In January 2016, Adrienne LaFrance wrote about why cars have become safer while gun safety has remained relatively stagnant.
In February 2012, Heather Horn wrote about the 60th anniversary of Queen Elizabeth II's ascension to the throne.
The year you were born, Joseph S. Clark, Jr. wrote about how the American liberal movement could recapture the political power it had lost in the 1952 elections.
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The Monkees was released in 1966.
NASA
Over the years, the moon landing has come to be lauded as the pinnacle of human achievement, although it was often derided at the time. In 1963, NASA astronauts took to The Atlantic to plead the case for landing on the moon.
In November 1972, Sanford J. Ungar wrote about the Pentagon Papers trial, calling it “a decisive test of the federal government's capacity to control the disclosure of information stamped ‘secret’”.
In June 2012, Megan Garber wrote about how Apple computers, once thought to be virus-immune, can now get PC viruses.
Kevin Lamarque / Reuters
In April 2012, Roger Lowenstein wrote about Bernanke's successful tenure as chairman, despite his status as villain.
NASA / JPL-Caltech / Space Science Institute
With NASA's Cassini-Huygens mission in 2005, humans landed a probe in the outer reaches of the solar system for the first time, a moment Ross Andersen called the most glorious mission in the history of planetary science.
In December 2015, Robinson Meyer wrote about why scientists had accepted this fact.
The Atlantic is here to help you process it, in stories like these: