Smithsonian Magazine: July 2004

Features

Secrets of the Maya: Deciphering Tikal

After decades of intense research, the ancient ruins of Mexico and Central America are yielding new insights into the pre-Columbia culture
By David Roberts

Of Majesty and Mayhem

An exhibition of ancient Maya art points up the opulence and violence of the great Mesoamerican civilization
By Stanley Meisler

What is This Thing Called Love?

A new movie explores composer Cole Porter's consummate musical gifts and his remarkable, unorthodox marriage
By Robert F. Howe

Hubble's Last Hurrahs?

The orbiting space telescope has captured billions of years of star births and deaths, galactic collisions and the accelerating expansion of the universe. Now its own fate is in doubt
By Laura Helmuth

Everybody Take A Seat

Comfort for the masses? Or a tacky blight? Seemingly overnight, the one-piece plastic chair has become a world fixture. Can you stand it?
By Mariana Gosnell

Letter from Lahore: Reinventing Pakistan

Welcome to Lahore, where an explosion of art and media is offering a vibrant alternative to the strictures of religious conservatives and is transforming one of America's most important and most ambivalent allies
By Mohsin Hamid

The Rocky Road to Revolution

While most members of Congress sought a negotiated settlement with England, independence advocates bided their time
By John Ferling

Departments

Indelible Images

Dazzle by the Dozen

A 1947 portrait by the renowned Irving Penn broke the fashion mold and celebrated an elegance all too rare today
By Owen Edwards

The Object at Hand

Splendid Isolation

When the first astronauts to walk on the Moon returned from their July 1969 lunar expedition, they were confined to quarters
By Owen Edwards

Points of Interest

The Anti-Burb

Arcosanti, a struggling community in the Arizona desert, preaches the virtues of close quarters
By Robert Earle Howells

Phenomena & Curiosities

Yellowstone Grumbles

Pent-up water and steam threaten to burst through the park's surface. (And we're not talking Old Faithful here)
By Kevin Krajick

Presence of Mind

Plutarch's Exemplary Lives

An ancient Greek wrote the book on biography then and now
By Lance Morrow

Editor's Note

Great Finds

Celebrating a magazine's good fortuneĀ—and a nation's
By Carey Winfrey

From the Secretary

"All Music Is Folk Music"

Smithsonian Folkways Recordings may soon be coming to a computer near you
By Lawrence M. Small

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