Harrisburg Embattled With Fiscal Stress as Mayoral Election Approaches theepochtimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theepochtimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Mariska Hargitay is recovering from a broken right ankle after suffering a hard fall following a screening of Black Widow in The Hamptons over the long 4th Of July weekend.
The actress, who was making her way home to host an after party for attendees, tripped on the slick rainy street moments after the star-studded Cinema Society screening of the new Marvel release at the Regal UA East Hampton Cinema.
And to make matters worse, accident-prone Hargitay, 57, was already on the mend from multiple leg injuries she suffered in May, which she documented on her Instagram page.
On the mend: Mariska Hargitay, 57, is recovering at home in The Hamptons after breaking her right ankle during a fall on a slick rainy street following a screening of Black Widow
The First Art Newspaper on the Net
COLLEGEVILLE, PA
.- Two new exhibitions at the Berman Museum explore relationships between humans and the natural world. Mapping Climate Change: The Knitting Map and The Tempestry Project unites, for the first time, two innovative textile art projects that give visual and tangible presence to a changing climate at a crucial moment of environmental precariousness. By translating temperature, precipitation, humidity, or wind speed data into stitch and color, these vibrant works potently and poignantly reveal the centrality of weather to notions of identity and experiences of place, and thus map the flow of temperature over time. In Alison Safford: Anthro(Site), multimedia artist Safford meditates on the motion of bodieshuman, celestial, and terrestrialas they converge, collide, depart, or reunite through random or cyclical events, instances of migration and mortality, and orientations to place and space. . More
Share
Present and future students at Yale University’s drama school will no longer pay tuition, thanks to a landmark $150 million gift from entertainment executive and philanthropist David Geffen, the university announced today.
The donation the largest on record in the history of American theater makes the school the only institution of its kind to eliminate tuition for all degree and certificate students, removing financial barriers to access.
David Geffen. Photo by Bruce Weber.
“David Geffen’s visionary generosity ensures that artists of extraordinary potential from all socioeconomic backgrounds will be able to cultivate their talent at Yale,” said Yale President Peter Salovey, who announced the news with James Bundy, the School’s dean. “It is exciting to think about what will be made possible by increasing access to the premier theater education at the David Geffen School of Drama. Our students help drive creativity and innovation across all fields during