On July 28, 1945 an Army bomber pilot on a routine ferry mission found himself lost in the fog over Manhattan. A dictation machine in a nearby office happened to capture the sound of the plane as it hit the Empire State Building at the 79th floor.
Fourteen people were killed. Debris from the plane severed the cables of an elevator, which fell 79 stories with a young woman inside. She survived. The crash prompted new legislation that – for the first time – gave citizens the right to sue the federal government.
The Ski Troops of WWII
From Prison to President
The Last Place
A Guitar, A Cello, And The Day That Changed Music
The Story of ‘Ballad for Americans’
Serving 9-5: Diaries from Prison Guards
The Man Who Put the ‘P’ in NPR
Crime Pays
Strange Fruit
Mandela’s Prison Years
A Visit to the Memory Palace
Matthew and the Judge
Seeing the Forrest Through the Little Trees
The Traveling Electric Chair
From Bullets to Balance Sheets
The Square Deal
Fly Girls
Claudette Colvin – A “Teenage Rosa Parks”
First Kiss
The Greatest Songwriter You’ve Never Heard Of
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Criminal
Ear Hustle
Song Exploder
The Truth
the memory palace