But the debate between traditionalists and modernists isn't over
A research society is still coming to grips with its past—and learning more about how the Third Reich targeted people with disabilities
James Beard’s culinary philosophy helped shape American cuisine
Located in Jackson Park on Chicago's South Side, the former first couple hopes the campus will help revitalize the area
Once the tomb of emperors, a project funded by a telecom company hopes to revive the massive monument now covered in trash and weeds
It was a huge advance in cloning in the early 2000s
Once abandoned and decrepit, the house has been restored overseas
The Mill Restaurant, which once served hungry travelers, now hosts a shrine to the highway's roadside attractions
A new paper looks back on an old epidemic—and raises fresh questions about antique shaving brushes
The Handpas Project is looking to unlock who made the prehistoric art and why
For some, the museum is the first time they confront information about the 1989 massacre
John Haldane developed a rudimentary respirator that protected wearers against chlorine gas—at least for a few minutes
Franklin's cousin, Timothy Folger, knew how the then-unnamed current worked from his days as a whaler
In the early 1800s, the katzenklavier was hailed as a treatment for distracted people
Four miniature pattern looms found in a burial in Chengdu show how the Han Dynasty produced cloth to trade on the Silk Road
A new study has established a genetic link between a 10,300-year-old man and native groups living in the Pacific Northwest today
Under Eisenhower during the Cold War, "Loyalty Day" was declared to paper over International Workers' Day
People knew that inoculation could prevent you from catching smallpox. It was how Civil War soldiers did it that caused problems
The work was made in preparation for a larger, clothed statue by the Italian artist Antonio Canova
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