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Lectures & Seminars
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Join the Smithsonian
Friday, May 9
9 AM-5 PM
Lecture Special Sale Storytelling, a Path to Innovation
All-Day Seminar, with book signing
Storytelling has become an essential skill for managers and organizational leaders because it sparks innovation, builds community, transmits values, shares knowledge, and generates followers and new leaders in an organization. In today's seminar, Dorothy Leonard (professor of business, emeritus, Harvard Business School), Linda Coffman (senior manager, Global Learning), Claudia L'Amoreaux (education community developer, Linden Lab), and Steve Denning (senior fellow, James McGregor Burns Academy of Leadership, University of Maryland) teach participants how to use narrative techniques to generate new ideas and how to win organizational support at all levels for change. Madelyn Blair (founder/president, Pelerei, Inc.) moderates. Book signing follows.
$98, general admission & members; call 202-633-3030

Resident Associate Program
Location: S. Dillon Ripley Center
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12:30 PM
Special Tour Lecture In Conversation with Michael Bell-Smith
Friday Gallery Talk
Artist and curatorial research associate Ryan Hill organized the weekly gallery talks and introduces each program. In today's talk, artist Michael Bell-Smith discusses works in the exhibition Cinema Effect: Part I: Dreams.
Free
Continues most Fridays
Related Exhibition: Cinema Effect: Illusion, Reality, and the Moving Image
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
Location: Meet at information desk
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1-5 PM
Lecture Aaron Douglas
Symposium
Richard Powell (Duke University), Amy Kirschke (University of North Carolina, Wilmington), Renee Ater (University of Maryland), and Susan Earle (Spencer Museum of Art, University of Kansas, Lawrence) discuss the work and legacy of Aaron Douglas, one of the most prominent visual artists of the Harlem Renaissance. Kinshasa Conwill (deputy director, Smithsonian Museum of African American History and Culture) moderates and David Driskell (professor emeritus, University of Maryland) delivers the keynote address.
Free, first come, first served
Related Exhibition: Aaron Douglas: African American Modernist
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Location: McEvoy Auditorium (enter from G St.)
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Saturday, May 10
9-11 AM
Family Lecture Flutter Fest
Family Day
Bring the entire family and enjoy exclusive access to the museum's new butterfly exhibition. Learn from scientists how to identify the various butterfly species, how to feed butterflies, and how to grow a butterfly garden in the walk-through pavilion. Don't forget to enjoy the many arts-and-crafts activities.
Note: No tickets will be sold at the door. One ticket covers the whole family, including grandparents. $100 of your ticket purchase supports the scientific and educational mission of the National Museum of Natural History and is tax deductible according to IRS charitable donations requirements.
$125, per family; call 202-633-3030 ***See Note***

Related Exhibition: Butterflies + Plants: Partners in Evolution
Resident Associate Program
Location: Natural History Museum, meet at Constitution Ave. entrance
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10 AM-3 PM
Lecture Regional Riches: China off the Beaten Track
All-Day Seminar
In today's seminar, Elvira Hammond (professor of Chinese cultural history, New Mexico State University) provides an illustrated tour spanning across 3,000 miles and centuries of some of China's greatest cultural and religious sites, from the ancient capital of China's first imperial dynasty to Sichuan province and its mixture of old and new.
$110, general admission; $75, members; call 202-633-3030

