The heroine: her role in the great dramas of the day made her a woman for the 20th century
Article Abstract:
Lindbergh, known as the wife of aviator Charles Lindbergh but an accomplished author and public figure in her own right, was conflicted by, and partially succumbed to, her husband's fascistic politics. She recovered esteem with the publication, beginning in 1972, of "Hour of Gold, Hour of Glass", her collected letters and diaries.
Publication Name: The New York Times Magazine
Subject: General interest
ISSN: 0028-7822
Year: 2001
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
The french fry that will save your life
Article Abstract:
Traditionally fattening and unhealthy foods may be genetically modified to promote health by the year 2010, with pharmaceutical companies and nutritionist working together to create food of the future.
Publication Name: The New York Times Magazine
Subject: General interest
ISSN: 0028-7822
Year: 2000
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Southern Comforts: below the Mason-Dixon line, heroes can be found on both ends of the cultural spectrum
Article Abstract:
The particularly Southern personalities of writer Welty, who limned the South's spirit in her fiction, and Earnhardt, a race-driving star who stayed plain folks, are admiringly presented.
Publication Name: The New York Times Magazine
Subject: General interest
ISSN: 0028-7822
Year: 2001
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
- Abstracts: The secret of the summer wind. The flower and the glory
- Abstracts: After the crash: what became of the money Swissair paid out after the tragedy of Flight 111? The compensator
- Abstracts: Teen heroes. Are these animal shelters truly humane? Smashed
- Abstracts: Fear itself: it's not the terrorist attack that threatens the economy; it's the timing. Season of the witch: America's best-known sorcerers let the caldron bubble
- Abstracts: Prince of rides: some parents saw chauffeuring the kids as a chore; he saw it as an opportunity. Rise and fall of the geeks