News

A New York Times Magazine story on one of the most famous Native Americans in the history books raises a provocative question: "What if everything we know about Sacagawea was wrong?" reads the ...
Diagnosed in 2006 with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis — a progressive and fatal condition — Antonia Raco experienced a recovery that defied medical explanation.
The English poet John Milton grappled with this question in his famous epic, Paradise Lost, first published in 1667. And Alan ...
In this lesson, students will explore the crisis of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (MMIW) by first defining the term and analyzing national data and statistics, guided by insights from Rep.
The Encore Musical Theatre Company has opened subscription sales for its 17th Season, inviting audiences to lock in their ...
The princess, also named Ulele, lived in the Tampa area 500 years ago. According to Rodney Kite-Powell of the Tampa Bay ...
Uncovering the Real Story and Lasting Legacy" In this thought-provoking video, former Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs Kevin Gover and a Smi ...
Congress voted to claw back federal funding to public media. Some of those hit hardest include community radio stations in ...
A legendary meteorite in Pocahontas, Arkansas, remains a point of pride and debate, blending local folklore and science as it sits at the heart of the town's history on the courthouse lawn.
With a proven link between malnutrition and illness, human ingenuity is working to end the root cause of around half of all deaths in children under five years of age.
Not the Pocahontas story, I wish, but no, this is a different John Smith and he was buried in the Winchester Cemetery and moved to Elmwood and his daughter married Isaac Shelby and that's the man ...