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JSTOR Daily
Just for Fun
The Propaganda of World War II Comic Books | JSTOR Daily
A government-funded group called the Writers’ War Board got writers and illustrators to portray the United States positively—and its enemies as evil.
There’s Something About Lizard Blood | JSTOR Daily
The blood of western fence lizards has the ability to neutralize Lyme disease in ticks—so why aren’t scientists bottling it to sell at the grocery store?
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Fixing the Aqueduct from Hell | JSTOR Daily
The Roman engineer Nonius Datus thought the project was in good shape when he left Saldae. He would return.
Permaculture is Agriculture Reimagined | JSTOR Daily
No permaculture site is the same, but all draw on a unifying set of principles to maintain biodiversity and create resilient systems now and in the future.
How Two Kansans Invented the Safari Documentary | JSTOR Daily
Martin and Osa Johnson were celebrities in their day, but their vision of Africa was way out of touch with reality.
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After the fall of France to Germany in 1940, the “best avenue of escape” for those fleeing the Nazis from the southern part of the country was by boat from Marseilles to Martinique.
The World War II Escape Route from France to Martinique | JSTOR Daily
After the fall of France to the Nazis in 1940, some refugees tried to make it out through the Caribbean.
Botanists Use Machine Learning to Accelerate Research | JSTOR Daily
A new artificial intelligence program called ARADEEPOPSIS will help botanists rapidly classify plant phenotypes.
The World War II Escape Route from France to Martinique | JSTOR Daily
After the fall of France to the Nazis in 1940, some refugees tried to make it out through the Caribbean.
The Sorry History of Car Design for Women | JSTOR Daily
A landscape architect of the 1950s predicted that lady drivers would want pastel-colored pavement on the interstate.
Britney Spears, Karate, and Wrong Numbers | JSTOR Daily
Well-researched stories from the New York Times, Vox, and other great publications that bridge the gap between news and scholarship.