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The Pahaska Tepee Gift Shop and Café will close at the end of 2024. Bill Carle and his family has operated the store for nearly 50 years, and he fears what will come of the shop's future.
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For many Latino families in Colorado, Christmas food traditions revolve around tamales - not just eating them, but making them together.
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The Five Points Nutcracker isn't just your ordinary staging of the familiar ballet. It uses a jazz score from Duke Ellington and tells the story of prominent Black figures from Five Points, such as businesswoman Clara Brown, Black sheriff Willie Kennard, and philanthropists the Cousins family.
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The 19th Annual TubaChristmas was held Saturday afternoon, Dec. 7, at the Oak Street Plaza in downtown Fort Collins. Eighty tuba and euphonium players entertained a crowd of listeners.
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On Nov. 2, the BIPOC Alliance hosted the 4th Annual Diá de Muertos Community Celebration in Old Town Square.
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Colorado’s small but thriving LGBTQ+ Ballroom scene embraces and celebrates people for who they are. The houses often serve as a support system for queer people, an acceptance many do not receive from their own families.
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Since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Amendment 2 in 1996, Colorado has emerged as a leader for LGBTQ+ rights and laws this includes ensuring transgender and non-binary people have access to the health care they need. Plus a Northern Colorado medical recsidency program is normalizing HIV care in a primary care clinic.
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The number of Pride celebrations are growing across Northern Colorado but in some communities it's still a struggle to hold these events. This includes in Weld County where a local librarian - and their friends - took over organizing Greeley Pride after it was cancelled. We also hear from the organizer of another local Pride event. She was harassed and received death threats online after photos of her - and her kids - at a family friendly drag show were posted on a far-right social media account.
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The Third Annual Corn Festival was held in Longmont on September 28 and focused on gathering to celebrate Indigenous culture through workshops, musical and dance performances as well as a powwow and Native food court.
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Biologists were on hand to meet with families to explore what lives below the surface of the Cache La Pourdre River in Fort Collins. The event was just one of many across the state of Colorado this weekend. Many events are still happening in the coming days. Find out more at Latino Conservation Week.