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  • How the book "Everything You Wanted to Know About Indians But Were Afraid to Ask" came about, and how it seems to be working.
  • To celebrate their debut album’s 10th anniversary, The Milk Carton Kids have released a box set comprised of three LPs, including a lot of previously unreleased material. Listen to Joey Ryan and Kenneth Pattengale talk about "Prologue 10th Anniversary Edition."
  • This Sunday on Prairie Public Presents: Tune in at 5pm for "Witness In the Dark," which features two plays by Dominique Morisseau, a MacArthur Genius Grant recipient and Tony Award nominee.
  • Ben Blount is a renowned letterpress printer and artist, whose work has been featured in the Joan Flasch Collection at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, The Newberry Library, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  • Conductor Maria Sensi Sellner continues her discussion with the opera's Director and Cast Members
  • Many who grew up in North Dakota are familiar with the song “You Oughta Go Ta North Dakota” — it has been commonly taught in elementary schools and sung by choirs across the state for decades. Great American Folk Show host Tom Brosseau digs into the song's history.
  • This week on Prairie Public Presents: Four Indigenous college students tell how they are using higher education to strengthen ties to their Native roots and support their people.
  • On today’s Dakota Diners, Tom takes a trip to the Fairdale Café in Fairdale, North Dakota. It’s in the northeast part of the state, in Walsh County. Population: 25. Listen to Tom's friendly visit with Fairdale Café owner, Shiela Myrvik, as they talk about that famous Thursday Klub lunch special, and what it was like to run the café through the pandemic.
  • Episode 47 features singer-songwriter Riley Gilbreath; poets Sean Sexton and Shadd Piehl; Bluegrass band Corner House; German composer Gianna Ferilli; and storytelling singer-songwriter Persian Pelican.
  • 11/5/2008: In 1925, when it was decided that the American Legion would hold its state convention in Dickinson the following year, a contest for coming up with a snappy slogan for the city was begun. It was decided that the slogan that won the contest would then be used as advertising for the convention.
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