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Wednesday, March 17, 2010
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Wednesday, March 17, 2010
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Destiny saw to it that Hana Brady, one of the 1.5 million children killed in the Holocaust, was not to be forgotten.
Consider the English department at Harvard University. It has now agreed to remove its survey of English literature for undergraduates.
Fred Ross takes a look at how Victorian artists dealt with the realities of their world.
A boy with wings, a magic veil, a purifying cathedral smell: a single lick of smoke is many things.
The killing of Falun Gong for their organs is a meticulous account of true events that reads like Stephen King.
Dan Brown's latest book about Washington DC and Freemasonry starts slow, but becomes a terrific page-turner.
As a young professional, Canaletto started his career as an apprentice to his father, painting theatrical scenery.
Craig Kielburger says the world needs your kid. He should know. As youngsters, Craig and his brother Marc started an organization called Free the Children. The organization’s mission is to empower children in North America to help their peers around the world.
Beth Rowles Scott’s memoir is an inspiring story of determination and growth of the human spirit over a lifetime.
This is the first time work of the three Renaissance greats will be shown together outside Italy.