Chaplin’s The Great Dictator might be the most popular, but it was The Three Stooges who first openly mocked Hitler on film News Featured 9 years ago by Martin Chalakoski
Samuel Morse developed the single-wire telegraph after he had missed his wife’s funeral due to the extremely slow mail delivery News 9 years ago by Domagoj Valjak
Henrietta Lacks – The African American woman whose cancer cells were the source of the immortalized HeLa cell line News Strangeness 9 years ago by Boban Docevski
The Ravens of the Tower of London: Guardians of the Crown & Her Majesty’s Royal Palace Strangeness News 9 years ago by Martin Chalakoski
The Hiddensee treasure: The largest discovery of Viking jewellery in Germany News Strangeness 9 years ago by David Goran
The Story of Ishi, the last member of the Yahi tribe widely acclaimed in his time as the “last wild Indian” in America News Strangeness 9 years ago by Nikola Simonovski
Carl Jung’s “Red Book” was published in 2008, almost 50 years after his death: it explores his own psychotic experiences and the darkest depths of the unconscious News 9 years ago by Domagoj Valjak
Lake Hauroko- New Zealand’s deepest lake is the focus of many local myths Strangeness 9 years ago by Ian Harvey
Digital artist skillfully restores severely damaged vintage photos News 9 years ago by Goran Blazeski
Marilyn Monroe’s final home in Brentwood is now back on the market for $6.9 million News Glamour Interiors 9 years ago by Stefan Andrews
Camp X was a top-secret international spy camp in Canada during WWII; it was so secret that even the Canadian Prime Minister didn’t have full knowledge of its purpose News 9 years ago by Stefan Andrews
“His master’s voice” – The origins of the famous Jack Russell terrier, Nipper, the canine advertising icon for many gramophone companies News 9 years ago by Brad Smithfield