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  • This is Guilherme Feitosa DeAlmeida, senior lecturer of Musical Theatre at Baylor University. I'm here with this week's edition of Likely Stories. Award winning author Mahasweta Devi is an environmental crusader. Bitter Soil is her narrative manifesto.
  • Have you ever found yourself inexplicably moved by something incredibly simple and innocuous? A blinking street light in the dead of night. A solitary shopping cart in an empty parking lot. If so, then you might like to know, that sudden shift of emotion is known as a heartspur.
  • Willie Banks’ titanic sermon song “Things I Can’t Change” features one of the most powerful vocal performances in gospel music.
  • In this week's edition of David and Art, host David Smith dives into the fascinating story of how New Deal art—some of the most significant cultural creations of the 20th century—disappeared, and the ongoing efforts to track it down and return it to the public.
  • This week on conversations with Creative Waco host Fiona Bond speaks with Eric Linares about the importance of community. Fiona is also on conversation with Waco Civic Theater executive Director Kelly MacGregor about the significance of the theater's 100 year history.
  • “Leaning on the Lord” is an incredibly infectious gospel rave up by the otherwise unknown Heavenly Stars of Milwaukee.
  • In this week’s episode of David and Art, host David Smith takes a closer look at a painter whose life was as dramatic as his art. From gripping realism to a life marked by violence and mystery, his story continues to intrigue centuries later.
  • For many Baylor students, Monday nights at 9pm represent an opportunity to join in worship at a weekly service held by Vertical Ministries. This year, Vertical Ministries celebrates its 15th anniversary. Executive Director Myles Olenski and Associate Director Anna Webb share Vertical’s story, explain why Vertical stays focused on Monday services and discuss the organization’s purpose in serving Baylor students.
  • Sometimes when art looks at art, it can show how many works can deepen our view of suffering—and the quiet indifference that often surrounds it.
  • The landmark Global Flourishing Study, one of the most comprehensive studies of human existence ever undertaken and a first-of-its-kind multi-year investigation into human flourishing, recently released key insights from its first wave of data, highlighted by a gathering at Gallup Headquarters in Washington, D.C.
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