Articles

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Don't Get Strung Along by the "Ropen" Myth

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Events: Negro League Baseball, Spy Satellites, Doll Making and More!

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Weekend Events: Hong Kong Film Fest, Afro-Brazilian Dance and Make Your Own Lunch Bag!

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Spilling the Beans on the Origins of Food Idioms

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Flowers May Adapt Faster than Thought to Climate Change

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The Second Jurassic Dinosaur Rush

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"Portraits Alive" Closes Today at the National Portrait Gallery

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National Zoo Elephant Tours New Home

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Popeye Makes Kids Eat More Vegetables

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What Monkeynomics Can Tell Us About Us

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Art Out of a Vending Machine?

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Twenty Years of Tyrannosaurus Sue

Born Phoebe Ann Moses in Darke County, Ohio, on August 13, 1860, Annie Oakley was not exactly a product of the Wild West.

How Annie Oakley, "Princess of the West," Preserved Her Ladylike Reputation

Born in 1860, the famed female sharpshooter skillfully cultivated an image of a daredevil performer with proper Victorian morals

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Drowning McDonalds in the Hirshhorn

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Bark on the Rocks: A Rustic Gin and Tonic Recipe

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Wednesday Roundup: Conspiracies, Leopards and Chop Suey

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Plane May Be Better Than Car in Climate Equation

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Dinosaur Sighting: Santa Monica's Spitting Dinosaur

The silver spotted skipper butterfly is one of the most common butterflies caught during the census.

Name That Butterfly

Citizen scientists on a sharp learning curve are carrying out an important census in fields and gardens across the country

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Who Was James Smithson?

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