Photo Wagon

John Coffer turned his back on modern times to wander America in a wagon pulled by oxen, stopping only to take portraits with his antique camera.  Coffer traveled at two and a half miles an hour for five years. 25 states. 10-thousand miles.  He crisscrossed...

Refugee Wins Nobel Prize

I’d like you to meet Mario Capecchi.  He’s the son of a single mom, a poet, who thought she could defeat the Nazis with her pen.  She didn’t, but he became one of the scientists who saved us.   Share this: Share on Facebook (Opens in new...

Singer Saves a Town

I was sitting in a small cafe.  At the other end of the counter was a man who looked like Lincoln.  He was big and rawboned and about 80.  His voice pierced and rattled like an old bugle.  I couldn’t help overhearing.  He was holding...

Photographer for Life

Milton Rogovin grew old watching his neighborhood grow up, sharing the yearbook of their lives.  He was still photographing them at age 100, surrounded by friends who were now taking his picture — the “forgotten ones,” who did not forget him. Share...

Birth of the Ice cream Cone

 A lot of what we love today —ice cream cones, hamburgers, hot dogs, peanut butter, iced tea, the club sandwich, cotton candy — were all introduced in a single summer in 1904.  Americans also got their first glimpse of the Olympic games and the Democrats...

The Rescued Save the Rescuers

Roby Albouy spent most of his adult life in the Colorado mountains.  But he carries faces from France framed in his mind, the fellows he passed on to freedom during World War Two.  They were the downed crew of an America bomber.  He was a fighter with...