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Topic - Smithsonian Institution

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  • **FILE** Jonathan B. Jarvis, director of the National Park Service (Andrew Harnik/The Washington Times)

    Park Service chief: Sequester cut signs should come down

    The head of the National Park Service said Tuesday that parks should take down any signs blaming service cuts on the budget sequesters, saying he thought that was inappropriate.

  • ** FILE ** News Corp. CEO Rupert Murdoch delivers a keynote address at the National Summit on Education Reform on Friday, Oct. 14, 2011, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Noah Berger)

    EDITORIAL: Let Murdoch be Murdoch

    For those just waking up from a multidecade nap, the world has changed markedly since 1975. Led Zeppelin, Olivia Newton-John and Chicago no longer top the record charts. Roy Acuff and Minnie Pearl have joined Hank Williams in the great Opry House in the sky. "Maude," "Columbo" and "Happy Days" no longer rule the nation's television screens.

  • Radar reveals apparent buried channels on Mars

    The face of Mars is dotted with a maze of channels, pointing to possible ancient megaflood episodes.

  • Panelists at Indian museum forum team up against Redskins name

    Hundreds of people gathered Thursday at the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian for a discussion of sports teams' use of racially insensitive imagery that, as such discussions often do, turned into an ongoing complaint against a certain Washington football team's continued use of a certain Indian-inspired nickname.

  • Tragedy for dinosaurs, opportunity for mammals, us

    New research pinpoints how the torch passed from one dominant creature on Earth to another, from the brutish dinosaur to the crafty mammal.

  • Government spends millions on resort for retired research chimps

    As the government exits the business of using chimpanzees for scientific research, taxpayers just might go bananas over the animals' retirement tab.

  • NASA testing vintage engine from Apollo 11 rocket

    Like vinyl records and skinny ties, good things eventually come back around. At NASA, that means looking to the Apollo program for ideas on how to develop the next generation of rockets for future missions to the moon and beyond.

  • NASA testing vintage engine from Apollo 11 rocket

    A vintage rocket engine built to blast the first U.S. lunar mission into Earth's orbit more than 40 years ago is again rumbling across the Southern landscape.

  • 2nd inaugural fashion set for presidential library

    While a first lady's first inaugural gown is traditionally donated to the Smithsonian, Michelle Obama's second inaugural gown is destined to be among the first objects in a future Obama presidential library.

  • Museum: Mars Day
Mars, the planet, is not the selling point it once was. Edgar Rice Burroughs' turn-of-the-twentieth tales about John Carter and the red planet Barsoom" satiated the appetites of young Americans hungry for stories about space. Today, movies about space--like "John Carter," "Prometheus," "Mars Needs Moms," "Apollo 18"--are commercial flops. Perhaps it's the economy; space travel feels downright irresponsible at a time of record deficits. Or maybe the lack of interest in our planetary cousins is due to the fact that no fantasized-about alien technology can compete with what's currently available at the Apple store. Regardless of the root of our disinterest, the Smithsonian is not giving up its quest for our attention. At Mars Day!, visitors young and old can talk to people whose job it is to plot future human missions to the red planet and monitor the travel of Curiosity, the rover being sent to replace Spirit and Opportunity (may they rest in pieces).Friday July 13 at the National Air and Space Museum, 600 Independence Ave. SW. Phone: 202/633-1000. Web: http://airandspace.si.edu/

    EDITORIAL: Spaced out at the Smithsonian

    Accustomed to free access to Smithsonian museums, visitors to the National Air and Space Museum's center in Chantilly can be taken aback by the hefty $15 parking fee.

  • Beyond Obama's oath, what to see and taste in DC

    Whether visitors want to try one of the first family's favorite restaurants, discover a sense of history or escape from the crowd to find a museum off the beaten path, Washington is the nation's cultural capital this weekend for inauguration visitors.

  • ** FILE ** Rep. Robert E. Andrews, New Jersey Democrat.

    New Jersey Democrat wants pork-free Sandy storm aid bill

    New Jersey Democratic Rep. Rob Andrews is demanding his colleagues strip pork payouts from a massive aid bill intended to help victims of Superstorm Sandy.

  • Artist Nam June Paik used electronics in inventive and goofy ways

    Nam June Paik has been rightly called the George Washington of the video art movement. The South Korean-born artist, who died in 2006 at age 73, led a revolution in embracing television and electronics during the early 1960s to create provocative, quirky and influential works.

  • 2 Andean bear cubs born at National Zoo

    The Smithsonian National Zoo says its 6-year-old Andean bear Billie Jean has given birth to twins.

  • Concert: Ronnie Spector's Best Christmas Party Ever!

    Get Out: Ronnie Spector’s Best Christmas Party Ever

    Despite being dubbed the "bad girl of rock 'n' roll," Ronnie Spector's strong and sparkling vocals are perfect for the holiday season's cheesiest pop tunes — and her take on "Sleigh Ride" and "Frosty the Snowman" are some of the most-played versions of the songs.

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