Sunday, July 18th, 4 – 7 pm
We will be hosting a film screening and discussion of the film “
40 Days of Teshuvah” from the Inside Out Wisdom and Action (IOWA) Project. The film centers around Jewish Spirituality and Justice alongside Yehudah Webster, an organizer with Jews for Racial and Economic Justice in NYC. The documentary focuses on a forty-day racial justice action that Yehduah led in Brooklyn called 40 Days of Teshuvah (trailer here). Learn more about their work and the short film at InsideOutWisdomAndAction.org/40days
Please sign up on Meetup and bring a mask!
When Tara VanDerveer applied for the head-coaching job in womenâs basketball at the University of Idaho in 1978, her official credentials were thin. Sheâd never run her own program at any level, and sheâd landed her first paid assistantâs position just two years earlier. She was 24. More Headlines
Andrew Bird s latest album,
Hark!, is full of holiday music but when the Grammy-nominated musician was asked if he d ever attended an office Christmas party, his immediate answer was, I m glad to say, I haven t been to any.
NPR s Ophira Eisenberg spoke to Bird as part of
Ask Me Another s Mandatory Fun Virtual Office Holiday Party episode. Bird eventually did recall an early gig performing at an architects office: I don t miss those days of getting those sideways glances like, Oh look at that chair. Oh, it s a musician.
Bird has been performing his signature whistle and violin loops for nearly a quarter of a century. His first big gig was working at a Renaissance fair. Self-styled in a puffy shirt, drawstring pants, and a pair of Vans sneakers he spray painted black, I had free reign, I d go and play with the hurdy-gurdy guy and the dulcimer guy and they thought this guy s enjoying his job too much. His eagerness landed him at the privy line, entertaining people w
By
Andrew Bird s latest album, Hark!, is full of holiday music â but when the Grammy-nominated musician was asked if he d ever attended an office Christmas party, his immediate answer was, I m glad to say, I haven t been to any.
NPR s Ophira Eisenberg spoke to Bird as part of Ask Me Another s Mandatory Fun Virtual Office Holiday Party episode. Bird eventually did recall an early gig performing at an architects office: I don t miss those days of getting those sideways glances like, Oh look at that chair. Oh, it s a musician.
Bird has been performing his signature whistle and violin loops for nearly a quarter of a century. His first big gig was working at a Renaissance fair. Self-styled in a puffy shirt, drawstring pants, and a pair of Vans sneakers he spray painted black, I had free reign, I d go and play with the hurdy-gurdy guy and the dulcimer guy and they thought this guy s enjoying his job too much. His eagerness landed him at the privy line, entertaining peo