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Archer Mayo joins host Chelsea Rose on Underground History.
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Chris Ruiz joins Chelsea Rose, host of Underground History.
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The first national Women's History Week occurred in 1980. Seven years later, Congress passed a law designating March as Women's History Month.
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Mark Axel Tveskov, Southern Oregon University anthropologist, and Ashley Ann Bissonnette from Eastern Connecticut State University wrote "Conflict Archaeology, Historical Memory, and the Experience of War: Beyond the Battlefield."
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Goldie Taylor's been on NBC, ABC, and other networks providing political analysis. Her success is all the more notable because of some serious disadvantages she had growing up, including sexual abuse before she was even a teenager. Taylor takes the good and the bad and tells the whole story in her memoir "The Love You Save."
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“Us As We Are” host Keegan Van Hook visits with the Society for Creative Anachronism. It’s an international organization where members dress in period clothing and recreate the pre-17th century European world.
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The High Desert Museum in Bend just opened (January 28th) a display of art from and about the people of the Columbia River Plateau. Only indigenous people created the works, which are artistic and functional at the same time. HDM Director Dana Whitelaw explains.
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Southern Oregon University Anthropologist and host Chelsea Rose speaks with Dr. Elissa Bullion, the newly appointed physical anthropologist for the Legislative Commission on Indian Services.
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The photos were taken inside the Warsaw Ghetto by a 23-year-old Polish firefighter as the Nazis were brutally crushing the Jewish uprising of 1943. The photos were discovered in a family collection.
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Hundreds of thousands of postcards from all over the world have found a home in 92-year-old Donald Brown's personal collection in Myerstown, Pa.
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The stewards of Oregon's tallest lighthouse are sprucing up the popular landmark on Oregon's central coast for its 150th anniversary in 2023.
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Randy Settler’s family has spent generations fighting for its right to harvest salmon. But the federal government squandered its chance to recover the endangered fish before the onset of climate change. Now, Settler sees it all slipping away again.
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Lisa Napoli on her book "Susan, Linda, Nina & Cokie: The Extraordinary Story of the Founding Mothers of NPR. Susan Stamberg and Linda Werthheimer join the discussion.
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Pulitzer prize winning author Michael Hiltzik takes us a lot further down the track in his book Iron Empires: Robber Barons, Railroads, and the Making of Modern America.