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June 2010

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Features

Kurd Semi Utan

Heritage Reclaimed

After years of conflict, Turkey and its Kurdish population have forged a fragile accommodation, giving the beleaguered ethnic minority fresh optimism

Villa Adriana

Home Away From Rome

Archaeologists studying the country retreats of ancient emperors have illuminated the lives of the rulers themselves

Boxer Jack Johnson and musician Scott Joplin

Great Expectations

A century ago, the boxer Jack Johnson and the musician Scott Joplin embodied a new sense of possibility for African-Americans

Puffins on Eastern Egg Rock

Comeback!

Atlantic puffins had nearly vanished from the Maine coast until a young biologist defied conventional wisdom to lure them home, inspiring bird-recovery programs worldwide

William Henry Ireland

To Be...Or Not

William-Henry Ireland committed the greatest Shakespeare hoax ever--and fooled even himself into believing he was the Bard's true literary heir

Departments

From the Editor

Homes Away

Another side of Kurds and Romans

Letters

Letters

Readers Respond to the April Issue

Wild Things: Life as We Know It

Hummingbirds, birch trees, queen bees, northern quolls and more...

Indelible Images

A Beat Family Album

Poet Allen Ginsberg's photographs reveal an American counterculture at work and play

My Kind of Town

Forever Foreign

Though he had lived in an around Kyoto for two decades, the author remains both fascinated and puzzled by the ancient Japanese city

This Month in History

June Anniversaries

Momentous or Merely Memorable

From the Castle

Far Sighted

The Chandra X-Ray Center at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Laboratory helps scientists observe a fantastic range of phenomena

Around the Mall

California Dreamin'

In 1972, artist Christo and Jeanne-Claude envisioned building a fence, but it would take a village to make it happen

The Object at Hand

Sign of the Times

Milton Glaser's 1966 poster of a folk-rock icon captured the psychedelic dazzle of the flower-power era

Q&A

Madeleine Albright on Her Life in Pins

In 2010, the former secretary of state reflected on her famous collection of brooches and pins

What's Up

What's Up

Presence of Mind

Novel Achievement

To Kill a Mockingbird, published 50 summers ago, still speaks to millions of readers. But its author, Harper Lee, maintains a determined silence

The Last Page

Green Eggs and Salmonella?

Beware the hidden hazards lurking within popular children's books