Tag: Week
Lickee's and Chewy's secrets, Gundalow Co. series, new Aplomb opening: Events this week – Seacoastonline.com
Penn State Altoona to hold events for Startup Week April 4-8
A University-wide event, Startup Week brings leading minds in entrepreneurship and innovation to Penn State campuses across the Commonwealth. The week features entrepreneurial workshops, networking events, student pitch competitions, and presentations from startup founders and corporate innovators, including Penn State alumni. Startup Week inspires students to go beyond what is expected of them and expand their minds to think more broadly in whatever career path they choose.
Macomb County Library events week of March 20 and beyond
Chesterfield Township Library
• Online learning tools for young children up to adult learners are available with a free library card at chelibrary.org. Residents may also apply for a free card at the website.
• Online streaming and download services are also available at chelibrary.org, including rbDigital, Hoopla, OverDrive/Libby and cloudLibrary for magazines, e-books and audiobooks, TV shows, music and more.
The library is located at 50560 Patricia Dr., Chesterfield Township.
Clinton-Macomb Public Library
• Mindfulness and Mental Health at 6:30 p.m. March 23 via Zoom. Dr. Michelle Davila from Beaumont Integrative Medicine in Royal Oak will discuss mindfulness which is a practice of be aware of each moment as it arises and and brining an attitude of kindness and non-judgement. To register, call 586-226-5040 or visit the Events page online.
• Speakers from several mental health organizations will focus on family dynamics with an event at 6:30 p.m. March 24. Experiences will be shared on learning healthy communication strategies and navigating stress, to the effect of trauma on relationships and options in the community when a family is in crisis. Registration is required for this hybrid event by calling 586-226-5050 or visit the Events page online.
• ‘Maybe You Should Talk to Someone’ book discussion at 3 p.m. March 26. This book was chosen as the adult novel of 123: Mental Health initiative. To register, call 586-226-5040 or visit the Events page online.
• The library’s South Branch will host Snapology’s Machines and Contraptions for children ages 5-10 who love to tinker and create new things. It will teach children to understand mechanical movement and the importance of simple machines. All materials will be provided to build various machines and contraptions using Lego bricks. To register, call 586-226-5073 or visit the Events page online.
• Bilingual storytime at 6:30 p.m. March 30. Storytime for children will use a mix of English and another language to tell stories and rhymes. Recommended for ages 3-6 but all ages welcome. At this session American Sign Language will be used. To register, call 586-226-5030 or visit the Events calendar online.
• The South Branch will host Go Nuts! Children will find out what it’s like to be a squirrel during this program and make a treat to offer squrriels in the yard. To register, call 586-226-5073 or visit the events calendar online.
• Reading Challenge for Adults though Dec. 30, 2002. Readers can take the challenge to read six books from eight predetermined categories. Residents who complete the challenge will receive a completion pin and be entered to win a basket full of gift cards for a night on the town courtesy of CMPL. Join the challenge and start logging at cmpl.beanstack.org.
• CMPL is again offering the 1-2-3 program combining one topic, two communities and three age appropriate books that discuss a particular topic. This year is mental health. Programs will be offered throughout the year that focus on the importance of mental health. Books chosen are ‘Ruby Finds a Worry’ by Tom Percival; ‘The Dark Matter of Mona Starr’ by Laura Gulledge and ‘Maybe You Should Talk to Someone’ by Lori Gottlieb.
• The library is offering various virtual events that all require registration, which can be done at cmpl.libnet.info/events. A valid email address is required to access the events.
• CMPL is still offering usual book discussion groups and trivia nights online each month. Register for events online at cmpl.libnet.info/events or call 586-226-5000.
Eastpointe Public Library
• Spark Joy with Shannon Huneycutt virtual program available on March 21 and 22. Learn how to declutter your space with tips based on Marie Kondo’s KonMari method. Link on the website, cityofeastpointe.net. Click on Departments, Library and scroll down to virtual programs.
• Chef Fran’s Cooking Demonstration at 2 p.m. March 24. Healthy nutritious dishes using budget friendly ingredients. Limited space. Registration required.
• Mystery Book Club at 2 p.m. March 29 “Reader’s Choice” month. Read any mystery and share it with the group.
• Friends Book and Media Sale from 12:30-4:45 p.m. April 1 and 10 a.m.-1:45 p.m. April 2. Sale include books, music and movies.
• Author Paul Vachon presents, “Lost Restaurants of Detroit.” He talks about some of the favorite restaurants around Detroit in this program that was filmed at the library. It is available on the website cityofeastpointe.net/departments/eastpointe_memorial_library.php.
• The library is open for curbside service and phone reference service during regular hours. Patrons can place holds on items through the catalog or call to request materials. It is open to the public. Masks must be worn and social distancing practiced. Patrons will have access to library materials, computers, and copiers. Materials returned to the library must be placed in the dropbox.
• The library is offering virtual storytimes. Those and book talks for different age groups are set. Themes will change each week and videos will be posted on the Facebook page which is accessible from the library website, cityofeastpointe.net/departments/eastpointe_memorial_library.php. Anyone who comments on a Facebook post will automatically be entered into a biweekly raffle. Raffle prizes are gift cards to local restaurants. Winners will be notified via Facebook message.
