Thirty years ago this week, rumors began circulating about the supposed extramarital affairs of Sen. Gary Hart, the leading candidate for the 1988 Democratic nomination for President.
In response, Hart challenged the media. He told The New York Times in an interview published on May 3, 1987, that…
On December 27, 1927—80 years ago today—American musical theater changed forever with the opening, at New York’s Ziegfeld Theatre, of Show Boat. It was a hit from the very start. From its opening tryout in Washington, D.C., through its other out-of-town runs in Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and…
Fifteen years ago today, on December 17, 1992, the North American Free Trade Agreement was signed by the United States, Canada, and Mexico. It created a huge free trade area of more than eight million square miles, 430 million people, and almost uncountable economic resources. It is the largest…
Absent from the list of robber barons recently reconsidered has been Cornelius Vanderbilt, known to everyone as the Commodore. Indeed, the last major biography of him was Wheaton J. Lane’s Commodore Vanderbilt: an Epic of the Steam Age, published in 1942. This is a pity, as the Commodore was one…
When engineers make mistakes, the results can be both spectacular and expensive. And if someone happens to be at the right place at the right time with a movie camera, immortality of the sort no engineer wants is inevitable. The collapse of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge on the morning of November 7,…
The 1977 “Wow!” signal, as originally recorded and notated. (Ohio State University Radio Observatory and North American AstroPhysical Observatory)
It would have been the biggest news story of all time had it been confirmed. On August 15, 1977—30 years ago today—a radiotelescope at Ohio State…
A thoroughly enjoyable appreciation of the nation’s greatest songwriters.
Most people couldn’t write a decent song if you held a gun to their head. Perhaps one in a million can write one that becomes a big hit before fading away or becoming a period piece. But to be able to write a song that is…
(Library of Congress)
Shortly after midnight on June 13, 1942, a German submarine lifted off the bottom, where it had been waiting, and surfaced near the sleepy eastern Long Island town of Amagansett. It soon put ashore four men wearing German uniforms. They had with them explosives and other…
President Reagan speaks at the Berlin Wall, June 12, 1987. (Ronald Reagan Presidential Library, National Archives)
It is probably the Great Communicator’s most famous line, one he uttered on June 12, 1987—20 years ago today—while standing in front of the Brandenburg Gate at the Berlin Wall. And…
Sixty-five years ago today, the United States Navy gained the greatest victory in its history. Against overwhelming odds, it won the American equivalent of the defeat of the Spanish Armada and decisively reversed the strategic situation in the Pacific in a single day.
The Japanese government and…