“There Is a Certain Amount of Humor in Checkers”
But if you think this game is easy, you haven’t met the Ayshire Lassie, the Black Doctor, the Goose Walk or the Canalejas Cannonball
Mount Athos, Where “Every Stone Breathes Prayers”
At this remote sanctuary, art and religion have intertwined for 1,000 years
In the Year 1, Augustus Let the Good Times Roll
The year 2000 is almost upon us, but what in the (Western) world was happening when the counting began?
Across the country, weekend aviators are sending their remote-controlled model aircraft soaring
While we look to the new millennium with both trepidation and amusement, medieval scholars argue about what really happened at this time 1,000 years ago
“Hello Boys! Become an Erector Master Engineer!”
With no “hanky-panky gimcracks,” A. C. Gilbert’s Erector sets taught boys more than just the nuts and bolts
It’s pulled and jimmied, tied and lifted but the 20-ton Jupiter engine finally reaches its new home
Working together, the Smithsonian’s Freer and Sackler Galleries are gaining distinction in Asian art
You Can’t Keep a Good Prophet Down
What will be, will be. Or will it? As the millennium draws nigh, prophets want to tell us about it
With regret but a legacy of accomplishment, the Secretary plans to leave the Smithsonian in December
Conveying History Through Song
Bernice Johnson Reagon adds cultural nuance and period flavor to rousing a cappella renditions
A devoted keeper of the past, the National Museum of American History looks ahead to the Millennium
An image at the National Portrait Gallery may be the truest account we have of the Indian princess
The demolition derby is an American institution or something like that
The Changing Face of Stone Mountain
In the shadow of a towering Confederate memorial and a difficult history a small Georgia town looks to the future
Even in the computer age, a thousand-ton train driven by fire and water inspires awe
With a new facility in the works, the National Air and Space Museum prepares for the 21st century
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