Resident Associate Program
Location: S. Dillon Ripley Center
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Screening, 1 PM; Tour (Galleries 1 & 2), 2:30 PM
Special Tour Film Lecture The Compassionate Art of Indian Temple Sculpture
Video Screening, Conversation, and Tour
Art historian and filmmaker Benoy K. Behl discusses connections among aesthetics, philosophy, religion, and architecture in Indian life. He then screens one of his documentaries and leads a question-and-answer session on the sculpture of India. Later join Behl for a gallery talk in the Freer to learn more about Indian temple sculpture.
Free; first come, first served
Arthur M. Sackler Gallery and Freer Gallery of Art
Location: Freer, Meyer Auditorium
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1-2:30 PM
Lecture When Birds Collide - Birdstrike Identification at Smithsonian
Naturalist Center Lecture Series
(for ages 10 and up) Each year, civil and military aviation suffers millions of dollars in damage as a result of birdstrikes. Once the species of bird that is causing damage is identified, airfield managers and engineers can work to prevent these birdstrikes. Today, Dr. Carla Dove (museum specialist, Vertebrate Zoology) discusses the techniques used to identify birds from the fragments of feathers that remain after birdstrikes, as well as other kinds of feather cases she has helped solve.
Free
Series continues May 24
National Museum of Natural History
Location: Naturalist Center, 741 Miller Dr., SE, Leesburg, VA
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4:30 PM
Lecture Anna Deavere Smith on Ruth Orkin's Member of the Wedding
American Pictures Lecture Series
This lecture series offers a highly original approach to art and portraiture by pairing great works of art with leading figures of contemporary American culture. Today, actress, playwright, and author Anna Deavere Smith discusses Ruth Orkin's Member of the Wedding, Opening Night, Ethel Waters, Carson McCullers, and Julie Harris, New York City, 1950.
Free, but tickets distributed 1 hour before in G Street lobby
Last in series
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Location: McEvoy Auditorium (enter from G St.)
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Sunday, May 11
1 PM
Lecture Film Panel Discussion: Love, Marriage, and Family in the New Korea
Korean Film Festival DC 2008
Join Lee Yoon-ki (director of Ad Lib Night), Hyunjun Min (programmer of the Korean Film Festival DC's section Love is a Crazy Thing: Love, Sex, and Marriage in Recent Korean Cinema), and other guests as they discuss how Koreans' attitudes towards traditional family and romantic relationships have changed over the past decade and how these changes are depicted in Korean cinema. Celebrates Asian Pacific American Heritage Month.
Free, tickets (2 per person) distributed beginning at 12 noon
Series continues May 16 & 18
Related film at 2:30 PM today
Arthur M. Sackler Gallery and Freer Gallery of Art
Location: Freer, Meyer Auditorium
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3 PM
Lecture Consuming Art
Lecture
Artist Claudia Crisan explains her edible jewelry and the relationship between it, the wearer, and the audience. She explores the importance materials play in this relationship and offers samples of some of her sugar adornments.
Free; first come, first served
Related Exhibition: Ornament as Art: Avant-Garde Jewelry
Renwick Gallery
Location: Grand Salon
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Monday, May 12
7 PM
Lecture Special Sale Laura Lippman, Richard Price, and the Art of the Crime
Interview, with book signing
Laura Lippman has become one of the premier names in suspense. In an engrossing conversation with David Simon, Ms. Lippman and Richard Price talk about their work and explore such topics as the connections between crime in reality and crime in art, how they turn a city into a character, the differences between writing for film and writing a novel, and creating real-life crime characters. Book signing follows.
$25, general admission; $15, members; call 202-633-3030

Resident Associate Program
Location: S. Dillon Ripley Center ***New Location***
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Tuesday, May 13
11:30 AM-1:30 PM ***New Time***
Workshop Lecture Family Flights of Fancy - Stories for Children
National Children's Book Week
(for ages 3-7) Bring your children to "Flights of Fancy," the museum's story time. Celebrate National Children's Book Week as storytellers and readers share folktales and books from around the world that make the collections come alive. It's a magical way to explore space and fly with heroes and heroines of the past. Each reading is followed by a hands-on activity.
Free; parking $12 for the day
Repeats May 14-17
National Air and Space Museum Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center
Location:
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6:30 PM
Lecture What's the Next Move: Housing, East of the River
Panel Discussion
Policy makers and housing planners discuss how housing policy has affected the character of neighborhoods and communities east of the Anacostia River. Participants include: Chester Hart (Southeast Ministries, AEN Program); Brett Williams (professor, American University); Al "Butch" Hopkins (Anacostia Economic Development Corporations); Janice Burgess (D.C. Housing Authority, Office of Planning); Dorn McGrath (professor emeritus, George Washington University); Christopher Smith (W.C. Smith Real Estate); and Aubrey Thagard (D.C. Office of Planning). Moderator: Villareal Johnson.
Free; for reservations, call 202-633-4875
Related Exhibition: East of the River: Continuity and Change
Anacostia Community Museum
Location: 1901 Fort Place, SE
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7 PM
Lecture Special Sale Stuart Kauffman: Building a Bridge Between Science & Religion
Illustrated Lecture, with book signing
Scientist Stuart Kauffman (professor of biological sciences, physics, and astronomy, University of Calgary) seeks to change nothing less than the way we think about the evolution of humanity, the Universe, faith, and reason. In this evening's presentation, he argues that the science of complexity provides a way to move beyond reductionist science to something new: a unified culture where we can see the divine in the creativity in the universe, biosphere, and humanity. Book signing follows.
$20, general admission; $15, members; call 202-633-3030