• Patrons who live in Eastpointe may call the library with specific requests or a general request of a genre or author they like for librarians to make material selections. Books, movies, music and magazines are available for check out. Contact the library from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. at 586-445-5096 to make a request. Eastpointe residents who do not have a library card can also contact the library.
The library is located at 15875 Oak Ave., Eastpointe. To contact the library call 586-445-5096.
Fraser Public Library
Library is back open and curbside service is still available. Patrons are encouraged to wear masks while inside the building. Masks are available at the entrance if needed.
• For curbisde service, a librarian will assist patrons and staff will get requested items. When arriving at the library, remain in the car and call the library again to tell a staff member you are outside, along with your car model and which pick up spot you are parked in.
• Items will be on a cart pushed by a staff member. Allow them to step at least six feet away before getting out to get materials. Masks or face coverings must be worn at all times.
• Materials brought back to the library must be placed in the drop box before or after the staff member comes outside. Returns will not be accepted on the cart for safety reasons.
• The library is open for curbside pick-up Monday to Thursday from 10 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. and Friday and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Patrons who wish to checkout materials should call the library (586-293-2055) to checkout over the phone and then call again when they’re in the parking lot.
• Tutor.com services are available for homework assistance with tutors in a variety of subjects. Visit fraserpubliclibrary.org and under the resources tab, select online databases. Students who don’t have a library card can get a virtual library card from their school that will allow access to online library services, but not to check out books.
Librarians are available from 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Monday-Thursday and 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays to answer questions regarding the library’s online databases. They are available by email at fraserlibrary@libcoop.net or live chat at Google Hangouts with the username fraserpubliclibrary@gmail.com.
The library is located at 16330 14 Mile Road, Fraser.
Harrison Township Public Library
• Reading Month: Bingo Challenge March 1-31 for those ages 2-12. Print off your bingo board or get on at the library and start reading. Every time you read a book that fulfills the requirements of a square, add the title on the back of the sheet and color in the square. Each book can only be used for one square. Get bingo by filling any one row, or column or diagonally corner to corner. Once you get bingo return the sheet to the library and get your prize. One entry per person please.
• Knitting and Crochet Circle 10 a.m.-12 p.m. Tuesdays March 22 and 29. Knitters and crocheters of all levels are welcome. Please bring your own project and supplies. Items are donated to charitable organizations and the group is also accepting donations of yarn, fleece or craft store gift cards.
• Free Tax Preparation 9 a.m.-3 p.m. March 25. Appointment required. Free assistance for federal, state and city tax returns through the Macomb CA-VITA program. Service includes e-filing and direct deposit. To be eligible, annual family income must be less than $57,000. To schedule an appointment, call 586-463-2537 or visit macombca.itfrontdesk.com/vita.
• HTPL Teen Night: Donate a Story for Community Service 5:30-7 p.m. March 25. Need community service hours? Get recorded reading a story of your choosing to be featured on the library YouTube channel and the Bedtime storytimes. Earns one hour of community service. Registration required. Register online or by calling the library.
• Book Group at 7 p.m. March 29. Selection is ‘Midnight Library’ by Matt Haig.
• Storytime Shakeup via Facebook Live at 10 a.m. Wednesdays Jan. 12-March 30. Storytime with books, songs and rhymes for all ages. No registration required.
• Residents can request materials be delivered to their homes. Request materials, once notified they are ready for pickup, contact the library at 586-329-1261 to set up delivery time.
While pickups are not being scheduled for library returns at the moment, returns can be given to volunteers at a scheduled drop-off. Deliveries cannot be left in common areas and residents of apartments and other multi dwellings should schedule deliveries for when they are home to accept them. Volunteers will not enter a home for any reason. Deliveries will be rescheduled during inclement weather for safety of materials and volunteers.
• The library has implemented allowing residents to check out WiFi hotspots, which will provide internet access wherever needed, expanding service beyond the walls of the library. The hotspots will allow those without Internet to check it out from the library. It’s a small device that can be used to access and connect wireless-enabled devices such as laptops, smartphones or tablets. They are portable and are available to borrow for 14 days and will carry a $1 a day late fee if not returned on time. Devices more than 24 hours late will be deactivated.
The library is located at 38255 L’Anse Creuse St., Harrison Township. Register for classes where required at htlibrary.org.
MacDonald Public Library
To sign up for programs or find more events, visit macdonaldlibrary.org and click on “Events.”
To contact the library, send us an email at contactmpl@macdonaldlibrary.org or call (586) 725-0273. The library is open and available for visits Monday through Thursday from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Friday through Saturday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
The library is located at 36480 Main St., New Baltimore.
Mount Clemens Public Library
The library is currently under renovation but has a temporary location at 300 Groesbeck, Mount Clemens. Some of the programming takes place there, while others take place at Cairns Community Center, 58 Orchard Street, Mount Clemens.
• Toddler Storytime and Open Gym at 9:30 a.m. Mondays at Cairns Community Center.
• Preschool Storytime and Open Gym at 11 a.m. Mondays at Cairns Community Center.
• Family Storytime at 6:30 p.m. Thursdays at 300 North Groesbeck
• Take Home Art Projects throughout March at 300 North Groesbeck
• Teen Book Talk 4:30 p.m. March 22 at Cairns Community Center.
