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Huey P. Newton: The Revolutionary Mind Behind the Black Panther Party
In the late 1960s, in a modest office in West Oakland, a young man sat in a wicker chair with a rifle in one hand and a law book in the other. It was not a theatrical pose, although it would become an iconic image. It was a statement. For Huey P. Newton, politics was never abstract. It was lived, studied, tested, and defended on the streets of Oakland, in courtrooms, in prison cells, and later in lecture halls. His journey from a self described struggling student to co founde


The Vanishing Billionaire: The Mysterious Disappearance of Alfred Loewenstein
Loewenstein on board a ship for a party. (right) boarding the plane he would disappear from On the evening of 4 July 1928, Alfred Loewenstein, one of the wealthiest men in the world, boarded his private aircraft at Croydon Airport. It was a routine flight—one he had taken countless times before—bound for his homeland of Belgium. The skies were clear, the aircraft, a Fokker FVII, was in good working order, and there was nothing to suggest that this would be anything but an une


Robert Hansen: The Butcher Baker of Alaska
In 1924, Richard Connell’s short story The Most Dangerous Game introduced the idea of human beings being hunted for sport. The tale follows a Russian aristocrat who, bored of hunting animals, lures unsuspecting prey to his remote island to chase them down. The concept has fascinated audiences for nearly a century, inspiring books, films, and television series. But for most, the story remained firmly within the realm of fiction. Then came Robert Hansen. Between 1973 and 1983,
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