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Saturday is Juneteenth. It marks the day in 1865 that enslaved people in Texas received word of their freedom, more than two years after the signing of鈥�
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A new series of art installations hosted by The Nature Conservancy aims to connect hikers to the land through the art.Elizabeth Billings, the conservation鈥�
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The FrequencyA new VPR series explores Black grief and joy, through the lens of Vermont musicians of color. Plus, walk-in vaccine clinics, drought conditions and state鈥�
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This is a story about friendship, a love of theater and a shared passion for costumes. And how all those things have come together in a downtown Rutland鈥�
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The 400 Years Project is a pictorial collection of Native American life. It addresses colonization while centering the Native voice.
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Paul Rucker's multimedia work tackles mass incarceration, lynching, police brutality and the ways America has been shaped by slavery. His latest marks the 100th anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre.
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Baseball is coming back to Burlington this weekend. For the first time since 2019, the Vermont Lake Monsters will take the field. And since then, much has鈥�
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What comes to mind when you hear the words: palm oil, rum, honey, yellow flowers? The Brattleboro Museum & Art Center has an exhibition with that title by Kenny Rivero. Kenny Rivero is a New York artist who works across mediums. And it was the title that drew me, in addition to other key things about this work that Kenny describes.
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A classical cellist and Burr and Burton Academy senior became Vermont's Poetry Out Loud state champion back in March. And now Ir茅n Hangen V谩zquez's verse鈥�
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Congregations are figuring out how to safely meet in person now that the COVID-19 vaccine is more widely available. But vaccination remains divisive even as it allows them to come together again.