Jihye Lee Quintet Will Perform at Flushing Town Hall For APA Heritage Month
The event includes a special dedication to the women who were killed in the Atlanta, Georgia spa shootings in March. by BWW News Desk
On Friday, May 21, the Jihye Lee Quintet will perform live from the stage at Flushing Town Hall for an all-virtual audience.
The livestream event honors Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month and includes a special dedication to the women who were killed in the Atlanta, Georgia spa shootings in March. At Flushing Town Hall, we are responding to the recent rise in hate crimes as best we know how through the arts, says Ellen Kodadek, Executive & Artistic Director. Our mission is to bring people together by presenting arts and culture from around the world. The Atlanta killings were widely understood to be driven by racism and misogyny. We are proud to present Jihye Lee s all-female, Korean jazz quintet to share their message and music with our diverse aud
Desmond inquiry: Veterans Affairs submits internal review after initial refusal
atlantic.ctvnews.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from atlantic.ctvnews.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Desmond inquiry: Veterans Affairs submits internal review after initial refusal
princegeorgecitizen.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from princegeorgecitizen.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Veterans Affairs won t release its review into former soldier who fatally shot his family, himself cbc.ca 1 hour ago Laura Fraser © Submitted by Cassandra Desmond Lionel Desmond is shown here in this family photo, with his mother, Brenda, left, and daughter, Aaliyah, right. Desmond shot his family in 2017.
Veterans Affairs conducted an internal review into the day an Afghanistan veteran with post-traumatic stress disorder shot his family and then himself but the department is refusing to share its findings with the ongoing provincial fatality inquiry.
The inquiry, which seeks to prevent deaths like those of Lionel, Shanna, Brenda and 10-year-old Aaliyah Desmond, only learned of the review last week, more than a year after Judge Warren Zimmer began hearing evidence.
PORT HAWKESBURY, N.S. Veterans Affairs Canada initially refused to disclose to an inquiry its internal review of how it handled the tragic case of an Afghanistan war veteran who fatally shot three family members and himself in 2017.
The provincial inquiry investigating Lionel Desmond s case, which resumed Tuesday, was told last week by federal lawyers the review was beyond the inquiry s scope an assertion that raised questions about the inquiry s ability to determine what happened and how to prevent similar tragedies.
In an internal email dated April 14, the lawyers said the department appreciated the review could be of some assistance to the inquiry, but they argued both the review and results are beyond the terms of reference and will not be provided.