Deke Slayton made it into the history books by being one of the seven original astronauts — the guys with the “right stuff.” He made history again by being present when an Apollo craft docked in space with a Soviet Soyuz vehicle, and American astronauts and shook hands in space with Soviet cosmonauts.
Articles from October 2019
Ice Age artistry
It was the view of cultural critic Lewis Mumford that “modern man has formed a curiously distorted picture of himself, by interpreting his early history in terms of his present interests in making machines and conquering nature.”
The little spacecraft that could
In Shakespeare’s The Tempest, Miranda grows to the age of sixteen on an ocean isle with no human companions other than her father Prospero and the monster Caliban. When storm and shipwreck bring others to the island she is suddenly awakened to the variety and beauty of mankind. “O brave new world,” she exclaims, dazzled,“that has such people in’t!”
Lessons in love from the pied flycatcher
How can I make myself more attractive to the opposite sex?
Snaring a Snark
The word from CERN, Europe’s big high-energy physics lab, is that the antiproton has been trapped. The antiproton has been caught and stored for several minutes in a bottle.
Answering the oldest question
“Who am I?” It is the oldest question in philosophy. Socrates asked it. Descartes asked it. Philosophers today are still asking it. And science may be on the verge of breakthroughs that will change forever the way we understand the question.
Glacier disasters
Alaska’s majestic Hubbard Glacier is on the move. An advancing tongue of ice has sealed off the mouth of the Russell Fjord, blocking its connection with the sea. The fjord has has become a 32-mile-long lake contained behind an ice dam, and the level of the lake is rising.
It’s all there but the thrill
Not long ago the British journal Nature published a report titled “A new class of Echinodermata from New Zealand.” In it the authors describe an animal previously unknown to science, nine of which were discovered on waterlogged wood dredged up from the ocean off the New Zealand coast.
Ireland’s contender in race for America
Was Columbus was the first European to set foot on American soil, in 1492? You may agree if you are an American of Italian descent. But if you are Norwegian, or Portuguese, or Irish, or almost any other nationality, you will probably have your own candidate for the first European to reach these shores. There is no dearth of entries in the “Discover America” sweepstakes.
Of course, the sky is always falling
Thirty-one years ago, Ann Hodges was sleeping on her living room couch in Sylacauga, Ala., when a 8‑pound rock crashed through the roof of her house and hit her on the side. Life magazine published a full-page photograph of Hodges displaying her bruise and her unwanted trophy from the sky.