Smithsonian Magazine: July 2009

July 2009 Issue Cover

Features

On the March

A traveling exhibition of China's 2,200 year-old terra cotta soldiers sheds new light on the ruler whose tomb they guarded
By Arthur Lubow

Nikita in Hollywood

When Khrushchev went to Tinseltown at the height of the cold war, the Soviet dictator put on a show of his own
By Peter Carlson

We Have Liftoff

Forty years ago this month, the Apollo 11 mission put men on the moon—and brought America to Florida's shore
By David Burnett

Birth of a Robot

Can scientists build a machine that, like a child, learns as it goes and plays well with others? A California-based group is finding out
By Abigail Tucker

Catching a Wave

Engineer Annette von Jouanne is pioneering an ingenious way to generate clean, renewable electricity from the sea
By Elizabeth Rusch

High Hopes for a New Kind of Gene

With "microRNA" transforming how researchers think about disease, Carlo Croce eyes new treatments for cancer
By Sylvia Pagán Westphal

Departments

Indelible Images

"Salami, Mr. Holcomb?"

The first women to attend the Naval Academy became seniors in 1979. Photojournalist Lucian Perkins was on deck as the old order changed.
By Amanda Bensen

Phenomena

Forest Primeval

An Illinois coal mine holds the world's largest fossil wilderness, a snapshot of life on earth 300 million years ago
By Guy Gugliotta

My Kind of Town

Keeping Company

Observing ibises and kayaking among sharks, the noted writer savors life "up this Keys"
By Barbara Ehrenreich

Presence of Mind

The Great Escape

Thornton Wilder sought a place where he could "refresh the wells." He found it in the desert
By Tom Miller

From the Editor

My Favorite Commie

Khrushchev Comes to America
By Carey Winfrey

Letters to the Editor

Letters

Readers respond to the May Issue
By Smithsonian magazine

Wild Things

Wild Things:
Life as We Know It

Whale of a comeback, dancing cockatoos, sticky bees, and waltzing pond scum
By Amanda Bensen, Joseph Caputo, T.A. Frail, Laura Helmuth and Abigail Tucker

This Month in History

This Month in History

Momentous or Merely Memorable
By Alison McLean

From the Castle

Forever Yours

By G. Wayne Clough

Around the Mall

Ant Eye View

A new photo exhibit at the Natural History Museum reminds us that we still live in an age of discovery
By Amanda Bensen

The Object at Hand

Stealth Machine

The SR-71 was the ultimate spy plane
By Owen Edwards

Q&A

Q and A: Jean Shin

By Megan Gambino

What's Up

What's Up

By Joseph Caputo

The Last Page

There Oughta Be a Law

Centuries hence, historians may wonder: Where exactly did Congress store all those pork barrels?
By William Ecenbarger

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