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NEA grants $30,000 to music dept for Freedom on the Move: Songs in Flight

May 13, 2021 The National Endowment for the Arts has approved a $30,000 Grants for Arts Projects award to the Department of Music to support a musical response to Freedom on the Move (FOTM), a database housing digitized, searchable fugitive slave advertisements. The grant, co-written by Lucy Fitz Gibbon, interim director of the Vocal Program, and Martha Guth, Ithaca College, will provide foundational support for Freedom on the Move: Songs in Flight, an ambitious musical project commissioned and administered by the art song organization Sparks & Wiry Cries, resulting in the premiere and subsequent performance tour of two major works. Freedom on the Move poster

Quảng Nam Lấy Mẫu Xét Nghiệm Covid-19 Ngẫu Nhiên Tại Các Khu Du Lịch

Quảng Nam Lấy Mẫu Xét Nghiệm Covid-19 Ngẫu Nhiên Tại Các Khu Du Lịch
tin247.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from tin247.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

How 3D Printing is Saving Lives at Seattle Children s Hospital

Thought LeadersDr. Seth Friedman, Manager, Innovation Imaging and Simulation Modeling Dr. Kaalan Johnson, Surgical Director, Aerodigestive ProgramSeattle Children s Hospital AZoM speaks with Dr. Kaalan Johnson and Dr. Seth Friedman from Seattle Children s Hospital. 3D printing has many uses at the hospital, from training purposes, to use in surgery, to aiding explanations of procedures to patients and their families.  Can you give our readers more information about how 3D printing is implemented at Seattle Children s Hospital? 3D printing is used across Seattle Children s for clinical care, training, education and engineering parts. Complex surgical care provides a great example of personalized medicine in action at Seattle Children s Hospital.  

In Time of Pandemic, UCSB Music Department Turns to Don Giovanni for Annual Opera | Arts & Entertainment

Isabel Bayrakdarian Let’s say you’ve been stuck in the house for, oh, nearly a year. The walls are closing in, and you’re pretty sure another Zoom meeting will make your head explode. What’s a pandemic hermit to do? One word: Mozart. Yes, you need Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart to soothe and cheer your weary soul. And you’re in luck. UC Santa Barbara’s Department of Music will present a virtual performance of “Don Giovanni,” at 6 p.m. Friday, Feb. 26. The two-act opera is free and available to the public. The link for the YouTube premiere will be available on the event page the week of the event.

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