Readings — From the March 2001 issue
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Readings — From the March 2001 issue
Readings — From the April 1997 issue
Readings — From the May 1994 issue
Readings — From the December 1989 issue
Editor’s drawer — From the September 1922 issue
Editor’s drawer — From the September 1921 issue
Editor’s drawer — From the February 1920 issue
Editor’s drawer — From the February 1918 issue
Editor’s drawer — From the December 1917 issue
Editor’s drawer — From the December 1915 issue
Editor’s drawer — From the May 1915 issue
Editor’s drawer — From the January 1915 issue
Editor’s drawer — From the October 1914 issue
Editor’s drawer — From the May 1914 issue
Editor’s drawer — From the January 1913 issue
Editor’s drawer — From the January 1912 issue
Editor’s drawer — From the October 1911 issue
Cost of renting a giant panda from the Chinese government, per day:
A recent earthquake in Chile was found to have shifted the city of Concepción ten feet to the west, shortened Earth’s days by 1.26 microseconds, and shifted the planet’s axis by nearly three inches.
An eight-foot minke whale washed ashore on the Thames, the third beaching of a dead whale on the river in two months.
At Ivanwald, men learn to be leaders by loving their leaders. “They’re so busy loving us,” a brother once explained to me, “but who’s loving them?” We were. The brothers each paid $400 per month for room and board, but we were also the caretakers of The Cedars, cleaning its gutters, mowing its lawns, whacking weeds and blowing leaves and sanding. And we were called to serve on Tuesday mornings, when The Cedars hosted a regular prayer breakfast typically presided over by Ed Meese, the former attorney general. Each week the breakfast brought together a rotating group of ambassadors, businessmen, and American politicians. Three of Ivanwald’s brothers also attended, wearing crisp shirts starched just for the occasion; one would sit at the table while the other two poured coffee.