Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
The lost memoir of a Hiroshima survivor was rediscovered. Now, it will be published as a book and adapted for film
On the morning the United States dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, in 1945, resident Kiyoshi Tanimoto, a Methodist ...
On August 6, 1945, the US bomber Enola Gay dropped the first atomic bomb ever used in military combat on the Japanese city of ...
Kiyoshi Tanimoto witnessed the destruction of Hiroshima after the atomic bomb was dropped in 1945.
The annual peace ceremony will have had no Russian representative for five years in a row since the country’s invasion of ...
HIROSHIMA— Local officials plan to carry out the city’s first DNA analysis on remains from the atomic bombing, seeking to ...
HIROSHIMA—The Hiroshima District Court ordered the central government on Jan. 28 to pay a total of about 3.3 million yen ($21 ...
U.S. Power, Not International Law, Determines Whether the Strait of Hormuz Is Open Chinese AI’s Sputnik Moment The Theater of Congress’s Iran War Votes The Hormuz Strait Drone Attack and the Folly of ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Atomic survival: Hiroshima bombing survivor’s memoir found in US archive after 80 years
A firsthand account written by a Hiroshima survivor nearly 80 years ago is finally ...
On August 6, 1945, on the order of President Harry Truman, a B-29 named the Enola Gay dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan. The blast destroyed the city, killed more than 100,000 people, and ...
The giant silver bomber roared along the runway on Tinian Island in the darkness, passing the firetrucks and ambulances parked every 50 feet, struggling to pick up speed. “Dimples Eight Two” weighed ...
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