The bus station’s “colored entrance” has vanished: door bricked over, scattered holes where a sign once hung. Though standing just inches away on the sidewalk, the students might not have even noticed it, had the museum director not highlighted the “ghost of segregation.” The building, he explained, was telling them a story. Read more 


Adolf Hitler became German Chancellor (prime minister) because his party, the National Socialist Party (Nazi), received more votes in parliamentary elections in 1932. 

Hitler cynically used the democratic process; he was never a believer in democracy. His dictatorial ambitions were published in Mein Kampf (My Way) in 1925, a clear declaration of his global domination plans. It should have been no surprise when he began dismantling democracy as Chancellor eight years later, in January 1933. Read more 

Related: Hitler’s Terrible Tariffs. By Timothy W. Ryback / The Atlantic