• Bingo 1:30 p.m. March 28 at Cairns Community Center.
• March Take and Make Stained Glass Mandala Sun Catcher at 300 North Groesbeck.
• Adult Book Club: Selection is ‘The Good Sister’ by Sally Hepworth meets at 2 p.m. March 23 at Cairns Center or 7 p.m. March 23 at 300 North Groesbeck.
• Bridgerton Grab and Go Trivia week of March 21-26 at the library, 300 North Groesbeck.
Ray Township Library
• Friends of the Library and Historical Society has released its 2022 calendar titled Barns of Ray, Romeo, Washington which is available for purchase for $10 at the Ray Township offices and library as well as the Octagon House, Romeo Arts and Archives Center and Washington Museum. Proceeds from sales within Ray Township will support Phase II of Procter Cemetery Restoration Project, while calendars sold by Romeo and Greater Washington Area Historical Societies will support each organizations projects and programs. For more information, call 586-749-7130 or visit rayhistory.org.
Roseville Public Library
• Story Time 10 a.m. Mondays March 21. Join for books, songs, movement and crafts that encourage development of early learning skills. Recommended for toddlers and preschoolers with their caregivers. Registration required.
• Home Buying Workshop at 6 p.m. March 22. Take the stress out of the home buying process. Find out what you should know and get questions answered before making the big purchase. Registration in advance required.
• Finding Black Ancestors with Rozlyn Kelly at 6:30 p.m. March 28. Presentation discusses the challenges of African American genealogical research, including relevant history and resources available to research. Advance registration required.
• Library is open regular hours: Monday-Thursday 9 a.m.-8 p.m.; 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Friday; 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday and closed on Sunday.
• Masks are no longer required to be worn by the public, though still encouraged.
• Book Bundles for children. Fill in the form that can be found on the website, social media or in the newsletter and choose up to three topics or themes and a librarian will put together five books and place them on hold for you to pick up.
• Book Match Submit a Book Match form that can be found on the website, social media or in the newsletter. More detailed responses will result in better recommendations. After finishing the form expect to receive a custom reading list within 10 business days.
• Homework Help Tutor.com offers live assistance from tutors.
• Librarians are offering chat reference on Facebook at facebook.com/RosevillePublicLibraryMI. Library patrons may continue to ask questions through comments on the library’s Facebook page and via email at rsvlibrary@roseville-mi.gov or by calling 586-445-5407.
The library is located at 29777 Gratiot Ave., Roseville.
St. Clair Shores Public Library
• Bookmark contest. Patrons can create a bookmark and enter to win from March 1-31. Age groups are 5-7, 8-11, 12-15; 16-17 and 18 and older. Winning designs will be printed and made available at the library as well as displayed on the library’s website and Facebook page. Winners will be announced April 7 and bookmarks will be available after May 1. Instructions and entry forms are available at the library or at scslibrary.org.
• Morning storytime at 10 or 11 a.m. Mondays the week of Feb. 28 through the week of March 28. Programs with stories and music for children of all ages with an adult. Registration is required and begins Feb. 14. Registration can be done in person, by calling 586-771-9020 or emailing SCSYouth@libcoop.net.
• Evening storytime at 6:30 p.m. Tuesdays or Wednesdays for the week of Feb. 28 through the week of March 28. Programs with stories and music for children of all ages with an adult. Registration is required, starting Jan. 3 and can be done in person, by calling 586-771-9020 or emailing SCSYouth@libcoop.net.
• 1st Stop for Tots will be at 10 a.m. Thursdays via Zoom. To request the Zoom link email the library at SCSYouth@libcoop.net
• The Youth Services department, with the help of grant funding, has created 14 Explorer packs for children and families to check out. Each pack contains learning tools, non fiction books, activity sheets, identification guides and other manipulatives centered on an outdoor activity. Topics include insects, bird watching, astronomy water, hiking, plants and rocks. To check out an Explorer pack or for more information, ask at the Youth Services Desk.
The library is located at 22500 E. 11 Mile Road, St. Clair Shores.
Shelby Township Library
• Teen Council helps create teen displays, decorates the library and plans teen events. Earn community service hours every month for attending. Meets the first Thursday of every month at Senior Citizen Park behind the library. To join, call the library to request an application at 586-739-7414.
• Afterschool Teen Hangout for those in grades 7-12 at 3 p.m. Wednesdays. Drop by after school to pay some board and party games.
• Technology Time for adults by appointment only. Services such as setting up new devices, downloading Beanstack, learning skills for a future library event and more. Call the library to make an appointment at 586-739-7414.
• Michigan Activity Pass and Library Card Program A library card can be a pass to savings at museums and campsites across Michigan through the Michigan Activity Pass and Go Library Card program. The virtual program takes place at shelbytwp.org/library
• Pick My Books. Fill out a brief form with what you are in the mood to read and what you aren’t interested in and someone will choose three items they think you will enjoy within three days they will be available for pick up at the check out desk. To use this service click on the ‘Pick My Books’ button at shelbytwp.org/library
• Mission Read Challenge. Kids in grades K-3 can take on the mission to read for 1,000 days before grade six by reading whatever they want for as long as they wish. To start, sign up at shelbytwplib.beanstack.org. When the goal is reached, report back to a librarian and there will be a surprise out of this world reward.
