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You can cook it like any green beans, perhaps with added bouillon, or toss it into a stew. But if the stem is quite thick, ...
A special exhibit up through mid-September explores racial stereotypes and caricatures in their historic context.
Like most cars of this model year, the 2025 Toyota RAV4 hybrid comes in a wide variety of choices—nine in total. You can get ...
The 12th Generation Kindle Paperwhite is the one to get for most readers. It's fast, with a new screen that's much easier to ...
If you don't have swivel caster wheels making your kitchen appliances mobile, you're making your life in the kitchen way ...
When empty-nesters look for a home to downsize to, they tend to look for a few key characteristics. First — if possible — it ...
Colette Laxton and Mark Curry use the two-color scheme for the packaging on the products for their company, the Inkey List, and as a philosophy for their relationship — “total honesty always ...
Jack White took to social media to share a fan letter he received that's meant for Jack Black and asked an interesting question: 'Debating what I should do, any ideas?' ...
Here's how the conclave creates black and white smoke and why the Catholic Church began using them to signal whether a new pope has been elected.
Today, thanks to modern chemistry, the smoke is unmistakable—thick black billows for inconclusive votes, or a bright white plume when a new pope is elected.
Black smoke indicates a non-conclusive answer, and white smoke indicates that a new pope has been selected. Here's what to know about the black and white smoke used during a papal conclave.