From The Archives

This Presidents’ Day, we look back on how the news about the four-term POTUS — who'd been in office as a generation of Americans came of age and then went off to war — still hit hard a dozen years later.

Are you a loser on the slopes and between the sheets? Back in ’92, the Voice offered readers some gold medal advice.

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A year-round refuge for contemplation, Woodlawn Cemetery especially sparkles in the snow.

A couple of weeks after investigative reporter Jack Newhouse published a story about powerful New York senator Jacob Javits’s wife shilling for Iran, a Voice colleague laid out the facts about the regime’s terror.

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In America’s Bicentennial year, dogged reporter Jack Newfield revealed that Marion Javits was running PR cover for one of the world's most bloodthirsty despots.

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The ever-astute culture critic James Wolcott covered the fans, the stars, the ephemera, the merch, and the meaning of it all, live from the Statler Hilton in Midtown.

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In 1966 the civil rights leader faced down those who wanted to kill him.

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The day was full of TV cam­eras, spontaneous singing, speeches, clapping, and the echo of Martin Luther King’s phrase: “I have a dream … ”

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On February 1, pianist Pavlo Gintov will perform to support the most endangered Ukrainians.

NYC turns out to fight rogue power with truth.