• 1,000 Books before Kindergarten. Set a goal to read 1,000 books to your child before they start kindergarten. Earn digital badges as you track your progress at your own pace. Sign up at shelbytwplib.beanstack.org. Children will receive a sticker for every 100 books read and a free book and tote when the 1,000 goal is reached. Show a librarian your digital badges to earn prizes.
Library events are added regularly. Check calendar at shelbytwp.org/library or follow facebook.com/ShelbyTwpLib.
The library is located at 51680 Van Dyke Ave., Shelby Township.
Sterling Heights Public Library
• Author Reading and Q&A Kids ages 8-12 can attend the event which is taking place at 2 p.m. March 19 via Zoom. Elizabeth C. Bunce, the author of the Myrtle Hardcastle Mystery series will join remotely for a reading from the series. Get a glimpse into the process of creating Myrtle’s world and look behind the curtain during the Q&A portion.
• Living an Herbal Life at 7 p.m. March 24. Delve into the benefits of various cultivated and foraged herbs in this presentation. Participants will learn how to use herbal products for health, wellness and beauty.
• Meet The Pets at 2 p.m. March 26 with local authors and illustrator. Meet the creators of ‘Meet the Pets: Presidential Animals from A to Z’ who will present their book about animals that have graced the White House and how this book was made.
• Open Mic and Authors Event at 6 p.m. March 29 All are welcome to come and listen to writers and poets sharing their creative works. No registration required to listen. Authors may register for a six minute time slot to share their work aloud and have their books available for purchase. Stories and poetry must be appropriate for a general audience.
• Women Changemakers Reading Challenge. Celebrate Women’s History Month by reading stories of inspirational creators, brave leaders and bold changemakers. Log your reading on the Beanstack app to earn badges all month long.
• Library cardholders can reserve a time to use the Maker’s Space by appointment. Look for Maker Space Lab on the program calendar.
• Biblio Book Box offered for adults and Teen Book Box for teens offered every month. Register and a librarian will will pick a book based on your preferences and include a surprise.
• Toddler Time and Preschool storytimes are both offered at 10:30 and 11:30 a.m. Tuesdays. Registration is required. Check the library calendar for full details.
• PAWS for Reading 6-7 p.m. Tuesdays. The first 10 children to check in at the youth desk on Tuesday nights will be able to read to a therapy dog.
• The Upton House is open for self guided tours from 1-4 p.m. every Wednesday and second Sunday of the month. Register up to six people in a household.
For more information or to register, visit shpl.net or call 446-2640.
• Sterling Heights Public Library will continue curbside materials service, phone service, and home delivery/outreach service on Monday – Thursday from 9:30 a.m. to 8 p.m., Friday from 1 to 5 p.m. and Saturday from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. In addition, 24/7 digital library services are available at shpl.net. The library will be returning to virtual programming only.
•The library has 12 new hotspots that can be checked out for a week at a time with a library card. Hotspots can be reserved by calling 586-446-2665 and pressing 3 for Adult Services or through the online catalog at shpl.net an searching for “SHL HOTSPOT.” Patrons will be notified their hotspot is ready by text, email or voicemail per their library account preference and then can pick it up via curbside service. The hotspots are packaged in protected, handheld cases. Each case includes the hotspot, a charging cable and a set of instructions.
• Residents with children and those staying home with safety concerns can take advantage of contactless deliveries of library materials to their doorstep. To utilize this service, residents can call 586-446-2665 and press 4 for home delivery. A library card is required to use the service.
• Residents may call the library to place holds on items, seek help with digital services, and ask general questions by calling 586-446-2665. The library staff is also ready to receive returns of library materials in our curbside book drop as well as the book drops that are attached to the building.
• Contactless curbside pickup available. Residents can place holds by calling the library or signing into their accounts online. Once available, patrons can drive up and park in one of the designated spaces, call the library and give them your card number and the color and make of vehicle. Then unlock the trunk to have items dropped in without person to person contact.
• All electronic services will be available. Visit shpl.net/1264 to access them. If you don’t have a library card, you can now apply for one at shpl.net/1578.
• Virtual activities and storytimes will also be shared on the library’s Facebook page facebook.com/shpublib.
• Scheduled list of staff-led virtual programs available at shpl.net/610.
The library is located at 40255 Dodge Park Road, Sterling Heights.
Warren Busch Branch Library
• Grab-and-Go Science at Busch Branch Library has science themed kits available for check out exploring topics in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) with fun and kid-friendly hands on activities. Each kit also contains a related book and instructions. For children, tweens and teens ages six and up, recommended ages vary by kit and activity. More kits will be added to the collection soon. They can be checked out for 21 days and renewed up to two times and must be checked out and returned to the Busch Branch.
The library is located at 23333 Ryan Road, Warren.
Warren Civic Center Library
• Families that are residents of Warren and has a child between the ages of 3-5 is eligible to receive a free early literacy kit to help prepare children for their kindergarten year. Kits include two activity workbooks and an early reader book to practice sight words. Kits are available for pickup at the Warren Civic Center Library and will also be available at children’s programs that are offsite. Children must be present for a kit to be issued.
