Discover weird and wonderful animals, take flight with a young scientist, journey across the ocean with a blue whale, and raise your teacups to two wacky picture book stars in a super selection of new children’s books.
Discover weird and wonderful animals, take flight with a young scientist, journey across the ocean with a blue whale, and raise your teacups to two wacky picture book stars in a super selection of new children’s books.
Winston-Salem Theatre Alliance plans to visit an imagined not-so-distant future when it puts on its outdoor version of the musical satire, âUrinetown: The Musical.â The creation of Mark Hollman and Greg Kotis, the inventive musical won multiple awards when it appeared on Broadway in 2001.
Jamie Lawson is directing the musical with the aid of Maggie Gallagher (music director) and John C. Wilson (choreography, who is also acting).
The musicalâs publishing company describes âUrinetownâ as a story about âa Gotham-like city where a terrible water shortage, caused by a 20-year drought, has led to a government-enforced ban on private toilets. The citizens must use public amenities, regulated by a single malevolent company that profits by charging admission for one of humanityâs most basic needs. Amid the people, a hero decides that heâs had enough and plans a revolution to lead them all to freedom.â
Small Bites: Tastee Diner temporarily closes in Bethesda
Plus: Cooper’s Hawk furloughs 51 workers in Rockville By Dan Schere |
December 29, 2020 | 11:31 pm
The Tastee Diner in Bethesda has temporarily closed due to Montgomery County s recent order prohibiting indoor dining.
Photo by Dan Schere
Tastee Diner temporarily closes in Bethesda
Bethesda’s Tastee Diner on Woodmont Avenue has temporarily closed this month for the second time during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Photo by Dan Schere.
The diner had a sign posted on its door that it had temporarily closed because of Montgomery County’s executive order that bans indoor dining. On Dec. 15, the County Council approved the order, which still allows takeout, delivery and outdoor dining.
All three justices were targets of hateful messages from supporters of
Donald Trump upset with the Wisconsin Supreme Court’s rejection of a lawsuit seeking to throw out the votes of more than 200,000 voters in Dane and Milwaukee counties. The voicemails and letters were first made public by
Progressive Magazine editor
Bill Lueders who filed an open records request seeking messages to the justices and published the results in the
Progressive and the
Examiner.
Karofsky and Dallet have also been the targets of anti-Semitic attacks published on a pro-Trump blog and in the neo-Nazi publication the Daily Stormer, the
The letter, signed by 74 members of the Wisconsin Bar as of mid-day Tuesday, concludes “these attacks need to be met with swift and forceful condemnation by the Wisconsin State Bar and the entire judiciary, led by our Chief Justice. An unanswered threat to one or more Supreme Court Justices is a threat to all members of the judiciary, the Bar, and