Resident Associate Program
Location: National Academy of Sciences, 2101 Constitution Ave. at C St.
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8 PM
Lecture Herb Kelleher: Agent of Airline Change
Charles A. Lindbergh Memorial Lecture
"Be humble; work harder than anyone else; serve your people." Herb Kelleher's philosophy made Southwest Airlines into one of the most admired companies in the world. Among the most influential CEOs of our time, Kelleher led Southwest Airlines through 30 consecutive profitable years while never having to furlough an employee. This evening, he presents his unique insight into the airline industry, corporate management, and living life to the fullest.
Note: For tickets, visit the Web at www.nasm.si.edu/events/lectures/ticketsform.cfm or call 202-633-2398.
Free, but tickets required; see Note
National Air and Space Museum
Location: Lockheed Martin IMAX Theater
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Wednesday, May 14
11:30 AM-1:30 PM ***New Time***
Workshop Lecture Family Flights of Fancy - Stories for Children
National Children's Book Week
(for ages 3-7) Bring your children to "Flights of Fancy," the museum's story time. Celebrate National Children's Book Week as storytellers and readers share folktales and books from around the world that make the collections come alive. It's a magical way to explore space and fly with heroes and heroines of the past. Each reading is followed by a hands-on activity.
Free; parking $12 for the day
Repeats May 15-17
National Air and Space Museum Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center
Location:
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3-3:30 PM
Lecture Behind-the-Scenes Program
Lunder Conservation Center Activity
A museum conservator explains how artworks in the Smithsonian American Art Museum and National Portrait Gallery collections are cleaned, conserved, and stabilized.
Note: Register in person at the Luce Foundation Center information desk before 3 PM.
Free, but registration required; see Note
Repeats every Wednesday
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Location: 3rd floor, west, Lunder Conservation Center
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6:45-8:45 PM
Lecture King David: A Biblical and Historical Look at Goliath's Slayer
Lecture
Anthony Tambasco (professor of theology, Georgetown University) analyzes the David narratives from a biblical and historical viewpoint and explores the myths surrounding the shepherd who became king and Goliath's final adversary.
$40, general admission; $30, members; call 202-633-3030

