D.J. Hayden, Ralph Oragwu and Zach McMillian — three former University of Houston football players — were among the victims of the crash, the university said. Source
Author Archives: Stonecom Interactive
A class where imagination takes flight
At the Trinity Leadership school near Dallas, Sonja White’s first-graders are flying high, reliving their amazing one-day flight south of the border – a plane trip to Mexico. Yet, they never actually left the classroom. Correspondent Steve Hartman reports on a clever teacher, and some very eager passengers. Source
Hamas’ tunnels: Piercing a battleground beneath Gaza
Normal tactics of warfare change in the environment that the terrorist group has dug beneath the Gaza Strip. CBS News looks at the difficulties military forces face, and the technologies being developed (including autonomous robots), to take on an enemy underground. Source
Passage: Remembering astronaut Frank Borman
Astronaut Frank Borman, who commanded the Apollo 8 mission in 1968, died on Tuesday, November 7, 2023, at the age of 95. “Sunday Morning” looks back at his history-making flight – the first human expedition to the moon. Source
“Hell’s Kitchen”: Alicia Keys’ life and music inspires a new musical
It’s been a 13-year-long labor of love by the Grammy-winning musician, singer and songwriter: an off-Broadway musical loosely based on her own life story. Source
“Hell’s Kitchen”: Alicia Keys’ life and music inspire a new musical
It’s been a labor of love by the Grammy Award-winning musician, singer and songwriter Alicia Keys: she’s created a new stage musical loosely based on her own life story. “Hell’s Kitchen,” about a teenage girl with a love of music and a difficult relationship with her mother, features new music as well as some of Keys’ most beloved songs Keys rearranged or recontextualized. Correspondent Kelefa Sanneh talks with Keys about the show’s origin and its sold-out run in the East Village, with an eye on a future Broadway production. Sanneh also talks with theater critic Ben Brantley about the history of “jukebox musicals,” and why “Hell’s Kitchen” may be different. Source
Artist Ed Ruscha on his career-spanning retrospective
“Ed Ruscha / Now Then,” the largest exhibition ever of iconic and cryptic works by one of the most celebrated American artists of the postwar era, is now on display at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. Source
Artist Ed Ruscha’s career-spanning retrospective
The largest exhibition ever of works by Ed Ruscha, one of the most celebrated American artists of the postwar era, is now on display at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. Ruscha, now 85, talks with correspondent David Pogue about collecting much of his life’s work into one retrospective; the cryptic nature of many of his paintings; and his use of unusual materials (like chocolate and axle grease). Source
The Woolly Worm Festival, inching to predict winter’s weather
Punxsutawney, Pa., has its groundhog, but every autumn Banner Elk, North Carolina hosts the Woolly Worm Festival, in which caterpillars crawl in feats of athletic prowess, the outcome of which is said to predict the area’s winter weather. Correspondent Conor Knighton checks out the competition. Source
Almanac: November 12
“Sunday Morning” looks at important historical events on this date. Source