history
Key historic events throughout the ages in relation to business, work, corporate figures and moguls.
Three Generations of Ukrainian Women on Soviet Memory, War, Faith, and Independence
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen and Anastasia Bura (Translator, English-Ukrainian) Liubov Polischuk is a Ukrainian interview participant whose recollections focus on Soviet and post-Soviet life. In the conversation, she discusses scarcity, propaganda, military surroundings, restricted travel, prayer, and Ukrainian independence. Her comments emphasize lived experience across political change, including daily survival, faith, memory, and wartime moral perspective over several decades. Tetiana Shuliaka is a Ukrainian interview participant describing civilian life during Russia’s war against Ukraine. In the conversation, she recounts nightly drone threats, prayer, fear of missile strikes, and the pressures of self-defence. Her remarks connect contemporary danger to longer Soviet patterns of military industry and constrained freedom for civilians. Anastasia Bura is the youngest participant in this group discussion and is the translator (English-Ukrainian) in this interview.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen2 days ago in Journal
Rebuilding the Heart of Tradition: The Revival of Sim Corder Mill
Restoring Sim Corder Mill is more than a construction project. It is a journey into the past and a promise to protect the skills that shaped a community. The mill once stood as a center of local craft, labor, and pride. Time changed the world around it, yet its story remained strong in the memories of families who lived and worked nearby. Today, the work of restoring Sim Corder Mill brings history back into view and honors the handmade craft that first gave the mill its purpose.
By Grady Gaston4 days ago in Journal
June Lockhart
Some actors become famous for a moment. Others become part of television history. June Lockhart belongs firmly in the second group. For decades, audiences around the world watched her portray thoughtful, compassionate, and intelligent women. Whether she was guiding a young boy and his loyal dog in Lassie or navigating the challenges of space travel in Lost in Space, Lockhart brought warmth and authenticity to every role.
By Ilsa Sophia6 days ago in Journal
Why America Attacked Iran
“America Just Struck Iran — And the World Is Holding Its Breath” The United States and Israel are now engaged in direct military action against the Islamic Republic of Iran — a dramatic escalation that marks one of the most consequential shifts in American foreign policy in decades. The conflict, which erupted at the end of February 2026, has already reshaped geopolitics in the Middle East and sparked widespread debate over Washington’s objectives and justifications.
By Zakir Ullah9 days ago in Journal
The Empty Locker
I didn’t know his name at first. I only knew the silence. It was a Tuesday in October. The high school hallway buzzed with its usual chaos—backpacks slamming, laughter echoing, sneakers squeaking on linoleum. But one locker stayed shut. No one leaned against it. No one dropped off homework. Just a quiet space where a boy should have been.
By KAMRAN AHMAD10 days ago in Journal
The Suitcase in the Hallway
I didn’t pack lightly. The suitcase sat by the door for three days—half-full, then overflowing, then emptied again. I kept adding things I thought I’d need: my favorite coffee mug, the photo from last summer, the sweater that still smelled like home. Then I’d take them out, convinced they were too heavy, too sentimental, too much.
By KAMRAN AHMAD10 days ago in Journal








