Research suggests that experience may matter more than innate ability when it comes to a sense of direction
Newly unearthed documents shed light on claims that the famous criminal attorney bribed a juror
John Howard Griffin gave readers an unflinching view of the Jim Crow South. How has his book held up?
Terrorists get the headlines, but most Muslims want to reclaim their religion from extremists
The former NSA official reached a plea deal with the government, but the case still raises questions about the public’s right to know
The label now has many meanings, but when the group protested 200 years ago, technology wasn't really the enemy
The famous historian's eyewitness accounts of the Navy during World War II—now being reissued—won't be surpassed
Egypt's ruler was more than the sum of the seductions that loom so large in history—and in Hollywood
The idea that the United States has always been a bastion of religious freedom is reassuring—and utterly at odds with the historical record
Cracking the Code of the Human Genome
How the great influx of people from Africa and the Caribbean since 1965 is challenging what it means to be African-American
Those who don't have power tend to make fun of those who do. But what happens when the power shifts?
The European discovery of America opened possibilities for those with eyes to see. But Columbus was not one of them
How an unlikely mix of environmentalists and free-market conservatives hammered out the strategy known as cap-and-trade
For the Pulitzer Prize winning playwright, Douglas, Arizona was a place to "refresh the wells" and drive into the sunset
Famed World War II Gen. George S. Patton's grandson finds his calling in the ashes of his fathers journals
Two dueling archetypes dominated 20th-century American politics. Is it time for them to be reconciled?
Do we take more risks when we feel safe? Fifty years after we began using the three-point seatbelt, there's a new answer
When his father and father-in-law died within days of each other, author Max Alexander learned much about the funeral industry
Author James Reston Jr. discovers firsthand what is gained and lost when history is turned into entertainment
Mary Pinchot Meyer's death remains a mystery. But it's her life that holds more interest now
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