As someone who’s spent countless summer evenings outside, there’s nothing worse than having your gardening serenity ...
The singer-songwriter and social activist best known as one-third of the folk-music group Peter, Paul and Mary, has died at age 86. Peter Yarrow died Tuesday at his home in New York.
"Gardeners might regard their January garden as dormant and less than enjoyable. Many of their plants are 'asleep' and ...
Gates, who has been the host of the PBS series “Finding Your Roots” since it premiered in 2012, has helped many celebrities uncover what’s hiding in their family tree. Sometimes, stars aren ...
A mutation that causes an amino-acid substitution in a channel called CNGC15 in the plant cell’s nucleus boosts the formation of such endosymbiotic relationships. Studying ion channels in their ...
Folk singer Peter Yarrow, of the musical group Peter, Paul, and Mary, died Monday, Jan. 6, at 86 after a years-long battle with bladder cancer. In the wake of his passing, Gastonia Councilwoman ...
It’s hard to imagine growing up in the last 60 years or so without being touched by the music and activism of Peter Yarrow. He wrote the classic “Puff the Magic Dragon” while still a student ...
Saul Loebmandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images On hearing of the death of Peter Yarrow, who co-wrote the iconic tune “Puff the Magic Dragon,” I thought back to Northwestern University in Evanston ...
Members of the folk trio Peter, Paul and Mary, left to right: Paul Stookey, Mary Travers and Peter Yarrow in 1978. (The Heritage Foundation) Yarrow was born on May 31, 1938, in New York.
Peter Yarrow, one-third of the hit-making 1960s folk group Peter, Paul and Mary, and a Jewish activist who promoted Israeli-Palestinian coexistence and other progressive causes, has died at age 86.
American singer and songwriter Peter Yarrow, who found fame with the 1960s folk music trio Peter, Paul and Mary, died on Tuesday at the age of 86, his publicist said. Yarrow died at his New York ...
Yarrow and his bandmates Mary Travers and Noel ... The band blended folk roots and commercial success: their self-titled 1962 debut reigned over the US charts and sold more than two million ...