Renginių gidas: pirmadienį – virtualus susitikimas su sapnų laboratorijos tyrėjais lrt.lt - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from lrt.lt Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
For 52 years, the Society for the Involvement of Good Neighbours has supported the residents of Yorkton. SIGN’s beginnings started in 1968 when Father Paul St. Pierre, Rev. Jack Jones, Rev. William Shank, and Rev. Roland Wood felt a need for an organization to reach the community in a way that was beyond what individual churches could do. On May 1, 1969, SIGN opened its first office with the goal “to produce the product called Community Unity - a community in which people care about people care about people,” according to its first newsletter. The organization first offered five programs, including an Information and drop-in centre, psychological consultant services, a youth hostel, a homemakers program and a radio program. Today, the organization offers over 20 programs that include services for kids, families, adults, and counselling services.
Travis, one of the headline acts of Edinburgh Summer Sessions
Blindness, Festival Theatre, Edinburgh, June 29-July 3 Scotland’s theatres are gradually opening up and one of the first major shows is this production from London’s Donmar Warehouse (above), an adaptation of Nobel Prize winner Jose Saramago’s dystopian novel. Audiences wear headphones for a performance narrated by Juliet Stevenson in immersive binaural sound. Tickets are £22.50. Call 0131 529 6000 or visit capitaltheatres.com
Edinburgh International Children’s Festival, Edinburgh, May 25-June 6 The bulk of the annual festival is online but the opening and closing weekends see a series of pop-up outdoors events – or “site-specific encounters” if you prefer – in the Royal Botanic Garden and at venues in Granton and Craigmillar.
Culross, Fife It’s not just for Outlander fans, you know. Visiting this handsomely preserved village beside the Forth is like time-travelling back to the 18th century. Cobbled streets, a palace, and, if you walk to the top of the town, a small but impressive abbey. Pop into the Biscuit Cafe on the way down the hill. Visit nts.org.uk
Tak ma doon Road, Kilsyth One for eager cyclists, this road out of Kilsyth climbs to more than 300ft in less than three miles. At the top there’s a car park with impressive views over the Forth Valley (if the weather is kind).