They are striving to protect the state's remaining brown ash trees, and hope to harvest enough healthy trees in the meantime to supply future tribal artisans.
Indigenous and Native American Heritage Month reminds us of the importance of reading Native American books to learn and ...
By Catherine Hong The Coming of the ‘Messiah’: How Handel’s Masterpiece Was Born John Adams reviews “Every Valley,” Charles King’s new book about the artistic, social and political ...
ORONO — More than 1,000 learners, many of them pre-kindergarten to grade 12 educators, have completed a self-directed University of Maine System course about the history of the Wabanaki Nations ...
Loren Long has illustrated books by Barack Obama, Madonna and Amanda Gorman. His No. 1 best seller, “The Yellow Bus,” took him in a different direction — one that required time, patience and ...
More than 1,000 people have received a digital credential in Wabanaki Nations history, the system announced Friday. Two years after it was introduced, more than 1,000 people, including many ...
Oct. 29—How to help protect the brown ash tree used in Wabanaki basketry from the invasive emerald ash borer. — Cut, buy, or burn only local firewood to avoid carrying beetle-infested wood to ...
The Wabanaki-Labrador Indigenous Health Research Network is receiving $4 million from the federal government over five years, said Debbie Martin. "As we move forward, we're going to start to dive ...
Lila Pereira, a successful media executive, rises to the top of her career but has to reckon with her youngest daughter, Grace, resenting her for not being a PTA mom. Grace also dredges up the ...
Katharine Spurrier dives into the stunning selection of photographs by Carlos Muñoz-Yagüe in this new book which takes us behind the scenes of iconic designer, Yves Saint Laurent. National Trust ...
These books dispense practical advice on managing one’s ambitions—or describe the dread of writer’s block with precision and humor. A short story has velocity and verve, and the best ones ...
Wabanaki basketmakers want to harvest these basket-grade trees, freeze and store them — some as whole logs, some pounded into thin, ready-to-weave strips called splints — so they will have ash ...