• The library also has purchased Playaway Launchpads which are tablets that are preloaded with educational preschool games and are available for checkout with a library card.
The library is located at 1 City Square, Suite 100, Warren.
Warren Miller Branch
• Baby Lapsit at 2 p.m. Wednesdays starting March 23 for ages birth to one year and their caregivers to enjoy stories, rhymes and songs. Registration is required. To register, call 586-751-5377 or use the online library program calendar.
• 5 Pillars of Responsible Decluttering with Stephanie Seferian at 6 p.m. March 24 via Zoom. Learn how to measure true value and prioritize quality over quantity as well as get questions answered about where and how to donate the trickiest of household items. Registration is required with an email address. Zoom invite information will be emailed the day prior to the event.
• Book Tots at 10 a.m. Fridays starting March 25 for ages 1-3 and their caregivers to enjoy stories, rhymes and songs. Registration is required. To register, call 586-751-5377 or use the online library program calendar.
The library is located at 5460 Arden in the Warren Community Center. To register for programs, call 586-751-5377 or visit warrenlibrary.net.
All Macomb County libraries, as part of the Suburban Library Cooperative, subscribe to RB Digital which over 100 digital magazines that can be checked out immediately. They also offer educational services through Tutor.com, which provides homework help, test preparation and term paper and resume review. Students can use their student ID number to access those services.
— Macomb Daily staff
High Fire Threat Sunday Is Just One Of Several Weather Events This Week
The first official day of Spring is upon us, but there’s a catch in Sunday’s forecast.
According to News On 6 Meteorologist Stephen Nehrenz, the fire danger in Green Country is very high. Strong winds, which could gust between 20 and 30 miles per hour Sunday, could get a fire out of control very quickly.
Sunday’s highs in cities like Tulsa, Okmulgee, Muskogee and Bartlesville will hover in the upper 70s.
Gusty winds will continue into Monday morning when showers move through our area in the mid-to-late morning. The storms will be widespread by early Monday afternoon.
Some areas will be in the mid-50s when the rain comes through. Others east of Tulsa may see temperatures in the 60s.
State Scan: List of noteworthy events last week
Published: Published Date – 04:53 PM, Sun – 20 March 22
Telangana: Leaders cutting across political affiliations paid their last respects to veteran communist leader Mallu Swarajyam, who passed away at the age of 91. Mallu Swarajyam was a member of the central committee of the Communist Party of India (Marxist). Her body was handed over to Nalgonda Government Medical College as per her wishes. Born into a feudal family in 1931 at Karivirala Kothagudem village of Nalgonda district, Mallu Swarajyam was attracted towards communism in her teens. Inspired by her brother Bheemireddy Narasimha Reddy, Mallu Swarajyam participated in Telangana People’s Armed Struggle (1946-51) against feudal lords. As a candidate of CPI(M), she was elected to Legislative Assembly of united AP from Thungathurthy Assembly constituency for two terms – 1978 and 1983.
Jammu & Kashmir
From a photojournalist and an artists’ point of view, the exodus in Kashmir had all the elements that good journalism offered, but being a victim himself and living like a refugee brought out the pain in his works. For Vijay Kaul, the trauma of exodus will never ebb. He carries his pain in his umpteen photographs that he clicked during the exodus period and the oil canvas that he paints. His pictures present the story of helpless people who were overnight turned into refugees in their own country. He clicked tattered tents, dazed faces, sufferings, and struggles even as he himself was trying to find space among the thousands in camp. Kaul fled the Valley a month before the mass exodus erupted on January 19, 1990.
Gujarat
The Gujarat government launched the fifth phase of its Sujalam Sufalam Jal Abhiyan, a water conservation campaign, from Kolavada village in Gandhinagar district. Chief Minister Bhupendra Patel formally launched the project with the deepening of a lake in the village, with the State aiming to carry out around 13,000 water conservation works by May 31. This year, the projects are estimated to increase the State’s water storage capacity by 15,000 lakh cubic feet and provide more than 25 lakh mandays of employment to workers under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA).
Nagaland
Governor Prof Jagdish Mukhi referring to the Naga peace talks with the Central government, said that with the concern being shown by everyone, the long-cherished solution would soon become a reality and a new era of peace and prosperity would begin in the State. Addressing the 11th session of the 13th Nagaland Assembly, the Governor referring to the March 9 consultative meeting on Naga peace process, said that the resolution adopted in the meeting called upon all the negotiating parties to arrive at a political solution that is honourable, inclusive, transparent and acceptable to the people.
Karnataka
Following death threats to the three Karnataka High Court judges, including the Chief Justice, who delivered the hijab verdict, and arrest of a person in Tamil Nadu in this regard, Karnataka Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai said his government has decided to provide ‘Y category’ security to them. Stating that his government has taken the matter seriously, he has ordered the Director-General of Police to look into the case and take the person arrested in Tamil Nadu into custody for investigation, and questioned the silence of ‘pseudo seculars’ on the matter. FIR was registered by Vidhana Soudha Police on Saturday against an unknown individual over a video clip circulating on social media platforms of a man speaking in Tamil and issuing death threats to the three judges.