Resident Associate Program
Location: S. Dillon Ripley Center
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Thursday, May 15
11:30 AM-1:30 PM ***New Time***
Workshop Lecture Family Flights of Fancy - Stories for Children
National Children's Book Week
(for ages 3-7) Bring your children to "Flights of Fancy," the Museum's story time. Celebrate National Children's Book Week as storytellers and readers share folktales and books from around the world that make the collections come alive. It's a magical way to explore space and fly with heroes and heroines of the past. Each reading is followed by a hands-on activity.
Free; parking $12 for the day
Repeats May 16-17
National Air and Space Museum Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center
Location:
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12 Noon
Lecture Jewelry through the Ages
Lecture
Sabine Albersmeier (associate curator of ancient art, Walters Art Museum, Baltimore) explores the evolution of jewelry through time, starting with the first forms of adornment and ending with the avant-garde jewelry of today.
Free
Related Exhibition: Ornament as Art: Avant-Garde Jewelry
Renwick Gallery
Location: Grand Salon
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6 PM, Pre-lecture Activities; 8 PM: Lecture
Lecture Living with a Star
Exploring Space Lecture Series
• 6:00 PM: Informal educational programming
• 7:00 PM: Free screening of 3D Sun
• 7:30 PM: Meet the Lecturer
• 8:00 PM: Lecture: Dr. Barbara Thompson (astrophysicist, Laboratory for Solar and Space Physics, Goddard Space Flight Center) discusses how the Sun-Earth connection is being studied by numerous ground-based and space-based observatories in a cooperative effort during the International Heliophysical Year (IHY). She highlights results from the SOHO satellite mission and describes how the program "Living with a Star" supports the goals of the IHY.
Note: For tickets, visit the Web at www.nasm.si.edu/events/lectures/ticketsform.cfm or call 202-633-2398.
Free, but ticket required; see Note
Series continues June 17
National Air and Space Museum
Location: Lockheed Martin IMAX Theater
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6-6:30 PM
Special Tour Lecture Portrait of Douglas Fairbanks
"Face to Face" Portrait Talk
The weekly portrait talk highlights a portrait selected by a National Portrait Gallery staff member or guest speaker.
Lauren Johnson (Gallery's executive assistant) talks about the portrait of Douglas Fairbanks, a leading actor of early Hollywood and co-founder of United Artists, by the Ullman Manufacturing Company in the related exhibition.
Free
Continues most Thursday evenings
Related Exhibition: Ballyhoo! Posters as Portraiture
National Portrait Gallery
Location: Meet at F Street Lobby
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6:45-9 PM
Lecture Mind-Body Basics
Lecture
Our awareness of the connection between the mind (what we think) and the body (what we physically experience) continues to grow. This evening, health psychologist Ann Webster (Harvard Medical School) coaches participants in a variety of techniques that reduce stress by eliciting the relaxation response, including mindfulness, imagery, and contemplation. Participants learn how to observe, understand, and maximize the role of positive thinking patterns in achieving greater well-being.
$40, general admission; $30, members; call 202-633-3030

Resident Associate Program
Location: S. Dillon Ripley Center
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Friday, May 16
11:30 AM-1:30 PM ***New Time***
Workshop Lecture Family Flights of Fancy - Stories for Children
National Children's Book Week
(for ages 3-7) Bring your children to "Flights of Fancy," the museum's story time. Celebrate National Children's Book Week as storytellers and readers share folktales and books from around the world that make the collections come alive. It's a magical way to explore space and fly with heroes and heroines of the past. Each reading is followed by a hands-on activity.
Free; parking $12 for the day
Repeats May 17
National Air and Space Museum Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center
Location:
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12:30 PM
Special Tour Lecture Molly Donovan on Black Box: Kimsooja
Friday Gallery Talk
Artist and curatorial research associate Ryan Hill organized the weekly gallery talks and introduces each program. In today's talk, Molly Donovan (National Gallery assistant curator of modern and contemporary art) discusses Black Box: Kimsooja.
Free
Continues most Fridays
Related Exhibition: Black Box: Kimsooja
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
Location: Meet at information desk
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Saturday, May 17
10 AM-4:30 PM
Lecture The Religions of China: Visions of the Way
All-Day Seminar
In today's seminar, Charles B. Jones (associate professor of religion and culture, Catholic University) explores basic assumptions underlying the Chinese religious worldview, and discusses the three major religions of China: Taoism, Confucianism, and Buddhism. Celebrates Asian Pacific American Heritage Month.
$120, general admission; $85, member; call 202-633-3030

Resident Associate Program
Location: S. Dillon Ripley Center
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10 AM-4 PM
Lecture Hill Towns of Tuscany: The Heart of Italy
All-Day Seminar
The hill towns of Tuscany are a living cultural treasure. In each picturesque village, magnificent treasures are tucked away on steep cobbled paths that offer breathtaking panoramic vistas of the surrounding landscape. In today's seminar, C. Griffith Mann (curator of medieval art, Walters Art Museum) highlights some of these villages, presenting their buildings, art, and history as a reflection of the medieval communities that created them.
$120, general admission; $85, member; call 202-633-3030

