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The Life of Skip Brack

Tue., Nov. 20, 2012 | Matt Stevens
Bibliographers seldom get much attention, especially when they choose the literary giant Samuel Johnson as their subject. Scholar O M "Skip" Brack Jr. relished living in the shadow of such greatness, annotating scholarly editions of Johnson's writings
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Maynard L. Parker’s American Dream

Thu., Nov. 15, 2012 | Susan Turner-Lowe
"Maynard L. Parker (1900–1976) built a career making residential spaces look their alluring best," says Jennifer A. Watts on the jacket copy of the new book that she edited about the acclaimed architectural photographer.
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Last Men of the Revolution

Sat., Nov. 10, 2012 | Jennifer A. Watts
Veterans Day, an occasion to honor the nation's servicemen and women, has roots stretching back to the First World War. Yet the desire to commemorate wartime sacrifice has a much longer history.
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Hubble and Copernicus

Thu., Nov. 8, 2012 | Catherine Wehrey
The name Hubble is familiar to most people. It invokes mental images of the Hubble Telescope and its photographs of colorful nebulae in space, but few know details of the life of its namesake...or his cat.
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Come What Will, Part 2

Tue., Nov. 6, 2012 | Olga Tsapina, Ph.D.
Today we bring you the second part of a post by Olga Tsapina, the Norris Foundation Curator of American Historical Manuscripts and curator of the current exhibition "A Just Cause: Voices of the American Civil War."
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Come What Will, Part 1

Mon., Nov. 5, 2012 | Olga Tsapina, Ph.D.
Today and tomorrow we bring you a two-part piece by Olga Tsapina, the Norris Foundation Curator of American Historical Manuscripts and curator of the current exhibition "A Just Cause: Voices of the American Civil War."
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AUDIO | The Work of Death

Thu., Nov. 1, 2012 | Matt Stevens
Historian Drew Gilpin Faust, president of Harvard University and author of This Republic of Suffering: Death and the American Civil War, spoke at The Huntington last night about Ric Burns' adaptation of her book
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ORCHID COLLECTION | Orchid See, Orchid Do!

Tue., Oct. 30, 2012 | Brandon Tam
Dracula simia has been monkeying around in the cloud forests of Ecuador and Peru since its discovery to humans in 1978. Despite more than 130 known species of Dracula so far, many more varieties of this genus are yet to come.