On September 20, 1973, in a high-profile “Battle of the Sexes” tennis match, top player Billie Jean King, 29, defeated Bobby Riggs, 55, a former
Author: Vanniyar Adrian
Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a revolutionary lawyer, longtime advocate for gender equality and public servant who served as a Supreme Court justice for 27 years, died
When naturalists like John Muir first entered California’s Yosemite Valley in the 19th century, they marveled at the beauty of what they believed to be
In the 1960s, a radicalized Mexican-American movement began to push for a new identification. The Chicano movement, aka El Movimiento, advocated social and political empowerment
Future President Jimmy Carter files a report with the National Committee for the Investigation of Aerial Phenomena (NICAP) on September 18, 1973, claiming that he
In the wee hours of March 4, 1801, John Adams, the second President of the United States, quietly left Washington, DC under cover of darkness.
Beginning in the early morning of September 17, 1862, Civil War Confederate and Union troops clash near Antietam Creek, Md., On the bloodiest day in
The US Constitution, written in 1787 and ratified by nine of the original 13 states a year later, is the oldest written constitution in the
When it comes to the fight for workers’ rights in the United States, Latino Americans have been critical players since the early 1900s. Their organizing