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Playwright to read A Sissy in Wyoming as part of Nic s celebration of Sissy Goodwin in Casper
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Oklahoma Joe: The importance of the arts
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Evening Standard/Getty Images
Facts and Bob Dylan have always made for strange companions. Though he achieved worldwide fame as “The Voice of a Generation” a young man celebrated for his honesty as he sang of both the hard truths of social injustices as well as his own personal romantic anguish he did so as Bob Dylan, not as Robert Zimmerman, the name he was born with and went by growing up in Minnesota.
Even today, more than 50 years after he first began kicking around the Greenwich Village club scene, Dylan remains an elusive figure who has at times been accused of making career choices specifically to obfuscate and muddle his identity. But there’s plenty we do know about the Nobel Prize winner who wrote some of the most important songs in music history.
Looter Tunnel 1938 at the Spiro site.(Permission Sam Nobel Museum of Natural History)Â
Temple Mound, Spiro, 1936, showing the ragged destruction by the looters.(Permission Oklahoma Historical Society)Â
Spiro Mounds Archeological Center signageMIKE CATHEY | Photo
Recent photo of Craigâs Mound at Spiro Mounds Archeological Center.MIKE CATHEY | PhotoÂ
Artist s conception of Spiro Mounds viewed from the west.(Permission Spiro Mounds Archeological Center)Â
Herb Roe
When they were unearthed in 1935, Oklahomaâs Spiro Mounds were dubbed by the Kansas City Star, âa King Tut tomb in the Arkansas Valley.â The mounds held thousands of richly-decorated, sophisticated artifacts from Native American Mississippian people, who thrived in the area before the arrival of European settlers.
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George Catlinâs 1832 drawing of âBall-play of the ChoctawâBall Upâ in Oklahoma (Permission Smithsonian Institution)
Ha-tchoo-tuck-nee, the Snapping Turtle (Peter Pitchlynn); The Snapping Turtle (Permission Smithsonian Institution) featured
By Mike Cathey Guest columnist Apr 10, 2021 1 of 2
George Catlinâs 1832 drawing of âBall-play of the ChoctawâBall Upâ in Oklahoma (Permission Smithsonian Institution)
Ha-tchoo-tuck-nee, the Snapping Turtle (Peter Pitchlynn); The Snapping Turtle (Permission Smithsonian Institution)
When George Catlin, a young Philadelphia lawyer and struggling painter, saw a delegation of Native Americans from the Far West in the late 1820s, he was inspired to embark on a new career. Admiring their grace and dignity â âarrayed and equipped in all their classical beautyâ â and believing that their way of life was fas
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