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JSTOR Daily
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How American Girl Scouts Shocked Mexico in the 1950s | JSTOR Daily
At a retreat center called Our Cabaña, girls from all over the world became Cold War–era diplomats. American scouts had additional ideas.
Black Camerawoman Jessie Maple’s Fight to Join a Union | JSTOR Daily
Her climb into filmmaking began with programs designed to train African Americans. But to succeed, she needed to break into a mostly white male union.
Muhammad Speaks for Freedom, Justice, and Equality | JSTOR Daily
The official newspaper of the Nation of Islam—published from 1960-1975—combined investigative journalism and Black Nationalist views on racial uplift.
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Over centuries of surviving harsh winters, the St. Lawrence Iroquois had developed a successful treatment for a disease that commonly beset individuals living in cold climates—scurvy. Read more about ... View More
Plant of the Month: Tree of Life | JSTOR Daily
Indigenous people in North America used the conifer as an effective cure for scurvy during cold winters.
The Feminist History of “Child Allowances” | JSTOR Daily
The Biden administration’s proposed “child allowances” draw on the feminist thought of Crystal Eastman, who advocated “motherhood endowments” 100 years ago.
Sturmgeist
On the other hand it encourages White women to make babies.
- May 12, 2021
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Plant of the Month: Tree of Life | JSTOR Daily
Indigenous people in North America used the conifer as an effective cure for scurvy during cold winters.
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Can you hear anything at the deepest spot in the Pacific Ocean? That’s almost 11,000 meters down. It turns out the answer is yes. And some of that noise is made by humans. What does that mean for mari... View More
Wait, There’s Noise Pollution at the Bottom of the Ocean? | JSTOR Daily
Anthropogenic sounds have made it all the way down into the deepest place on Earth—Challenger Deep, in the Mariana Trench.
When the Push Button Was New, People Were Freaked | JSTOR Daily
The mundane interface between human and machine caused social anxiety in the late nineteenth century.
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Texas Identity, Smart Trees, and Cicada Weirdness | JSTOR Daily
Well-researched stories from Texas Observer, Aeon, and other great publications that bridge the gap between news and scholarship.
Wait, There’s Noise Pollution at the Bottom of the Ocean? | JSTOR Daily
Anthropogenic sounds have made it all the way down into the deepest place on Earth—Challenger Deep, in the Mariana Trench.