
Spies, Zoos, and Trained Ravens: The Secret Cold War Animal Projects Read More »
On September 11, 2001, at 9:12 a.m., nine minutes after United Airlines Flight 175 struck the South Tower between floors 77 and 85, 24-year-old Welles Crowther called his mother and left a message: “Mom, this is Welles. I wanted you to know that I’m okay.”
The Man in the Red Bandana: Welles Crowther’s Final Hours on 9/11 Read More »
Physicians were allowed to prescribe liquor as “medicinal alcohol” for health conditions.
Prescriptions for Whiskey: Doctors’ Alchemy under U.S. Prohibition Read More »
In 1850, French luthier Jean-Baptiste Vuillaume built the first octobass in Paris, creating one of the largest and rarest bowed string instruments ever made.
The Mighty Octobass: The Colossal Instrument That Plays Below Human Hearing Read More »
In the early nineteenth century a nationwide optical telegraph preceded the electric wire.
From Semaphore to Spark: Morse and the Making of the Telegraph Read More »
In 2009, a domestic cat named Casper captured worldwide attention when it was revealed that he was a regular bus commuter in Plymouth, Devon.
Casper the Commuting Cat: The Feline Who Rode the Bus Read More »
In 1945, the University of Pennsylvania completed ENIAC (Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer), the first programmable, electronic, general-purpose digital computer.
ENIAC: The “Giant Brain” That Changed Computing Forever Read More »