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June 6, 2026

The Heartbreaking Story of Palma, a Faithful Dog Who Waited for Her Owner for Two Years at a Moscow Airport From 1974

In the autumn of 1974, a passenger was boarding an Ilyushin Il-18 flight from Moscow. He was traveling with his German Shepherd, a dog he called Palma. However, upon reaching the steps of the aircraft, the crew refused to let the dog board because the owner lacked the proper veterinary health certificates.




Faced with a choice between missing his flight or leaving his dog, the owner made a heartbreaking decision. He took off Palma’s collar, unleashed her on the tarmac, and walked up the boarding stairs. Palma, thinking it was a game or a temporary separation, ran along the runway after the accelerating aircraft until it disappeared into the sky.

Palma didn’t leave the airport. Instead, she set up a daily routine near the runway, surviving on scraps given to her by sympathetic ground crew and airport staff. What made Palma’s story extraordinary was her memory. She didn’t just wait for any plane; she specifically watched for Ilyushin Il-18 aircraft, the exact model her owner had boarded. Whenever an Il-18 landed, Palma would trot up to the mobile boarding stairs, carefully scanning the faces of the passengers descending to the tarmac.

For two years, through scorching summers and bitter, freezing Moscow winters, she kept this precise vigil. Airport security initially tried to catch or remove her, but she was incredibly clever and elusive. Eventually, the airport staff grew to love and protect her, building her shelter and ensuring she was fed.


In 1976, a journalist named Yuri Rost from the prominent newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda heard about the dog. He visited Vnukovo, witnessed Palma’s routine, and published a moving article titled “A Dog on the Runway.”

The story exploded nationally. The newspaper received thousands of letters from citizens offering to adopt Palma, sending money, or expressing outrage at the anonymous owner. The article also included a plea for the owner to return.


The owner actually did see the article. He wrote a letter back to the editorial office (wishing to remain anonymous due to the immense public shame), explaining that he had been working in the far north and felt too guilty and embarrassed to return for her after so much time had passed. He never came back.

Photos of Concertgoers From the Celebration of Life, the 1971 Disastrous Rock Festival Held in McCrea, Louisiana

The Celebration of Life was a disastrous, ill-fated music festival held from June 24 to June 27, 1971, on the Cypress Pointe Plantation in McCrea, Louisiana. Billed as an ambitious eight-day “mini-Woodstock” in the country, it quickly devolved into logistical chaos, extreme weather conditions, and tragedy, ultimately leading the state to shut it down after just four days. Today, it is widely remembered by music historians as the event that marked the definitive end of the golden, idealistic era of late-1960s rock festival culture.

Promoters were evicted from two previous locations before leasing a 500-to-700-acre soybean plantation along the Atchafalaya River just days before the event opened. Despite local legal battles and opposition from the National Guard, anywhere from 60,000 to 150,000 attendees descended on the tiny rural town, completely bottlenecking local traffic for miles. The venue lacked basic infrastructure, leaving attendees stranded in 90-degree summer heat with a severe lack of food, clean water, medical facilities, and sanitation.

Promoters heavily advertised a legendary lineup to sell tickets, but they failed to actually book or secure permits for most of the headliners. Pink Floyd, The Beach Boys, Miles Davis, B.B. King, and Sly & The Family Stone were widely advertised but never performed. Out of dozens of promised acts, only about 7 to 9 actually took the stage, playing mostly late-night or overnight sets. Performers included Chuck Berry, Ike & Tina Turner, Stephen Stills, WAR, John Sebastian, and a then-unknown Brownsville Station.

Seeking relief from the stifling heat, many festival-goers swam in the nearby Atchafalaya River. At least four people drowned due to the river’s deceptively swift, dangerous undercurrents. Dangerous, low-quality drugs flooded the campgrounds, resulting in dozens of medical emergencies and at least one confirmed fatal overdose. Promoters hired regional motorcycle clubs for security. The bikers allegedly shook down attendees for money, committed acts of violence, and clashed with State Police before being removed at gunpoint.

Rolling Stone magazine later described the event as an “American nightmare,” though for the thousands of young people who survived the heat, the mosquitoes, and the mud, it remains a legendary badge of honor.






Caroline Reboux: The Queen of Milliners

Caroline Reboux (1837–1927) was one of the most influential and celebrated milliners in history, often called the “Queen of Milliners.” Active for nearly seven decades in Paris, she defined hat fashion from the Second Empire through the Roaring Twenties.

Renowned for her exceptional craftsmanship, elegant designs, and innovative sensibility, Reboux created hats for royalty, aristocracy, and the most fashionable women of her time, including actresses Sarah Bernhardt and Coco Chanel. She was particularly famous for perfecting the cloche hat in the 1920s and for her ability to combine artistic creativity with refined simplicity.

Her work embodied the height of Parisian chic and helped elevate the milliner’s craft to the level of haute couture. These exquisite vintage photos capture the timeless elegance and artistic genius of Caroline Reboux, the woman who defined hat fashion for nearly seven decades and remains the undisputed Queen of Milliners.

Model in plum colored straw trimmed with long cherry and plum ribbon streamers by Caroline Reboux, photo by Studio Robert Rigasse, 1940

Model wearing turban in navy blue felt lined with pink gros-grain and decorated with roses, covered by large mesh voilette, by Caroline Reboux, photo by Studio Robert Rigasse, 1940

Betty Threatt wearing a hat of ice blue ostrich feathers on a black wide cuff and back of velvet lattice work strips by Caroline Reboux at Bergdorf Goodman, photo by Louise Dahl-Wolfe, Harper's Bazaar, December 1946

Model in wool coat by Balenciaga, hat of towering tulle with red roses by Carolyn Reboux, photo by Philippe Pottier, 1947

Model wearing black velvet hat with cyclamen pink ribbon by Caroline Reboux, photo by Philippe Pottier, 1947

San Francisco in 1965 Through 30 Stunning Kodachrome Slides

In 1965, San Francisco stood on the brink of a cultural revolution. Still elegant and slightly old-fashioned in many ways, the city was beginning to pulse with a new, youthful energy that would soon define the Summer of Love.

