Ben Wolfgang
Articles by Ben Wolfgang
Doolittle Raiders recommend the first movie
For those who lived through it, Hollywood's most recent depiction of the Doolittle raid completely bombed. Published April 12, 2012
Five survivors of Doolittle Tokyo Raiders recall daring sortie
The five remaining survivors of the Doolittle Tokyo Raiders — the daring crew that led America's first military strike against the Imperial Japanese homeland, four months after the infamous sneak attack on Pearl Harbor — recognize their prominent place in history seven decades later. Published April 12, 2012
School returns ‘God’ to song of patriotism
God may once again bless the USA at Stall Brook Elementary. The Bellingham, Mass., school, under fire for changing the lyrics of Lee Greenwood's "God Bless the USA" to "We Love the USA" for an upcoming fourth-grade concert, reversed course Thursday after drawing a backlash from parents and hints of legal threats from Mr. Greenwood, who penned the 1984 tune. Published April 5, 2012
Some Louisiana teachers look to expel governor
Teachers have their sights set on another Republican governor. This time, it's Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal. Published April 3, 2012
Biden blames fracking for earthquakes
The vice president shook up the scientific world Tuesday. Published April 3, 2012
Santorum looks to home state for boost
Rick Santorum is now calling his home state of Pennsylvania a must-win in his bid for the Republican presidential nomination, just as his hopes in Wisconsin, which votes on Tuesday, continue to fade. Published April 1, 2012
Wisconsin’s Sen. Johnson endorses Romney
Two days before Wisconsin Republicans go to the polls, GOP presidential front-runner Mitt Romney has picked up another key endorsement in the Badger State. Published April 1, 2012
Biden slams Republicans for blocking programs for renewable energy
More investment in "green" technology is shaping up to be a cornerstone of President Obama's re-election effort, and the administration's No. 2 man on Sunday accused Republicans of standing in the way of wind, solar and other renewable sources of energy. Published April 1, 2012
Santorum eyeing Pennsylvania primary
Republican presidential hopeful Rick Santorum continued on Sunday to reject calls that he drop out of the race and concede victory to front-runner Mitt Romney. Published April 1, 2012
Churches step up environmental activism
God is going green. With a Bible in one hand and a protest sign in the other, many religious activists are now moving in lockstep with the environmental movement in the fight against oil and gas drilling. Published March 28, 2012
No new coal plants under draft EPA rules
The Environmental Protection Agency Tuesday proposed greenhouse-gas regulations that effectively would prohibit the construction of new coal-fired power plants. Published March 27, 2012
Graham says Obamacare will hurt Dems this fall
With the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday set to begin hearing oral arguments over the constitutionality of Obamacare, a leading Republican senator predicts the issue could sink Democrats in the fall. Published March 25, 2012
White House sure its energy policy is an election winner
Widespread criticism from the oil and gas sector hasn't shaken the White House's faith that, when given the choice this fall, Americans will choose President Obama's energy plan over that of his Republican challenger. Published March 25, 2012
Education Secretary Duncan defends big increase in school funding
Education Secretary Arne Duncan used Thursday's appearance before a key House subcommittee to not only defend the Obama administration's request for a $1.7 billion increase in school funding for fiscal 2013, but also to rip the GOP budget proposal laid out by Rep. Paul Ryan earlier this week. Published March 22, 2012
Lack of infrastructure stalls natural gas use
With unprecedented amounts of natural gas in storage because of soaring supplies and plummeting prices, industry leaders and their political allies are mounting a major effort to find new uses to work down the glut. Published March 20, 2012
Natural gas industry high on future, despite current low prices
Despite looming federal regulations and rock-bottom market prices, leaders in the natural gas business are confident the shale boom that's helped revitalize economies from Pennsylvania to Wyoming is only just getting started. Published March 19, 2012
EPA regs could hamper oil, natural gas production, report says
Despite rhetoric to the contrary, the Obama administration is poised to deal a major blow to U.S. oil and natural gas, a leading industry group charged Thursday. Published March 15, 2012
U.S. starts to lose its academic reputation
U.S. and U.K. universities still sit at the head of the class in world higher education, but emerging schools in Asia and elsewhere threaten to shift the global balance of academic power, a major study shows. Published March 14, 2012
To many teachers, career has failed
Students aren't the only ones who hate going to school. Published March 12, 2012
Earthquake link casts cloud over fracking
In another blow to the natural gas extraction technique known as fracking, officials in Ohio now say wastewater produced by the popular process is likely responsible for a rash of recent earthquakes. Published March 12, 2012