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	<title>NMWA RSS Feed</title>
	<link>http://wildlifeart.org/explore/blogs/People+Art+Wildlife/</link>
	<language>en-us</language>
	<copyright>Copyright © 1997 - 2010</copyright>
	<webMaster>it@wildlifeart.org (Tom Wuthrich)</webMaster>
	<lastBuildDate>Wed, 03 Nov 2010 00:00:01 MST</lastBuildDate>   
	<description>The National Museum of Wildlife Art wants to keep you connected to Your Museum in Jackson Hole. Each month we send out a electronic newsletter to supplement our annual membership magazine, Call of the Wild. You can view the most recent six months of eNews from this page</description>
	
		

	<item>
	<title>April eNews</title>
	<link>http://www.wildlifeart.org/Calendar/eNews/archive/201204.html</link>
	<pubDate>3 April 201200:00:01 MST</pubDate>   
	<description>Nature Speaking April 2012</description>
	</item>

	<item>
	<title>March eNews</title>
	<link>http://www.wildlifeart.org/Calendar/eNews/archive/201203.html</link>
	<pubDate>7 March 201200:00:01 MST</pubDate>   
	<description>Nature Speaking March 2012</description>
	</item>

	<item>
	<title>February eNews</title>
	<link>http://www.wildlifeart.org/Calendar/eNews/archive/201202.html</link>
	<pubDate>8 Feb 201200:00:01 MST</pubDate>   
	<description>Nature Speaking February 2012</description>
	</item>

	<item>
	<title>January eNews</title>
	<link>http://www.wildlifeart.org/Calendar/eNews/archive/201201.html</link>
	<pubDate>1 Jan 201200:00:01 MST</pubDate>   
	<description>Nature Speaking January 2012</description>
	</item>

	<item>
	<title>December eNews</title>
	<link>http://www.wildlifeart.org/Calendar/eNews/archive/201112.html</link>
	<pubDate>1 December 201100:00:01 MST</pubDate>   
	<description>Nature Speaking December 2011</description>
	</item>


	<item>
	<title>November eNews</title>
	<link>http://www.wildlifeart.org/Calendar/eNews/archive/201111.html</link>
	<pubDate>1 November 201100:00:01 MST</pubDate>   
	<description>Nature Speaking November 2011</description>
	</item>

	<item>
	<title>Maps, Moose, and Museums</title>
	<link>http://wildlifeart.org/explore/blogs/People+Art+Wildlife/#5</link>
	<pubDate>Friday, 01 Jan 2010 00:00:01 MST</pubDate>   
	<description>Posted Friday the 1st of January, 2010 - In these days of Google Earth, GPS tracking, and instant cell phone connections to every nearby restaurant, mapping technologies inspire new visions. It’s great to know about restaurants. What do you know about, say, moose? Or museums?</description>
	</item>

	<item>
	<title>"I See What You Mean"...</title>
	<link>http://wildlifeart.org/explore/blogs/People+Art+Wildlife/#6</link>
	<pubDate>Tuesday, 02 Jan 2010 00:00:01 MST</pubDate>   
	<description>Posted Tuesday the 2nd of January, 2007 - "I See What You Mean" is the name of the forty-foot sculpture of a blue bear by Lawrence Argent that stands outside, staring into the windows of the Colorado Convention Center in Denver...</description>
	</item>

	<item>
	<title>The Tourist</title>
	<link>http://wildlifeart.org/explore/blogs/People+Art+Wildlife/#4</link>
	<pubDate>Monday, 02 Feb 2010 00:00:01 MST</pubDate>   
	<description>Posted Monday the 2nd of February, 2009 - You can see the elk a mile away. Headed north out of Jackson, the lead cow tripping her way down, the bull perched atop the rock, gazing across the valley; three others following. On a daily basis dozens of people stop their cars and take snapshots of this monumental sculpture by Bart Walter in front of the National Museum of Wildlife Art. Some picture-takers lean out the window of the car; at other times whole families emerge to pose in front of the sculpture, or a well-equipped shutterbug hauls out a tripod. </description>
	</item>

	<item>
	<title>Have you ever seen a lion in a museum?</title>
	<link>http://wildlifeart.org/explore/blogs/People+Art+Wildlife/#13</link>
	<pubDate>Saturday, 13 Mar 2010 00:00:01 MST</pubDate>   
	<description>Posted Saturday the 13th of March, 2010 - Have you ever seen a lion in a museum? In startling footage of the National Museum of Wildlife Art, a live male African lion pads through the galleries. He wanders calmly past paintings and sculptures, nosing through carpeted galleries, stopping once to roar. Not the outdoors, not a cage, not an open vista--nothing to eat. </description>
	</item>

	<item>
	<title>If you've never seen an animal, what does it look like?</title>
	<link>http://wildlifeart.org/explore/blogs/People+Art+Wildlife/#14</link>
	<pubDate>Thursday, 27 May 2010 00:00:01 MST</pubDate>   
	<description>Posted Thursday the May 27th, 2010 - Renowned children's book illustrator and author Maurice Sendak has something in common with 19th-century Swiss artist Karl Bodmer: their work portrays animals many people had never seen before. New exhibits at the National Museum of Wildlife Art feature  Sendak's Animal Kingdom and Bodmer's North American Wildlife.</description>
	</item>

	<item>
	<title>Why Teach Kids in Museums</title>
	<link>http://wildlifeart.org/explore/blogs/People+Art+Wildlife/#16</link>
	<pubDate>Fri, 13 Aug 2010 00:00:01 MST</pubDate>   
	<description>Posted Friday the 13th of August, 2010 </description>
	</item>

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