Monday, February 24, 2025
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Author Archives: Stonecom Interactive

Celebrating July 2, America’s other Independence Day

On July 2, 1964, President Johnson signed into law the Civil Rights Act, ending our nation’s apartheid. Mark Updegrove, president & CEO of the LBJ Foundation, looks back on a watershed moment in American democracy when segregation was finally made illegal. Source

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July 2, and the end of apartheid in America

On July 2, 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed into law the Civil Rights Act, which ended our nation’s apartheid system. Mark Updegrove, president & CEO of the LBJ Foundation, looks back on a watershed moment in American democracy when segregation was finally made illegal. Source

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Photographer Ansel Adams and his legacy

Photographer Ansel Adams (1902-1984) created unparalleled images of the American West at a time when photography was not universally appreciated as a fine art. Today Adams is the most recognizable name in nature photography, and his landscapes have been acclaimed for their soulfulness. Correspondent Conor Knighton visits an exhibition on the artist’s work, “Ansel Adams: In Our Time,” currently on view at the de Young Museum in San Francisco; and visits Adams’ home in Carmel, Calif., where his dark room has been preserved by his son, Michael Adams. Source

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A trumpet call against Alzheimer’s

About three years ago Larry Kingsley’s wife, Georgeanne, was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. Using music to stay connected with her, the North Carolina man dug out his old trumpet and began playing for strangers on the street, with Georgeanne at his side. Every dollar he collected was donated to Alzheimer’s research. Correspondent Steve Hartman reports on how one man’s love prompted him to make a difference. Source

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Remembering Louis Armstrong

Kelefa Sanneh talks with pianist Jason Moran, curator of a new exhibition on the jazz icon at the new Louis Armstrong Center in Queens; and filmmaker Sacha Jenkins, director of the documentary “Louis Armstrong’s Black & Blues.” Source

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Tom Bodett crafts his third act

He was young when he almost died, in an accident involving an electric utility cable and a considerable height. But Tom Bodett went on to become a writer, NPR essayist, and Motel 6 spokesman. And now, at 68, he has found another calling, as a woodworker. Source

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Tom Bodett and his new calling

He was young when he almost died, in an accident involving an electric utility cable and a considerable height. But Tom Bodett, by his accounts, went on to become a pretty good writer (of more than a dozen books and audiobooks), an NPR essayist, and Motel 6 spokesman. And now, at 68, Bodett has found another calling, as a woodworker. He talks with correspondent Faith Salie about crafting a new life in Brattleboro, Vermont. Source

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The history of Ferris wheels: What goes around comes around

In 1893 engineer George Washington Gale Ferris Jr. created an attraction for the world’s fair in Chicago: A giant, steam-powered wheel that gently lifted passengers 250 feet in the air for a spectacular view. Today, Ferris wheels (or observations wheels) continue to spin delight. Source

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