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Events of the Week: ‘WeCrashed,’ ‘Pachinko’ and More
As Hollywood events return to full force in New York and Los Angeles amid the coronavirus pandemic, here’s a look at this week’s biggest premieres, parties and openings, including red carpets for WeCrashed, Pachinko, Life & Beth and Cheaper by the Dozen.
SXSW
The annual music, tech and film festival returned to Austin this year, kicking off on March 11 and running until March 20, with premieres of Everything Everywhere All At Once, The Lost City, Bodies Bodies Bodies, The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent, along with debuts of upcoming shows DMZ, Halo, Swimming with Sharks and The Girl From Plainville.
Pachinko Global Premiere Event
Apple TV+ hosted a starry premiere for its global series on Wednesday at the Academy Museum in Los Angeles, where the cast, including Yuh-jung Youn, Lee Minho, Jin Ha, Minha Kim, Anna Sawai and Jimmi Simpson, was joined by guests Natalie Portman, Damon Lindelof, Ashley Park, Alan Kim, Meena Harris, Greta Lee and Jimmy O. Yang.
Life & Beth New York Premiere
Amy Schumer’s new Hulu comedy debuted at NYC’s SVA Theatre on Wednesday, where the star appeared alongside Laura Benanti, Kevin Kane, Violet Young, Yamaneika Saunders and LaVar Walker.
Cheaper by the Dozen Premiere
The Disney+ remake, starring Gabrielle Union and Zach Braff, held its world premiere in Hollywood on Wednesday, where the two leads and their young cast were joined by co-screenwriter Kenya Barris, director Gail Lerner and EP Brian Dobbins.
WeCrashed Premiere
Jared Leto, Anne Hathaway, Kyle Marvin, O-T Fagbenle and co-creators Lee Eisenberg and Drew Crevello premiered their Apple TV+ series WeCrashed, based on the spectacular rise and fall of WeWork and its founding couple, on Thursday at the Academy Museum.
How I Met Your Father Fan Experience
In celebration of the Hulu show’s finale, on March 10 HIMYF stars Hilary Duff, Chris Lowell, Francia Raisa, Tien Tran and Tom Ainsley stopped by a fan experience, a downtown L.A. immersive setup that recreates the characters’ apartments from the show and offers photo opps.
Bust Down Screening
On Monday, Peacock, Broadway Video and Universal Television hosted a backyard barbecue cookout and screening at the Academy Hollywood for new comedy series Bust Down, along with stars and EPs Sam Jay, Langston Kerman, Jak Knight and Chris Redd, along with guests Lena Waithe and Prentice Penny.
The Outfit Special Screening
Cast members Zoey Deutch, Alan Mehdizadeh, Chiedu Agborh, writer/director Graham Moore, co-writer Johnathan McClain and producers Scoop Wasserstein, Amy Jackson, Ben Browning and Elizabeth Siegal took part in a special screening of their film The Outfit on Tuesday in downtown Los Angeles.
Better Nate Than Ever Premiere
Disney+ film Better Nate Than Ever premiered in Los Angeles on Tuesday with the help of stars Rueby Wood, Lisa Kudrow, Aria Brooks, Joshua Bassett, Michelle Federer, Norbert Leo Butz and writer-director Tim Federle.
New York Film Critics Circle Awards
As the weeks leading up to the Oscars turn into days, the awards event continued with the New York Film Critics Circle Awards on Wednesday in NYC, where honorees Jane Campion, Lady Gaga, Maggie Gyllenhaal and the Licorice Pizza cast made appearances. Martin Scorsese also popped in as a surprise guest to honor best director Campion and The Power of the Dog.
Mothering Sunday Special Screening
Sony Pictures Classics and The Cinema Society hosted a screening of Mothering Sunday in NYC on Wednesday, with appearances by star Odessa Young, director Eva Husson and guests including Pablo Schreiber, Bennett Miller, Jennifer Beals and Jo Ellen Pellman.
LA Confidential Women of Influence Luncheon
On Thursday, Los Angeles Confidential celebrated Women’s History Month with a luncheon at The Waldorf Astoria Beverly Hills, on the Patio at Jean-Georges, to honor the women creating trailblazing content in front of and behind the camera. Attendees included Angelica Ross, Fortune Feimster, Grey’s Anatomy‘s Camilla Luddington, Insecure‘s Amanda Seales, Women of the Movement showrunner Marissa Jo Cerer, set decorators Amber Richards and Pamela Martin, costumer designer Sharen Davis, editor Tatiana Riegel and TriStar Pictures president Nicole Brown.
RH San Francisco Unveiling
Jessica Alba, Alexandra Daddario, Ellen DeGeneres, Portia de Rossi and Erin and Sara Foster were among the stars on hand for the unveiling of Restoration Hardware San Francisco, The Gallery at the Historic Bethlehem Steel Building on Thursday.
The Worst Person in the World Special Screening
NYC’s Crosby Street Hotel hosted a special screening of The Worst Person in the World on Thursday, with a Q&A with director Joachim Trier and star Renate Reinsve, along with guests Molly Ringwald, John Slattery, Edie Falco and Cherry Jones.
