Topper, 1st Class and No Popcorn
The teenage queen was embraced by France in 1770. Twenty-three years later, she lost her head to the guillotine. (But she never said, "Let them eat cake")
We retrace the travels of the ragtag group that founded Plymouth Colony and gave us Thanksgiving
An unpopular president. A war-weary people. In the midterm elections of 60 years ago, voters took aim at incumbents
A fabled aircraft carrier sunk deliberately off the coast of Florida is the world's largest artificial reef
Momentous or Merely Memorable
How three pioneering reporters reshaped the way the press covers elections-and politics itself
William E. Leuchtenburg discusses the 1946 elections and how politics have changed
After two centuries, Mount Vernon's whiskey distillery returns
Little-known facts about the nation's first president
George Washington's historic Virginia plantation
Readers respond to the September issue
Civil war has threatened the existence of wild bonobos, while new research on the hypersexual primates challenges their peace-loving reputation
Bonobos have an impressive vocabulary, especially when it comes to snacks
Erich Jarvis dreamed of becoming a ballet star. Now the scientist's studies of how birds learn to sing are forging a new understanding of the human brain
"Bonobo Paradise" is an 86-acre sanctuary set in verdant hills 20 miles south of Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Killer whales, trap-jaw ants and dinosaurs
Fossils tell a new story about the diversity of hominid diets
A coastal community struggles to preserve the North Carolina "mullet blow"
Once imprisoned by Pinochet, the new Socialist president Michelle Bachelet wants to spread the wealth initiated by the dictator's economic policies
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