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Hagia Sophia

Travel

A Monumental Struggle to Preserve Hagia Sophia

In Istanbul, secularists and fundamentalists clash over restoring the nearly 1,500 year-old structure

Sacred Apache artifacts

Arts & Culture

The Road to Repatriation

The National Museum of the American Indian works with Native Tribes to bring sacred artifacts home again

John White illustration of an Atlantic loggerhead

People & Places

Sketching the Earliest Views of the New World

The watercolors that John White produced in 1585 gave England its first startling glimpse of America

Audry Hepburn

Arts & Culture

From Castro to Warhol to Mother Teresa, He Photographed Them All

Yousuf Karsh took a singular approach to fame and the famous. As the centennial of his birth approaches, do his photographs hold up?

Thoroughbred Park statues

Travel

Lexington Is Kim Edwards' Old Kentucky Home

Far from her Northern roots, the best-selling novelist discovers a new sense of home amid rolling hills and Thoroughbred farms

Displaced Pygmies

People & Places

The Pygmies' Plight

A correspondent who chronicled their lives in central African rain forests returns a decade later and is shocked by what he finds

whales

Science & Nature

Wild Things:
Life as We Know It

Chewing dinosaurs, climate change, self-sacrificing ants and black bears

Mary Pinchot Meyer

History & Archaeology

44 Years Later, a Washington, D.C. Death Unresolved

Mary Pinchot Meyer's death remains a mystery. But it's her life that holds more interest now

Internet critics

Arts & Culture

Amazon Warriors

Thanks to the Internet, everyone's a book critic

Bill Eppridge

History & Archaeology

The Lasting Impact of a Civil Rights Icon's Murder

One of three civil rights workers murdered in Mississippi in 1964 was James Chaney. His younger brother, Ben, would never be the same

Abraham Lincoln at Gettysburg

Arts & Culture

Gettysburg Address Displayed at Smithsonian

Lincoln's timeless speech during the Civil War endures as a national treasure

Christo and Jeanne-Claude

Arts & Culture

Q and A: Christo and Jeanne-Claude

The world-famous installation artists responsible for The Gates and Running Fence discuss the upcoming Smithsonian exhibit about their works

Photo Contest

Think Fast

Which city did poet Carl Sandburg praise as "Hog Butcher...Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat..."?


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