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When Theodore Roosevelt—Harvard-educated, dandified, and just twenty-three—arrived in Albany as an assemblyman in 1882, the oldpols dismissed him as a “Punkin-Lily,”and worse. They were in for a shock. Read >>
Today’s city, for all its ills, is “cleaner, less crowded, safer, and more livable than its turn-of-the-century counterpart,” argues this eminent urban historian. Yet two new problems are potentially fatal. … Read >>
A young girl’s memories of life in a community haunted by Read >>
One hundred years ago, Congress created two agencies—the U.S. Geological Survey and the Bureau of Ethnology. Both, according to the author, have since “given direction, form, and stimulation to the science of earth and the science of man, and in so doing have touched millions of lives.” Read >>
NOTES FROM A CENTURY OF GOVERNMENT SCIENCE Read >>
What the public wanted, it seemed, was a vice and bootleg business netting sixty million dollars a year-and many gangland funerals Read >>
The story of the world’s longest-running radio program and the extraordinary American music it helped make popular Read >>
How the Philadelphia waterworks became a potent symbol of our lost belief that nature and technology could live together in harmony Read >>
Had Franklin D. Roosevelt not been so conservative, we might have had national health insurance forty years ago Read >>
He was the first Englishman to give a detailed description of the North American wilderness. Was it a pack of lies? Read >>
Maligned and misunderstood throughout much of their history, the Penitentes of the American Southwest have nevertheless given their people a sense of community and spiritual security. But for how much longer? Read >>

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