Brian Baker, 27, is a tennis player from Nashville, Tenn., who's had a Disney-like comeback season after being out of the sport for seven years with injuries. Baker started the season as 458th in the world. He's now 79th after making it to Wimbledon's fourth round. Now, Baker will be playing in his first U.S. Open since 2005.
In a commentary this week on Morning Edition, Frank Deford said the "proof is in the pudding." A listener wrote in to say that keeping proof in a pudding would be messy. The original proverb is: The proof of the pudding is in the eating. And what it meant was that you had to try out food to know whether it was good.
Tesla reads in front of the spiral coil of his high-frequency transformer at his lab on Houston Street in New York.
Credit Dickenson Alley / Marc Seifer Archives
In this photo from 1898, Tesla is sending 500,000 volts through his body to light the lightbulb as he spins it around above his head.
Credit Library of Congress
In his time, Tesla was world famous. He was a wizard of electrical engineering. His power systems lit up the 1893 Chicago World's Fair. He's seen here circa 1895.
Credit Marc Seifer Archives
Wardenclyffe, Tesla's lab on Long Island, was supposed to be his crowning achievement. Behind it, he wanted to build a 187-foot tower he could use to transmit messages and pictures wirelessly. Frank R. Paul drew this illustration of the tower, which was never completed.
Credit Dickenson Alley / Marc Seifer Archives
A view from inside the Wardenclyffe lab on Long Island in 1904.
Credit Dickenson Alley / Marc Seifer Archives
This 1904 photo of Wardenclyffe was taken so that Tesla could go back to J. P. Morgan to try and get the additional funds he needed to finish the tower. Today the Wardenclyffe site is derelict.
Credit Marc Seifer Archives
Tesla's Wardenclyffe lab building, seen in 1904. Tesla wanted to deliver free, wireless power to everyone in the world.
Credit The Oatmeal
So far, The Oatmeal has helped raise over $986,000 to save Tesla's lab, Wardenclyffe, on Long Island, N.Y.
The only remaining laboratory of one of the greatest American inventors may soon be purchased so that it can be turned into a museum, thanks to an Internet campaign that raised nearly a million dollars in about a week.
The lab was called Wardenclyffe, and it was built by Nikola Tesla, a wizard of electrical engineering whose power systems lit up the Chicago World's Fair in 1893 and harnessed the mighty Niagara Falls.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (center) visits the Natanz Uranium Enrichment Facility in April 2008. Israel and the U.S. targeted the facility in 2009 with the Stuxnet cyberattack.
Talk in Israel of a military strike on Iranian nuclear facilities has reached a fever pitch. Last week brought the news of an alleged "war plan" leaked to a blogger. This week, a well-informed military correspondent in Jerusalem reported that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is "determined" to attack Iran before the U.S. election.
One night in the late 1960s, Eugene Gagliardi was lying awake in bed trying to figure out how to save his company. He was thinking about the Philly cheesesteak.
Gagliardi ran a family business that sold hamburgers and other meat to restaurant chains in the Philadelphia area. But within the span of a few months, the company had lost several of its biggest customers.