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  • After several years of planning and a complete remodel of its physical space, you are invited discover the newly renovated Museum of Making Music. The Museum of Making Music is an inviting and engaging place for families and individuals alike. It’s a place where the creative relationship between people, musical instruments, and music is explored. See hundreds of instruments on display from the last 150 years and hear a vast sampling of musical styles from yesterday and today. Experience an immersive panoramic multimedia display, then play on a variety of hands-on interactive musical instruments. Reflect on what it means to make music in your life and in the world today. The Museum of Making Music is open Tuesday through Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The Museum is closed on Mondays and major national holidays: Christmas Day, New Years Day, Independence Day, Thanksgiving Day. Admission: $10-$15 Visit www.museumofmakingmusic.org or call 760-438-5996 / Museum of Making Music on Facebook Parking is free at the Museum of Making Music. The parking lot is reserved for museum visitors and is located directly behind the building. The lot also includes two spaces reserved for bus and RV parking.
  • A committee formed by Harvard President Lawrence Bacow found that Harvard faculty and staff enslaved 70 people from the school's founding in 1636 to the banning of slavery in Massachusetts in 1783.
  • It was an abrupt reversal for the school, which had condemned the views of Gavin McInnes even as it said free speech required it to host the event. Protesters confronted each other and police.
  • In 1955, a 14-year-old Black boy was lynched in Mississippi. Till tells the story of Mamie Till-Mobley, whose insistence on an open-casket funeral helped ignite the civil rights movement.
  • Poet Franny Choi believes that for marginalized people, the apocalypse has already happened. In "The World Keeps Ending, and the World Goes On," she explores what it means to live in this dystopia.
  • A group of migrants filed a federal complaint alleging medical negligence, retaliatory use of solitary confinement and civil rights violations.
  • The iconic group's early music releasing online at last comes with a renewed interest in its career arc. Take a guided tour through one of the most distinguished runs in hip-hop history.
  • Vladyslav Krasnoshchok describes himself as a "geopolitical surrealist" painter. Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine began, he's been photographing the war with a vintage Olympus 35 mm camera.
  • Law enforcement organizations are promoting a new film about children being exploited into sharing sexual images and videos. But many of the film's key claims lack context.
  • Steve Cline was at home with his wife Annette last December when his heart suddenly stopped. Quick thinking and some help from a 911 dispatcher meant he made a full recovery.
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