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To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Mark Barrowcliffe wasted his youth playing Dungeons and Dragons. Now he's turned his obsession into a book.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Nicholas Gage tells Jim Fleming about the long love affair between Maria Callas and Aristotle Onassis.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

About a year ago, independent producer Karen Michel moved from Brooklyn to Pleasant Valley, New York, near the Hudson River.  She prepared this piece as a way of getting to know her new neighbors

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Paul Berman has written for The New Republic and the New York Times Magazine. His new book is “Terror and Liberalism.” He says that Saddam Hussein’s Iraq is the intellectual heir of traditional fascist movements

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Lars Svendsen talks with Anne Strainchamps about boredom's long, long history. Or maybe it just seems that way.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Mukoma Wa Ngugi is a poet and English professor who writes crime novels set in his native Kenya.  He says the crime genre lets him write truthfully about race, class and violence in cities like Nairobi.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

There's a nagging question at major sporting events: Are the athletes cheating? Steroids, human growth hormones and blood doping techniques are extending the outer limits of performance, and athletes can use them if they want -- unless they're professionals or Olympic athletes. But is doping really a problem? Australian philosopher and bioethicist Julian Savulescu has a simple litmus test: What contribution is coming from the technology and what is coming from the athlete?

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Jake Tapper tells Anne Strainchamps about the importance of lies during wartime and gives several examples of strategic deceptions.

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