Resident Associate Program
Location: S. Dillon Ripley Center
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11:30 AM-1:30 PM ***New Time***
Workshop Lecture Family Flights of Fancy - Stories for Children
National Children's Book Week
(for ages 3-7) Bring your children to "Flights of Fancy," the museum's story time. Celebrate National Children's Book Week as storytellers and readers share folktales and books from around the world that make the collections come alive. It's a magical way to explore space and fly with heroes and heroines of the past. Each reading is followed by a hands-on activity.
Free; parking $12 for the day
Last day
National Air and Space Museum Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center
Location:
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2 PM
Lecture Special Sale Native Writers: Noenoe Silva
Discussion, with book signing
Noenoe Silva (Native Hawaiian/Kanaka Maoli; associate professor of political science, University of Hawai'i at Manoa) reads from and discusses her book Aloha Betrayed: Native Hawaiian Resistance to American Colonialism which won the Baldridge Prize for best book in history. Book signing follows. Celebrates Asian Pacific American Heritage Month.
Free
Repeats May 18
National Museum of the American Indian
Location: 4th Level, Patron's Lounge
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6-9:30 PM
Family Lecture Special Tour Night at the Museum -- A Behind-the-Scenes Experience
After-Hours Family Program
Spend an evening with curators, archivists, educators, restoration staff, and other experts who research, preserve, and restore the museum's amazing aviation and space exploration artifacts. Take a tour to learn how the museum operates and hear stories about the artifacts. Don't forget your camera so you can take a special tour with photographer Dane Penland, who advises on the finer points of capturing the perfect picture of your favorite artifact.
Note: For tickets, visit the Web at www.nasm.si.edu/events/lectures/ticketsform.cfm or call 202-633-2398.
Free, but tickets required; see Note
National Air and Space Museum Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center
Location: Throughout the museum
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Sunday, May 18
2 PM
Lecture Special Sale Native Writers: Noenoe Silva
Discussion, with book signing
Noenoe Silva (Native Hawaiian/Kanaka Maoli; associate professor of political science, University of Hawai'i at Manoa) reads from and discusses her book Aloha Betrayed: Native Hawaiian Resistance to American Colonialism, which won the Baldridge Prize for best book in history. Book signing follows. Celebrates Asian Pacific American Heritage Month.
Free
Last day
National Museum of the American Indian
Location: 4th Level, Patron's Lounge
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2 PM
Lecture Architectural Olympics in Beijing
Illustrated Lecture
World-class athletes aren't the only star attractions at the upcoming Beijing Olympics. The architects and engineers on the Chinese teams who helped to create the two stadiums -- the National Stadium, nicknamed the Bird's Nest, and the National Aquatics Center, nicknamed the Water Cube -- are getting worldwide recognition. In this illustrated lecture, general designer of the National Stadium Li Xinggang and chief structural engineer of the National Aquatics Center Fu Xueyi discuss the design, construction, and influences of the structures.
$20, general; free to members & students; call 202-633-3030

Resident Associate Program
Location: Natural History, Baird Auditorium
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3 PM
Lecture Romancing the String - My Life in Fiber
Lecture
Over the last 35 years, fiber artist John Garrett has worked with textile technologies and a wide range of found and natural materials to create 2- and 3-dimensional constructions that are visually unpredictable and intellectually eloquent. Today, he highlights his creations. Sponsored by the James Renwick Alliance.
Free
Renwick Gallery
Location: Grand Salon
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Monday, May 19
6:45 PM
Lecture Greece and the Greeks: The Power of Hellenic Heritage
Illustrated Lecture
Why does Greece instantly evoke notions of classical antiquity? In this illustrated lecture, Fani-Maria Tsigakou (curator of the Department of Paintings, Prints, and Drawings, Benaki Museum, Athens) explores the reasons through an overview of Greek images produced in Europe.
$10, general admission; free, members; call 202-633-3030

