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Ten Space Stations in World History
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The following is a brief look at the ten space stations in world
history:
"Salyut 1:" The world's first space station launched by the
Soviet Union in April 1971, and only used twice.
"Skylab:" The first U.S. space station launched in May 1973 by
NASA. Intended to be used for 10 years, but plunged through the
atmosphere and burned up in July 1979.
"Salyut 2 through 5:" All Soviet space stations launched in the
1970s. The first generation of space stations.
"Salyut 6-7:" Two Soviet space stations; the former was launched
in September 1977 and used for five years, while the latter, ...
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Merrill D. Peterson. The President and His Biographer: Woodrow Wilson and Ray Stannard Baker.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Biography
; ...Biographer: Woodrow Wilson and Ray Stannard Baker. Charlottesville: U...Woodrow Wilson and Ray Stannard Baker fails because it...president's biographer, Baker-as-biographer appears...subject of this book as "Ray Baker, the journalist...
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Peterson, Merrill D.: The President and His Biographer: Woodrow Wilson and Ray Stannard Baker.(Book review)
Magazine article from: History: Review of New Books
; ...President and His Biographer: Woodrow Wilson and Ray Stannard Baker Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press 280...Wilson's image was conceived through the filter of Ray Stannard Baker's writings. The former was a progressive...
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MEDIA: BEFORE WOODWARD/BERNSTEIN, THERE WERE THE MUCKRAKERS
News Wire article from: Inter Press Service English News Wire
; ...national prominence. The trio consisted of Ray Stannard Baker, Lincoln Steffens, and Ida Tarbell. Baker (1870-1946) wrote the book, "Following...between cigarette smoking and cancer. From Ray Baker to Woodstein and beyond, reporters...
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"The desire for the sensational": Coxey's Army and the argus-eyed demons of hell
Magazine article from: Journalism History
; ...eyed Demons of Hell When Chicago Record reporter Ray Stannard Baker arrived at a farmhouse outside Massillon, Ohio...shaped it, relying primarily on the personal papers of Ray Stannard Baker and two newspapers, Baker's Chicago Record...
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REMEMBERING IDA TARBELL: Standard Oil investigation set out to capture an era-and readers
Magazine article from: Investigative Reporters and Editors, Inc. The IRE Journal
; ...corruption by Lincoln Steffens and on the labor movement by Ray Stannard Baker. Its most famous and enduring work, of course...himself as a candidate for an in-depth investigation. Ray Stannard Baker then suggested that the discovery ten years...
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Muckrakers.(Excerpt)(Reprint)
Magazine article from: Nieman Reports
; ...American Contempt of the Law." They are authored by Ray Stannard Baker, Lincoln Steffens, and Ida Tarbell. 1904 Wall Street...The final installment appears on November 4. Ray Stannard Baker examines corrupt "Railroad Rebates" in the...
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Down and out in the windy city.(Chicago)
Magazine article from: Cobblestone
; [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Ray Stannard Baker was fresh out of college and looking...were hard to get, however, and Baker found himself out of work and out...making money, or pretended to be," Baker explained. "It would have been...
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Where Are Muckraking Journalists Today?
Magazine article from: Nieman Reports
; ...public figure was more esteemed than Ray Stannard Baker, crusading reporter for McClure...eagerly each month for the latest Baker expose. And President Theodore...than the opportunity to preview Baker's articles--"and that not...
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S.S. McClure: Muckracker in chief.(certified financial advisors)(Biography)
Magazine article from: Cobblestone
; ...an outstanding young writer. Next came Ray Stannard Baker, a college-educated newspaper reporter. Baker eventually would earn the nickname "America...corruption in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Baker's writing exposed corruption in labor...
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The unemployed marched in 1894 and the newspapers had a feast. (media coverage of the 1894 national miners' strike in the U.S.)
Magazine article from: St. Louis Journalism Review
; ...on the march as entertainment. Ray Stannard Baker, then a young reporter in Chicago...plenty of gossip." In Massillon, Baker met W.P. Babcock, sent to cover...polished, came to his knees," wrote Baker. On his head he wore a white sombrero...
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