Time to Eat the Dogs
A Podcast About Science, History, and ExplorationHow NASA Plans Big Missions
Glen Asner and Stephen Garber talk about NASA’s efforts to plan ambitious missions in the face of huge political and financial challenges. Asner is the Deputy Chief Historian for the Historical Office, Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) Garber works in the NASA History Division at NASA Headquarters. They are the authors of Origins of 21st-Century Space Travel: A History of NASA’s Decadal Planning Team and the Vision for Space Exploration, 1999–2004.

Glen Asner

Stephen Garber
Replay: The Human Exploration of Mars
Jake Robins and Michael Robinson talk about the quest to explore Mars: how it compares to earlier eras of exploration in the West and in the Arctic as well as its power to capture the imagination of thousands of people. Robins is the host of WeMartians, a podcast that considers the exploration of the Red Planet from a variety of angles, both technical and scientific.

Jake Robins
How George Putnam’s Arctic Expedition Got into Trouble

Tina Adcock talks about the controversy over George Putnam’s Baffin Land expedition and why it tells a bigger story about the changing culture of exploration in the 1920s. Adcock is an assistant professor of history at Simon Fraser University. She’s the author of the essay “Scientist Tourist Sportsman Spy: Boundary-Work and the Putnam Eastern Arctic Expeditions” which was published in the edited collection Made Modern: Science and Technology in Canadian History, edited by Adcock and Edward Jones-Imhotep.
Replay: Escape from Nazi-Occupied Europe, Part II

Deportation of Jews from the Gurs internment camp in southern France, 1942 (Mémorial National de Gurs).
Ruth Gruenthal continues her story of her family’s escape from France in 1940. She also discusses the challenges of living in the United States after the war.

Ruth Gruenthal
Replay: Escape from Nazi-Occupied Europe, Part I

Refugees leaving Paris after the German invasion, June 1940 (credit: FPG/Hulton Archive via Getty Images).
Ruth Gruenthal talks about her life in Germany as the Nazi Party came to power in the 1930s. Gruenthal and her family – along with thousands of Jewish refugees — raced to escape France when the Germans invaded in the summer of 1940. Gruenthal is a practicing psychotherapist in New York City. She’s also the daughter of the publisher Kurt Enoch who co-founded the New American Library in the United States after World War II.

Ruth Gruenthal






