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Military History Quarterly Spring 2006 Gregory G. Bolich |
Terrorism in the Ancient Roman World Pax Romana was the rule against nations, but even the empire could not control vandals, rogues, and rebels.  |
Vietnam June 2007 Richard C. Barrett |
Bud Day: Vietnam War POW Hero The only American POW to escape North Vietnam missed being rescued by minutes, costing him more than five years in brutal captivity.  |
America's Civil War May 2007 Eric J. Mink |
Visiting Stonewall Jackson's Left Arm at Chancellorsville Stonewall Jackson's left arm lies a-mouldering in its grave, with its own grave marker.  |
America's Civil War Joe D. Haines, Jr. |
America's Civil War: Stonewall Jackson's Last Days Dr. Hunter McGuire, Stonewall Jackson's 27-year-old medical director, chronicled the general's last days.  |
Vietnam Peter Brush |
Operation Niagara: Siege of Khe Sanh The thing that broke the back of the NVA at Khe Sanh in 1968 was the fire of the B-52s.  |
Vietnam Peter Brush |
The Withdrawal from Khe Sanh Two months after withstanding the most ferocious siege of the Vietnam War, Khe Sanh was abandoned to the enemy in 1968.  |
Science News April 28, 2007 |
Timeline: From the April 24, 1937, issue Mystery mine in Blue Ridge revealed as U.S. test tunnel... Major forward step made toward chlorophyll synthesis...  |
Smithsonian May 2007 Terence Smith |
Beyond Jamestown After the colony was founded, 400 years ago this month, Capt. John Smith set out to explore the riches of Chesapeake Bay. With Smith's journals to guide him, a modern-day sailor retraces that historic voyage  |
Smithsonian May 2007 Amy Crawford |
Derby Days Thoroughbreds, mint juleps, big hats -- the Kentucky Derby's place in American history  |
Smithsonian May 2007 Katy June-Friesen |
Blues Alley How Chicago became the blues capital of the world.  |
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