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Reefer Madness in Mexico City
Historian Isaac Campos traces the origins of the idea that marijuana causes violent madness…and finds the trail leads south, to Mexico.
via
BackStory
on
May 20, 2016
partner
When San Diego Hired a Rainmaker a Century Ago, It Poured
After Charles Hatfield began his work to wring water from the skies, San Diego experienced its wettest period in recorded history.
by
Christopher Klein
via
JSTOR Daily
on
December 12, 2015
The Divorce Colony
The strange tale of the socialites who shaped modern marriage on the American frontier.
by
April White
via
The Atavist
on
December 8, 2015
Don’t Be So Quick to Defend Woodrow Wilson
It would be a grave mistake to ignore the link between Wilson’s white supremacy at home and his racist militarism abroad.
by
Greg Grandin
via
The Nation
on
November 24, 2015
The Beautiful Sounds of Jimi Hendrix
“Hendrix used a range of technological innovations...to expand the sound of the guitar, to make it ‘talk’ in ways that it never had.”
by
Adam Shatz
via
New York Review of Books
on
January 9, 2014
Haunted Stamford: 1692 Witch Trial
In the same year as the Salem Witch Trials, a more common and lesser known witch hunt occurred in Stamford, Connecticut.
by
Maggie Gordon
via
Stamford Advocate
on
October 31, 2013
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How Much Is Too Much?
The dramatic story of the abolitionist mail crisis of 1835.
via
BackStory
on
December 7, 2012
Revisions in Red
A scholar wrestles with the legacy of her grandfather, onetime leader of America’s Communist Party.
by
Laura Browder
via
The Chronicle of Higher Education
on
November 19, 2012
The Nancy Grace of Her Time?
Jane Addams was controversial and independent-minded.
by
Ruth Graham
via
Slate
on
November 9, 2010
Lincoln's Great Depression
Abraham Lincoln fought clinical depression all his life. But what would today be treated as a "character issue" gave Lincoln the tools to save the nation.
by
Joshua Wolf Shenk
via
The Atlantic
on
October 1, 2005
Martin Luther King Was a Law Breaker
On the second anniversary of MLK's assassination, political prisoner Martin Sostre wrote a tribute emphasizing his radical disobedience.
by
Austin McCoy
,
Martin Sostre
via
Martin Sostre Institute
on
April 1, 1970
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