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On November 1, 2020, The Atlantic retracted an article, "The Mad, Mad World of Niche Sports Among Ivy League–Obsessed Parents", after an inquiry by The Washington Post. An 800-word editor's note said, "We cannot attest to the trustworthiness and credibility of the author, and therefore we cannot attest to the veracity of the article."
Schlosser started his career as a journalist with The Atlantic Monthly in Boston, Massachusetts.He quickly gained recognition for his investigative pieces, earning two awards within two years of joining the staff: he won the National Magazine Award for his reporting in his two-part series "Reefer Madness" and "Marijuana and the Law" (The Atlantic Monthly, August and September 1994), and he won ...
Graeme Charles Arthur Wood (born August 21, 1979) is an American staff writer for The Atlantic and a lecturer in political science at Yale University. [1] He was awarded the Edward R. Murrow Press Fellowship of the Council on Foreign Relations [2] and won the Canadian Governor General's Award for English-language non-fiction for his book The Way of the Strangers: Encounters with the Islamic State.
Tim Alberta was born to parents Richard and Donna Alberta. [2] With his family, he moved when he was five years old from New York state to Brighton, Michigan, where his father had been named as pastor of Cornerstone Evangelical Presbyterian Church. [2]
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The New Yorker called it "a swift, penetrating book intent on shattering the habits of mindless workaholism," [3] and The Atlantic called it "gorgeously written." [ 4 ] Rebecca Goldstein , in The New York Times , wrote, "True to the tradition she loves, [Shulevitz] displays a reassuring double-mindedness toward almost everything except erudition."
The Levasseur PL.8 biplane was piloted by two French aviators who had hoped to complete the first nonstop trip across the Atlantic Ocean, but it vanished somewhere over coastal North America in 1927.
Over time, urban legends sprouted around the reasons for Carolina’s ACC departure. There was one driving force.