UGA poet Coleman Barks, celebrated for his own work and for bringing Rumi’s poetry to modern audiences, died in Athens ...
The opening scene in the first of four episodes of the PBS series Black and Jewish America: An Interwoven History captures a truly wonderful event: a Passover Seder led by culinary genius Michael ...
The longtime PBS series Great Performances is turning its focus to the young artists behind the New World Symphony on Miami Beach. The New World Symphony is based in the Frank Gehry-designed New World ...
Bill Mazeroski, who hit the first ever walk-off home run to end a World Series and lead the Pirates over the Yankees in 1960, died Friday. He was 89. Mazeroski was an eight-time Gold Glover whose ...
00:08 — Bill Moyers, legendary PBS broadcaster and former White House press secretary discusses his critique of media commercialization and warns it could result in a grim future that jeopardizes US ...
Jeremy Simien, a Baton Rouge native, is an art collector, historian and cultural preservationist whose work focuses on uncovering overlooked histories in American and Louisiana material culture. A ...
Bill Mazeroski, Hall of Famer, seven-time All-Star, two-time World Series champion and longtime member of the Pittsburgh Pirates, has died at 89 years old. “It is with a heavy heart that we relay the ...
Bill Mazeroski, the Gold Glove former second baseman of the Pittsburgh Pirates who danced around the bases after his bottom-of-the-ninth, solo home run beat the New York Yankees in Game 7 of the 1960 ...
Hosted on MSN
The PBS series ‘Black and Jewish America’ gets it right — except the Black and Jewish part
The Forward brings you independent, nonprofit journalism with trusted, nonpartisan news and analysis of the Middle East, campus conflicts, and more. Sign up for the free morning newsletter today. The ...
A religious liberty in medicine bill passed its first floor vote in Kentucky's Senate Friday. As our June Leffler reports, Republicans and Democrats disagree on whether Senate Bill 72 would protect ...
You can’t call yourself a true Pittsburgher if you don’t know who Bill Mazeroski was. Or what he did on Oct. 13, 1960, to become legendary. It was on that day that the Pirates second baseman, who was ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results