Related Exhibition: Classically Greek: Coins and Banknotes from Antiquity to Today
Resident Associate Program
Location: Smithsonian Castle, Schermer Hall
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Tuesday, May 20
6:45 PM
Lecture Special Sale Cal Thomas and Bob Beckel: Finding Common Ground
Lecture, with book signing ***Cancelled***
Drawing on their USA Today column, Cal Thomas and Bob Beckel address how partisan rancor has run amok in Washington and how civility can be restored in order to move the country forward. They make a strategic case for why bipartisanship and consensus politics are good for the nation. Book signing follows.
$30, general; $20, members; call 202-633-3030

Resident Associate Program
Location: S. Dillon Ripley Center
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Wednesday, May 21
3-3:30 PM
Lecture Behind-the-Scenes Program
Lunder Conservation Center Activity
A museum conservator explains how artworks in the Smithsonian American Art Museum and National Portrait Gallery collections are cleaned, conserved, and stabilized.
Note: Register in person at the Luce Foundation Center information desk before 3 PM.
Free, but registration required; see Note
Repeats every Wednesday
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Location: 3rd floor, west, Lunder Conservation Center
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6:45-9 PM
Lecture Cusine Easter Island: Myths and Reality
Illustrated Lecture, with light reception
Once home to a lost and enigmatic Polynesian culture, Easter Island, located off the coast of Chile, is today an important archaeological site. Tonight, the island's longtime resident archaeologist Claudio Cristino (associate professor of anthropology, University of Chile) discusses the most popular theories that have tried to solve the island's mysteries. The program concludes with a reception featuring Chilean cheeses and wines.
$40, general; $30, members; call 202-633-3030

Resident Associate Program
Location: American Indian Museum, Rasmuson Theater ***New Location***
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6:45-9 PM
Lecture Special Sale Elizabeth I's Perilous Path to the Throne
Illustrated Lecture, with book signing
Queen Elizabeth I's greatness was shaped in no small measure by her turbulent childhood and youth. British historian and author Alison Weir explores Elizabeth's life and relationships before her accession to the throne -- years when she came perilously close to the scaffold more than once. Drawing on a wealth of original source material, Weir traces the development of Elizabeth's complex character and describes the challenges she faced and the conflicts in which she was involved. Book signing follows.
$35, general; $25, members; call 202-633-3030

Resident Associate Program
Location: Hirshhorn Museum, Ring Auditorium ***New Location***
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Thursday, May 22
12:30-12:45 PM
Lecture The Nuts and Bolts of Flight: The Aeronautical Propulsion
Systems Collection: Ask an Expert
Jeremy Kinney, Aeronautics Division, discusses the aeronautical propulsion systems collection, the nuts and bolts of flight.
Free
Continues 2nd & 4th Thursdays of each month
National Air and Space Museum Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center
Location: Meet at the SR-71 Blackbird
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6-6:30 PM
Special Tour Lecture Portrait of Admiral William Frederick "Bull" Halsey
"Face to Face" Portrait Talk
The weekly portrait talk highlights a portrait selected by a National Portrait Gallery staff member or guest speaker.
Robert Cressman (Navy Historical Center) talks about the portrait of Admiral William Frederick "Bull" Halsey, a U.S. Naval officer and commander of the United States Third Fleet in the Pacific during World War II, by an unidentified artist in the related exhibition.
Free
Continues most Thursday evenings
Related Exhibition: Ballyhoo! Posters as Portraiture
National Portrait Gallery
Location: Meet at F Street Lobby
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6:30 PM
Lecture The Art of the Lost and Found
Lecture
Have you ever wondered what happens to stolen art? Bonnie Magness-Gardiner (manager, Art Theft Program, Federal Bureau of Investigation) shares her experience with the FBI Art Crime Team and gives examples of cases that illustrate how art theft and fraud is uncovered, how it is investigated, and the role of experts in the process. Cosponsored with the National Portrait Gallery.
Free, first come, first served
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Location: McEvoy Auditorium (enter from G St.)
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6:45 PM
Lecture Special Sale Mississippi Freedom Riders: Heroes of Civil Rights Movement
Lecture, with book signing
Join Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and distinguished history professor Roger Wilkins, author and photographer Eric Etheridge</