Headline Acts Announced For America250 Celebration At Capitol
Three concerts and a fireworks display are planned for the Fourth of July weekend on the state Capitol grounds.
Continue Reading Take Me to More NewsThree concerts and a fireworks display are planned for the Fourth of July weekend on the state Capitol grounds.
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Home » WVPB Podcasts » What's Next for the W. Va. Schools for the Deaf and Blind?
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On West Virginia Morning, two stories from Romney in Hampshire County. Ashton Marra reports from the schools for the deaf and blind about its future. And Jesse Wright reports on a groundbreaking ceremony for a new home designed for a severely wounded veteran. These stories on West Virginia Morning from West Virginia Public Broadcasting – telling West Virginia’s story.
On this West Virginia Morning, freshwater mussels play a vital role in the health of the region's waterways, but their populations have dwindled over the years.
Continue Reading Take Me to More NewsAn heir files suit to keep his community hospital open, disparities in the distribution of school choice vouchers, and a West Virginia lawmaker is among those targeted in White House UFC fight plot.
Continue Reading Take Me to More NewsThis week, ballads tell stories about all kinds of real-life events, but after Hurricane Helene, one group of ballad singers felt some topics were still too raw. Also, the author of a new book on ancient Ohio credits a former grad student with introducing him to the region’s mysterious earthworks. And, the legacy of Affrilachian poet Norman Jordan includes a summer camp for teens to study their heritage.
Continue Reading Take Me to More NewsIndigenous people created hundreds of earthen monuments in what is now Ohio, Kentucky and West Virginia. John E. Hancock, a professor of architecture and design at the University of Cincinnati, spent years studying these earthworks. He published a guidebook for visiting them. Inside Appalachia’s Bill Lynch spoke with Hancock about the book.
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