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Murray Kuun: Non-traditional Violin Maker
Murray Kuun is a woodworker and luthier living in South Africa, where he builds violins and other instruments. In a recent interview, he told us about his path to becoming a maker of instruments with innovative designs.
The Intrepid Fiddler
Busking in the Digital Age
Jody's Column
"Broken Down Gambler" as played by The Skillet Lickers
Violin Maker's Corner
Fundamental Friction Facts for Fiddler Folks
On Improvisation
In this On Improvisation column, we'll be discussing Mr. (or Ms.) Pinky, as he (or she) is known to his (or her) friends.
John Preston: Making Living Trees into Singing Instruments
Every great chef knows the excellence of their dish depends on the quality of their ingredients. The same is true for the builder of instruments.
Tracking Periods Without Being Tracked
The group behind the nonprofit app Drip says it offers greater privacy than commercial rivals
‘I Didn't Really Learn Anything': Covid Grads Face College
Angel Hope looked at the math test and felt lost. He had just graduated near the top of his high school class, winning scholarships from prestigious colleges. But on this test — a University of Wisconsin exam that measures what new students learned in high school — all he could do was guess.
You Can't Stop Pirate Libraries
Where there's demand for books, the Internet will supply them.
The Dangerous Lesson of Book Bans in Public School Libraries
An obscure Supreme Court case provides a roadmap through the curricular culture war.
Debtors' Vision
How a group of Occupiers pushed Biden to embrace student debt relief
Kids Can Learn Without Instruction
Don’t show this to your kids, because they might cry. But guess how much time children in “traditional societies”— indigenous groups pretty much off the grid—spend in direct instruction, the way American kids do in school?
The Magic of Children's Gardens
Exposure to nature helps kids learn important lessons they'll carry with them as they grow.
Cold War Kids
For two weeks in 1962, at recess, we would all look up at the sky. We're looking at the sky again.
10 Common Career Tips That Might Be Wrong for You
Advice about the working world can seem helpful, but following it may not help your career flourish.!
The End of an Era
Texans drove their last great herds north in the 1880s.
Wondrium: Wide Variety of Education Videos
Couch-side edutainment for the curious
Ask the Marshall — Saloons, Paniolos and Telegraphs
Was the Long Branch Saloon in Dodge City, Kansas, an integrated saloon during 1876 to 1886, the height of the cattle drive era? This rare interior photo of Chalk Beeson's famous Front Street bar shows bartender Lo Warren (front, right), a Black bartender and cowboys sitting at the rear of the saloon.
Native History Celebrated Large
Only months old, the First Americans Museum in Oklahoma City is dedicated to truth-telling.
The lost girls of covid
For 25 years, girls in developing countries have been on a remarkable trajectory of progress. The pandemic is reversing it
Good Bugs
These creative critters offer help to humans in a variety of ways.
“My Dad Wasn't Just A Nobody”
Fifteen people at Rikers died in 2021. These are their stories.
The Purity Trap
These women went to Bible college to deepen their faith. Then they were assaulted— and blamed for it.
THE ROOTS OF VIOLENCE
In the early 1960s, archaeologists from around the world descended on the Upper Nile Valley.
Under the Holy City
A long-running excavation in Jerusalem unearths evidence for two of the city’s least-known eras
TURNING SALT INTO GOLD
In the Austrian Alps, generations of miners toiled to extract the ancient world’s most valuable resource
OFF THE GRID
OPLONTIS, ITALY
AT FACE VALUE
Researchers are using new scientific methods to investigate how artists in Roman Egypt customized portraits for the dead
A Brush With Genius
An unprecedented find in central China brings to life the early years of a master calligrapher
Archaeology's Top 10 Discoveries of 2021
Discoveries