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New San Antonio Asian eatery House of Má temporarily closed over internal disagreement

Posted By Nina Rangel on Thu, May 27, 2021 at 10:38 AM click to enlarge Courtesy Photo / Giles Design Bureau House of Má is temporarily closed. House of Má? Maybe House of Dramá would be more appropriate. Folks who made the trek to downtown’s new Vietnamese comfort food restaurant House of Má this week were greeted by a message on front door announcing the restaurant owned by high-profile restaurateur Chris Hill is temporarily closed, MySA reports. According to a joint statement released by Hill who also owns downtown s Esquire Tavern and House of Má operating partners Eric Treviño and Luis Singh, an internal conflict spurred the shutdown.

Menarini Silicon Biosystems launches new breakthrough DEPArray PLUS image-based cell sorter to isolate rare cells with single cell precision

Game warden: Black bear likely looking for new home

Bryan Callihan, long-time Texas Parks & Wildlife game warden for Lamar County, said he had seen the image Moree’s camera took and confirmed the animal is a black bear.

Black women, Beauty, BMI and Culture

Marie-Ange Moise | 5/27/2021, midnight The data is disturbing: according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, four out of five Black women in the United States are overweight or obese. A common theory is that Black culture promotes larger than average female figures, and the acceptance of a fuller body has become its norm and serves to shield Black women from society’s ideal slender female body. The question is how did Black culture get to adopt a norm that’s so different from the main culture? From the beginning of American cinema, on the one hand, Black women were portrayed as overweight housekeepers only capable of following simple instructions. That negative portrayal remained largely unchanged. That portrayal served as the lens through which society has judged Black women, a group deemed far below what they considered beautiful or even acceptable.

Archie Teater s art will paint the town Thursday

Archie Teater created over 4,000 paintings that survive, the majority of them scenes of Jackson Hole and the town of Jackson, but also many depicting landscapes, cities and people around the world. And at least one of the rear end of a buffalo, said creature being a resident of the Central Park Zoo. The bison butt image isn’t among those being shown at the Jackson Hole Historical Society’s “Painting the Town” show, which will feature 26 Teater paintings, mostly of Jackson and a few of the surrounding area. The art is on loan from Lester Taylor, a Jackson Hole summer resident since the 1970s. Taylor met Teater by chance in 1957 and fell in love with his work. Taylor was washing dishes at Jackson Lake Lodge back then when Teater was brought up from Jackson by lodge management to educate and entertain the summer staff.

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