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  • TERI Campus of Life, a non-profit organization that is changing the way the world sees, helps, and empowers children and adults with developmental and learning disabilities, operates several social enterprises, with all profits supporting TERI’s array of special needs programs that improve their quality of life. With a lead gift from the Walter J. & Betty C. Zable Foundation, the new Performing Arts and Fine Arts Center at TERI Campus of Life features a 197-seat theater, drama studios, music studios, multi-sensory rooms, art and ceramics studios, and more. TERI is pleased to announce its inaugural lineup of live performances in its just-opened Cindy and James Bornemann Theater for the Performing Arts. The theater will feature a diverse and lively line-up of performances for all ages. Tickets are on sale now at www.TERi.Live Multi-talented and gifted pianist, producer, songwriter, programmer and film score composer, Myron McKinley is in a class all by himself. Born and raised in Los Angeles, California, McKinley began studying Jazz and Classical piano at the age of three. His smooth and eclectic sound blends classical, jazz, R&B, and hip hop together forming an explosive Jazz sound reminiscent of some of his influences such as Art Tatum, Bill Evans, Chick Corea and Oscar Peterson. Myron will be joined by drummer Marvin “Smitty” Smith, bassist Sekou Bunch, and guitarist Tony Pulizzi for a powerful performance Stay Connected on Social Media! Facebook & Instagram
  • In a video released Thursday, she says women are born with "individual freedom." Her memoir is coming out a year after former President Donald Trump said he was "able to kill Roe v. Wade."
  • Israel has allowed almost no food aid into north Gaza for two weeks. Humanitarian groups say it leaves 400,000 people with the choice of eventual starvation or fleeing their homes to the south.
  • In Nevada, 1 in 5 potential voters are Latino. That is a voting bloc with a lot of political power in a state where elections are won by a few percentage points. And campaigns are paying attention.
  • People who are in jail and haven't been convicted of a crime — and even many who have been convicted — retain their right to vote. But it's often challenging for them to exercise it.
  • Inflation remains substantially lower than it did during its 2022 peak — but Americans are still frustrated with high prices.
  • The cemetery official tried to prevent Trump staffers from filming and photographing in a section where recent U.S. casualties are buried, a source with knowledge of the incident told NPR.
  • Climate researchers have long grappled with how to get Americans to eat less beef, a food with a huge global warming impact. Now some are thinking about it through the lens of gender.
  • The Israeli attack on the Lebanese army came hours after Israeli troops fired on the headquarters of U.N. peacekeepers in southern Lebanon, injuring two peacekeepers for the second time this week.
  • Was the murder of a young Palestinian man in the West Bank an anti-gay hate crime? NPR identifies the accused killer and explores the parallel systems of justice that have yet to resolve this case.
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