Walk to End Lupus Now® Virtual Event Brings Together Lupus Community on October 16 prnewswire.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from prnewswire.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Lupus Foundation of America Unites Nationwide Lupus Community to Make an Impact for Lupus Awareness Month this May
Throughout May, the Foundation will lead the effort to raise lupus awareness and make lupus visible
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WASHINGTON, April 30, 2021 /PRNewswire/ This May for Lupus Awareness Month, the Lupus Foundation of America will continue its effort to
Make Lupus Visible, encouraging lupus warriors, family members and friends to raise awareness for the often invisible and devastating disease while also raising funds to support lupus research, education programs and support services.
Over half of Americans (63%) have never heard of or know little or nothing about lupus, underscoring the urgent need to raise awareness of the disease s brutal impact on every part of a person s life. Because many symptoms and effects of lupus are invisible, it can often leave those living with lupus feeling misunderstood and isolated.
Lupus Foundation of America Debuts New, Free Education Series - Lupus & You: Answers Advocacy Action yahoo.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from yahoo.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
NOW Magazine
The Top 10 Toronto stage artists, shows or stories
From the legacy of Philip Akin to the hybrid efforts of Factory and Outside the March, here are some stage standouts in an otherwise bleak year By Glenn Sumi
Photo of Natalie Metcalfe by Samuel Engelking; photo of Natasha Mumba by Dahlia Katz
Philip Akin (left), Natalie Metcalfe, Baby Larry and Natasha Mumba made 2020 suck a little less.
This time of year I normally weigh in on the thriving theatre and comedy scenes in Toronto, choosing what I think are the top productions and artists from among hundreds of shows. But of course, the pandemic happened, and live theatre as we know it stopped. Still, there were two-and-a-half months of regular shows. And after lockdown, artists and companies turned on their ring lights, upgraded their microphones and made us rethink everything about this centuries-old art form.