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Community news: Harvest market and dog costume parade return to Fairfield, and more

Community news: Harvest market and dog costume parade return to Fairfield, and more

Community news: Webinar to address cannabis trends among youth and more

Community news: Webinar to address cannabis trends among youth and more March 11, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail 1of8 Check: Brendan Miles, Alan Mathis and LifeBridge president and CEO Molly MilesContributed photoShow MoreShow Less 2of8 3of8 4of8 Urban Scholars: Lissan Hinton, Laron Barden, JJ Joyner and Jazell Ingram, Brendan Miles, Alan Mathis and Molly MilesContributed photoShow MoreShow Less 5of8 Matthew Podolsky, a resident of Fairfield, Conn. submitted this weather photo to Hearst Connecticut Media of Long Island Sound looking at the Penfield Lighthouse from Jennings Beach in Fairfield, Conn. March 9, where it was 63 degrees at 3 p.m.Matthew Podolsky / Contributed photoShow MoreShow Less 6of8 7of8

A Conversation with Tara Westover, Author of Educated, March 16

UpdatedWed, Mar 10, 2021 at 4:34 am ET Reply Tara Westover, author of the #1 New York Times bestseller Educated (Photo credit: Paul Stewart) Fairfield University s Open VISIONS Forum and the Bank of America Women and Leadership Series will welcome #1 best-selling memoirist Tara Westover for a virtual lecture about the power of knowledge to overcome the most difficult circumstances. FAIRFIELD, CT – The Regina A. Quick Center for the Arts at Fairfield University will welcome Tara Westover, author of the #1 New York Times bestseller Educated, for a livestreamed lecture on Tuesday, March 16, 2021 at 7:30 p.m. This virtual event is the second in the Quick Center s Open VISIONS Forum | Bank of America Women and Leadership series, designed to open minds and celebrate female leaders around the world.

Opera? Or Opera-ganda ?: Fairfield U lecture explores role of music in politics

Opera? Or ‘Opera-ganda’?: Fairfield U. lecture explores role of music in politics By Amanda Cuda © Provided by Connecticut Post Fairfield University music lecturer Michael A. Ciavaglia will host the virtual event ‘Russian Opera-ganda’ at 1 p.m. Feb. 17. Michael A. Ciavaglia doesn’t like reducing complicated pieces of classical music to cliches, but when it comes to the impact of opera and film scores on Russian nationalism, the cliche is too true to avoid. “Music makes us feel something,” says Ciavaglia, a lecturer in music at Fairfield University. He says, over the centuries, a variety of governments, including those in the United States, as well as Russia, have used music to inspire a sense of loyalty in their citizens.

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