Key events in EMEA next week
Pac-12 LGBTQIA+ Winter Inclusion Week celebrated across campuses and events
Across all activations for Pac-12 LGBTQIA+ Winter Inclusion Week, the “Gymnasts for Peace, Action, and Change” (G-PAC) group was instrumental in working together to encourage gymnastics teams to support their LGBTQIA+ communities, and are in the process of creating a PSA to be featured in upcoming event opportunities.
The G-PAC’s mission statement reads: “G-PAC facilitates an environment where diversity and inclusion is both welcomed and encouraged. Strives to ignite lasting change by sharing experiences, providing others with education and outside resources, and creating an authentic safe space for fellow student-athletes. Inspires others to thrive at the edge of their comfort zone furthering the journey to true equality.”
Editors’ Picks: 12 Events for Your Art Calendar, From the Return of Asia Week IRL to an Anti-Patriarchy Billboard Blitz | Artnet News
Each week, we search for the most exciting and thought-provoking shows, screenings, and events, both digitally and in-person in the New York area. See our picks from around the world below. (Times are all ET unless otherwise noted.)
Tuesday, March 15
1. “(Re)membering through Repetition: Seriality and Memorial Art” at the Philadelphia Show
Jessica Todd Smith, curator of American art at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and Gwendolyn DuBois Shaw, associate professor at the University of Pennsylvania, will discuss the museum’s new show, “Elegy: Lament in the 20th Century.” The exhibition explores how artists living and/or working in the U.S. during the 20th century have responded to tragedy, grappled with mortality, and honored those who have passed. The virtual presentation will focus on series and repetition in the Malcolm X sculptures by Barbara Chase-Riboud and the “Elegy to the Spanish Republic” paintings by Robert Motherwell.
Price: Free with registration
Time: 5:30-6:30 p.m.
—Eileen Kinsella
Wednesday, March 16
2. “Artist Talk: Terry Allen” at the Blanton Museum of Art, University of Texas at Austin
On the occasion of his current exhibition “MemWars” (through July 10), Texas musician, songwriter, and visual artist Terry Allen talks with Blanton deputy director Carter E. Foster about his creative process and how he integrates music, performance, theater, and drawing into his work. It’s part of the museum’s ongoing virtual “Curated Conversations” series.
Price: Free or pay-what-you-wish with registration
Time: 1 p.m.
—Sarah Cascone
Wednesday, March 16–Friday, March 25
3. “Asia Week New York“
Timed to 14 in-person auctions and six online sales at Bonhams, Christie’s, Doyle, Heritage Auctions, iGavel, and Sotheby’s, Asia Week New York returns to its in-person format this year with 22 international dealers setting up shop at host galleries, mostly on the Upper East Side. With work from across the Asian continent ranging from 2,000 BCE to the present day, expect museum-quality art in a wide range of mediums, including textiles, ceramics, and basketry, as well as prints and paintings. San Francisco’s Art Passages is bringing a major painting by Gobind Singh, a court artist to the Mughal Emperor Shah ‘Alam, from the year 1760. DAG, a New York gallery specializing in India’s modern masters, is showcasing 10 of the nation’s trailblazing women artists from the 20th century, including Ambika Dhurandhar, the first Indian women to receive a formal art degree, and Mrinalini Mukherjee, who had a stunning solo show at the Met Breuer in 2019 and is among the artists featured in the upcoming Venice Biennale. Fu Qiumeng Fine Art, a New York gallery that is participating for the first time, is offering collaborative works that meld the techniques of classical ink painting with photography by Chinese American artist Arnold Chang, who lives in New Jersey, and American photographer Michael Cherney, who lives in Beijing.
Location: Various
Price: Free
Time: Times vary
—Sarah Cascone
Through Thursday, March 17
4. “Consequences: A Parlor Game” at the National Arts Club, New York
Peter Halley, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Rashid Johnson, and Julie Mehretu are among the artists featured in this group show organized by the National Academy of Design. Curated by Sara Reisman and Natalia Viera Salgado, the exhibition is a celebration of abstraction in all forms—hard edge, gestural, conceptual—recognizing both its importance in art history and the way it frees artists from the limits of representation, particularly in times of political crisis. Because each artist selected their contributions on their own, the show takes its title from a Surrealist game in the style of mad libs or exquisite corpse, in which participants collectively write a story or complete a drawing without knowing what the others have added.
Location: National Arts Club, 15 Gramercy Park S, New York
Price: Free; reservation required to visit the upstairs parlors
Time: Monday–Sunday, 10 a.m.–5 p.m.
—Tanner West
Friday, March 18
5. “Annual Distinguished Lecture on the Arts of South and Southeast Asia—Buddhist Art of Gandhara and the ‘Year 5’ Buddha: Exploring Its Place in Time, Space, and Practice” at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
For this annual lecture at the Met, Juhyung Rhi, a professor of archaeology and art history at Seoul National University, will talk about the significance of a rare schist relief sculpture of the Buddha that sold for $6.6 million at Christie’s New York in October 2020. Known as ‘Year 5’ Buddha, it is one of only five known extant dated Gandharan sculptures.
Location: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Grace Rainey Rogers Auditorium, 1000 Fifth Avenue, New York
Price: Free with registration
Time: 4:30 p.m.–5:30 p.m.