These stunning Kodachrome slides capture the city in vivid, saturated color: from the cable cars climbing steep hills and the foggy streets of North Beach to the bohemian vibes of Haight-Ashbury and the bustling waterfront.

With their rich tones and remarkable clarity, the photos offer a nostalgic yet vibrant window into a pivotal year when beatnik culture was giving way to the emerging hippie movement, forever changing the character of one of America’s most iconic cities.

Columbus Tower, San Francisco, October 1965

A prototype BART car goes on display in Union Square, San Francisco, 1965

Bank of Canton, Chinatown, San Francisco, October 1965

Belli Building, San Francisco, October 1965

Cable car, San Francisco, October 1965

June 5, 2026

William “Buffalo Bill” Cody’s Delayed Burial

On June 3, 1917, under the wide Colorado sky, William “Buffalo Bill” Cody was finally laid to rest atop Lookout Mountain, just outside Denver. Although he had died nearly six months earlier on January 10, disputes over where he should be buried delayed the ceremony. Many believed he would be interred in Cody, Wyoming, the town he had helped establish, but Buffalo Bill had chosen Lookout Mountain himself. With its sweeping views of the Rocky Mountains and the Great Plains, it was a fitting resting place for a man whose life had been so closely tied to the American frontier.




Cody died of kidney failure in Denver, Colorado. His widow, Louisa, chose a burial site atop Lookout Mountain in Golden, Colorado. Because it was the dead of winter, the mountain ground was completely frozen solid, making it impossible to dig a proper grave or hew a tomb out of the solid granite. His body had to be kept embalmed and under guard at a Denver mortuary until the spring thaw arrived.

At the time of his death, Cody’s once-great fortune had dwindled to less than $100,000 (approximately $2,520,000 today). The delay was heavily prolonged by an intense political and emotional feud between two states. Cody had founded the town of Cody, Wyoming, and his 1906 will explicitly stated he wanted to be buried on Cedar Mountain overlooking his namesake town. The citizens of Wyoming felt deeply entitled to his remains.

A later 1913 will gave his widow the right to choose the burial site. She picked Colorado, though Wyoming residents loudly alleged that Denver officials and The Denver Post had bribed her with $10,000 to keep the legendary showman's body in Colorado to boost future tourism. Because the fury ran so high, Wyoming residents openly threatened to raid the Denver mortuary and steal Buffalo Bill’s body to take it back north.



Ella Raines: The Striking Beauty of 1940s Film Noir

Ella Raines (1920–1988) was an American actress celebrated for her striking beauty, sharp intelligence, and commanding screen presence during Hollywood’s Golden Age. With her high cheekbones, expressive eyes, and elegant yet strong features, she stood out as one of the most distinctive leading ladies of the 1940s.

Raines gained critical acclaim for her performances in classic film noirs such as Phantom Lady (1944) and The Suspect (1944), often playing independent, intelligent, and resilient women. Though her film career was relatively brief, she left a memorable mark with her sophisticated style and natural acting talent.

These captivating vintage photos capture the cool elegance, sharp intelligence, and magnetic presence of Ella Raines, one of the most distinctive and underrated beauties of 1940s Hollywood.






22 Romantic Photos of Rob Lowe and Melissa Gilbert in the 1980s

Rob Lowe and Melissa Gilbert had a highly publicized, on-and-off relationship that lasted for six years, from 1981 to 1987. Both actors were just 17 years old when they began dating. At the time, Gilbert was already a massive television star from her role as Laura Ingalls on Little House on the Prairie. Meanwhile, Lowe was a rising talent whose career completely skyrocketed during their relationship due to “Brat Pack” films like The Outsiders.

The two met briefly at age 14 but officially began dating at 17 after crossing paths at a traffic light. In her memoir Prairie Tale, Gilbert recalled falling “instantly, hopelessly and stupidly in love.” Gilbert has described the relationship as “very tumultuous,” largely because she was unprepared for Lowe’s rapid rise to heartthrob status. She noted that female fans would completely ignore her, pushing right past her to slide phone numbers into Lowe’s pockets, which she called “hard and horrible.”

As Lowe’s fame grew, so did his reputation as a Hollywood “bad boy.” He later admitted to being unfaithful multiple times throughout their long-distance relationship, including liaisons with co-stars like Nastassja Kinski and Demi Moore. After discovering Lowe’s infidelity, Gilbert had a brief retaliatory fling with actor John Cusack, one of Lowe’s good friends, which she described as her own private “screw you.”

Despite the ongoing drama, Lowe proposed to Gilbert in 1986, and she accepted. Shortly after the engagement, Gilbert learned she was unexpectedly pregnant. When she told Lowe, he admitted he was not ready to be a father or commit to a family, which caused the relationship to unravel for good in 1987. Shortly after their final breakup, Gilbert suffered a devastating miscarriage. She wrote in her book that losing both her baby and her relationship with Lowe “hurt like hell.”

Despite the painful ending, both stars eventually found closure and managed to maintain a mutual respect and friendship in their later years. Both wrote openly about the relationship in their respective memoirs. Gilbert eventually found long-term happiness, marrying actor Timothy Busfield in 2013. Lowe has been married to makeup artist Sheryl Berkoff since 1991.









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