Once just a way to find water, this rural practice is now used to test both food and dinner partners can you believe it?
The Japanese master has devoted his life to reviving a long-lost technique of fabric design and to creating handcrafted kimonos of lasting beauty
Sliced or chopped, sauteed or roasted, this bold little bulb has Americans clamoring for cloves to add sizzle to supper or to cure what ails us
Retired singers, musicians and conductors find a home in Milan, Italy, where a zest for music works like a fountain of youth
The expatriate American poet returned home in ignominy, and the postwar world watched as a literary giant was charged with treason
Alan Fern, director of the National Portrait Gallery, offers his insights on the art of reading a portrait
Getting rid of $34 billion worth of old ships, planes and guns, not to mention seven million tubes of toothpaste, was no picnic
Some reflections on the first year in office and a look at the likely changes and challenges facing us
Our cells take trillions of 'hits' each day from toxins both natural and man-made, but hardworking enzymes repair the damage
Planners ignore microclimates at their peril: mistakes can mean frozen crops, lower house values and camper vans blown off the highway
Today's physics allow outrageous possibilities: faster-than-light travel across the galaxy, or even our learning to make new universes to specification
At the University of Mississippi, the first annual International Conference on Elvis Presley brought together fans and scholars
It's a must-see show at the National Gallery of Art; not since 1696 have so many of his paintings been brought together in one place
They're from the Old Country, but there's nothing better for American music, from blues to honky-tonk and the fans are blown away
Sure the piano-violin can do two things at once—but can it do them well?
If you think things are pretty messy on Capitol Hill today, just take a look at what was going on up there a century and a half ago
In A.D. 77 a workaholic called Pliny the Elder published the first encyclopedia, Natural History. Headless people were among the many marvels
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