—Nan Stewert
Friday, March 18–Monday, January 16, 2023
6. “Healing Practices: Stories from Himalayan Americans” at the Rubin Museum of Art, New York
Timed to Asia Week, the Rubin Museum’s new show is an exploration of Tibetan Buddhist artworks related to healing and mental, physical, and spiritual practices for well-being. Tickets for Friday’s opening night party (6 p.m.–10 p.m.) with a performance by Yesh and Nathan Harrington are sold out, with limited walk-in tickets available.
Location: Rubin Museum of Art, 150 West 17th Street, New York
Price: $19 general admission; free entry March 18–20
Time: Thursday, Saturday, and Sunday, 11 a.m.–5 p.m.; Friday , 11 a.m.–10 p.m.
—Sarah Cascone
Friday, March 18–Wednesday, June 1
7. “Moonfolk: Passages Toward Greater Understanding” from the Children’s Museum of the Arts, New York
The Children’s Museum of the Arts has partnered with ArtBridge, which organizes public art shows on construction fencing and scaffolding, on a new mural by Tomashi Jackson on the theme of world peace. An accompanying exhibition features artworks made in response to Jackson’s work by New York City children ages four to 12. The show is part of the NYC Department of Cultural Affairs’s “City Canvas” program, which installs art on temporary protective barriers at construction sites. In celebration of the opening, the museum is holding a tour of the exhibition followed by a sparkling cider toast and mural-making party.
Location: Google campus, St. John’s Terminal, 550 Washington Street, reception at Restorative Ground, 345 Hudson Street
Price: Opening reception free with registration
Time: Opening reception, 4 p.m.; otherwise on view daily at all times
—Sarah Cascone
Through Sunday, March 20
8. “Shikō Munakata: A Way of Seeing” at the Japan Society, New York
It’s your last chance to see this exhibition of nearly 100 works by Shikō Munakata, a Japanese artist who lived from 1903 to 1975 and was known for his woodblock prints. The Japan Society has the nation’s largest collection of his work, including some pieces made there during Munakata’s first visit to the U.S. in 1959, as a fellow of the institution’s Print Artists Program. Highlights include his “Tōkaidō” Series (1964), depicting scenes along the route between Tokyo and Kyoto, shown in its entirety for the first time since 1965, as well as examples of his calligraphy, sumi ink paintings, watercolors, lithography, and ceramics.
Location: Japan Society, 333 East 47th Street, New York
Price: $12 general admission
Time: Monday, Wednesday–Sunday,12 p.m.–6 p.m. (extended hours for the closing days of the show)
—Sarah Cascone
Through Sunday, April 3
9. “Patriarchy RIP” at SaveArtSpace, in nine cities across the U.S.
Pussy Riot’s Nadya Tolokonnikova curated this nationwide public art show from SaveArtSpace, taking over billboard ad space in cities including Atlanta, Birmingham, and New Orleans. The exhibition, up for Women’s History Month, is meant to call attention to the gender pay gap in the art world, where women still account for just 2 percent of sales at auction. Artists Michele Pred and Autumn Breon have three billboards featuring works from their initiative the Art of Equal Pay. Pred launched the project in 2020 on March 15, which is known as Equal Pay Day—because that’s how long the average woman would have to work into the new year to match the salary earned by her male counterparts. The New York billboard features a piece from Holly Silius’s new series, “Phantom Feel,” showing stone sculptures of torsos inspired by writer and actor Lio Mehiel’s top surgery removing their breasts.
Location: Various locations in nine states, including Forsyth Street and East Broadway, New York
Price: Free
Time: On view daily at all times
—Sarah Cascone
Through Sunday, May 8
10. “Kia LaBeija: Prepare My Heart” at Fotografiska, New York
In her first solo show, photographer Kia LaBeija presents a deeply personal, autobiographical body of work about growing up HIV positive, the loss of her mother—an AIDS activist who died from complications of the disease—and finding herself in New York’s Ballroom dance scene. (The former “mother” of the House of LaBeiija drag family, La Beija also served as a principle dancer in the pilot for the television series Pose.) Born in 1990, La Beiija shares both childhood ephemera from her personal archives and poetry, video art, and photographs, including self-portraiture.
Location: Fotografiska, New York
Price: general admission $26
Time: 9 a.m.–9 p.m.
—Sarah Cascone
Through Saturday, June 4
11. “Peter Uka: Remembrance” at FLAG Art Foundation, New York
This just-opened show (March 12) marks the first New York solo exhibition for Nigerian-born artist Peter Uka, who lives in Cologne, Germany. His large-scale portraits and group scenes are inspired by his childhood memories, and feature 1970s-era fashion, hairstyles, and interiors. They celebrate the richness of life with attention to detail, including boys fresh from the barbershop and ready for mass in their Sunday best, characters playing cards on a shaded porch, or a group in disco-style clothing dancing exuberantly. Uka, who is represented by Mariane Ibrahim Gallery, studied at the Yaba College of Technology in Nigeria, and later at Germany’s Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, where he was taught by Tal R and Eberhard Havekost.
Location: FLAG Art Foundation, 545 West 25th Street, Ninth Floor, New York
Price: Free
Time: Wednesday–Saturday, 11 a.m.–5 p.m.
—Eileen Kinsella
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