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What’s Happening Week of Feb. 28 | What’s Happening – The Almanac

Posted By on February 26, 2021

Mt. Lebanon Public Library

All Mt. Lebanon Public Library programs are being held virtually. Visit http://www.mtlebanonlibrary.org or call 412-531-1912 to register and for more information.

Virtual Knitting and Crochet Group is at 10 a.m. March 3 and 17. Whether you are experienced or just learning, join online to work on your own projects and chat.

Monday Maker Lab, 10 a.m. March 8 and 22 Join resident artist Jud Ernest for a collaborative workshop using the CreativeBug database, available through the librarys website. Discuss your experiences with Jud and others in the group.

Board Game Night, 7 p.m. Tuesdays, a friendly competition playing both party and Euro-style board games

Montgomery Clift: The Lost Actor, 7 p.m. March 1 and 8. Clift was the first actor to portray a more sensitive, vulnerable and rebellious leading man. He paved the way for Marlon Brando and James Dean, yet remains virtually unknown today. This two-part series looks at his acting beginnings and acting style. Instructor Wendy Whittick is president of the Pittsburgh Classic Movie Club. Register.

Dispelling Hospice Myths, 1:30 p.m. March 2. A review of the hospice Medicare benefit and misperceptions associated with this specific healthcare entitlement. Presented by Family Hospice Speakers Bureau. Register.

Living and Aging Well, 1:30 p.m. March 9. Explore the challenges we face as we grow older through the eyes of author Dr. Atul Gawande. You will need to watch a 53-minute video on YouTube prior to the discussion. Register.

Film Noir: A Personal View, 7 p.m. March 3. Film noir describes the stylish Hollywood crime dramas, particularly those that emphasize cynical attitudes. Jim Valimont from the Pittsburgh Classic Movie Club will discuss the definition of film noir, what factors led to its creation, and the classic elements of the genre. Register.

Jewish Enrichment Club at Chabad

Jewish Enrichment Club is being offered for children ages 6 to 12 from 10:30 a.m. to noon Sundays at Chabad of the South Hills in Mt. Lebanon.

The program makes Jewish heritage, traditions and values come alive through experiential and interactive learning.

Strict adherence to all COVID-19 safety guidelines is required, including masks and social distancing. Visit Chabadsh.com/JEC or email mussie@chabadsh.com

Womens Business Network meetings

Womens Business Network is an award-winning business association that supports the success and growth of women in business as part networking group, part mastermind group and part educational resource.

All professional women are welcome to attend as a guest at the meeting for no charge. At the time of publication, many chapters are meeting virtually; please check with the local chapter representative for more information. To learn more, visit http://www.wbninc.com.

The McMurray Chapter meets at 8:30 a.m. the first and third Wednesdays of the month. Contact chapter representative Diane Fehl at 412-341-7788, ext. 110.

The South Hills Chapter meets at 8 a.m. the first and third Thursdays of the month. Contact chapter representative Susanne Snyder at 724-953-1539.

The Washington Chapter meets at 8:30 a.m. the second and fourth Wednesdays of the month. Contact Karen Kovac or Pam Slominay at 724-986-6739.

The Mt. Lebanon Chapter meets at 8:30 a.m. the second and fourth Tuesdays of the month. Contact chapter representative Marlene Will-Knapp, at 412-833-9279.

The All Virtual Chapter holds regular meetings via Zoom from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. the first and third Wednesday of each month. Fuests are welcome to attend at no cost. Contact chapter representative Jennifer Pasquale at 412-908-1663.

YMCA ballet classes

The spring ballet term at Spencer Family YMCA in Bethel Park runs from March 1 through May 26. Classes are:

Pre Ballet, ages 4-5, 4 to 4:45 p.m. Tuesdays;

Ballet I-II, ages 5-9, 5 to 5:55 p.m. Tuesdays;

Ballet III-IV, ages 9 through teen, 4 to 4:55 p.m. Wednesdays;

Adult ballet 10 to10:55 a.m. Tuesdays.

Class sizes are limited to nine dancers. A virtual performance is scheduled for May 27.

Instructor Virginia Nicoll offers almost 30 years of experience in classical training for children. She was former director of Southwest Ballet and has worked for the Pittsburgh Ballet Theater and CLO Academy

Register online http://www.pittsburghymca.org. For more information, contact JoAnn Guilfoil at jguilfoil@ymcapgh.org of 412-227-3806.

South Hills Coin Club

The monthly meeting of the South Hills Coin Club will be held at 7:30 p.m. March 9 at the Bethel Park Municipal Building, 5100 W. Library Ave. All members and the general public are invited.

This months program will be on Lincoln cents. A 50/50 will be offered and childrens prizes awarded.

Applications are now being accepted for membership. For more information, call 724-984-6611.

American Legion fish fry

American Legion Post 760, 2409 Bethel Church Road, Bethel Park, will hold fish fires each Friday through Lent.

Dinners will be served from 4 to 8 p.m. and are takeout only. Masks are required to enter the building.

The menu includes baked or fried Fish, shrimp, macaroni and cheese, coleslaw, haluski, french fries and potato chips.

For more information, call 412-835-9690.

Elks fish fry

Pittsburgh South Hills Elks Lodge 2213 is hosting Lenten fish fries.

Takeout is available and the dining room is open to the public at 2789 South Park Road, Bethel Park. Call 412-831-0616 to order. The menu includes fish sandwich, fish dinner, haluski, pierogies and clam chowder.

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What's Happening Week of Feb. 28 | What's Happening - The Almanac

At Zionist hero’s memorial, Netanyahu invokes Purim to threaten Iran – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on February 26, 2021

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday issued a warning to the regime in Tehran ahead of Purim, the holiday that marks the Jewish peoples rescue from annihilation at the hands of Haman in ancient Persia.

On the eve of Purim, I would like to say to Iran and its proxies in the Middle East that 2,500 years ago, another Persian villain tried to destroy the Jewish people, and just as he failed then, so, too, will you fail today, Netanyahu said during the state memorial ceremony for early Zionist activist Joseph Trumpeldor and his comrades, who fell in the Battle of Tel Hai in the northern Galilee on March 1, 1920.

We will not allow your extremist and aggressive regime to attain nuclear weapons, continued Netanyahu, according to excerpts of his speech released by his office. We have not made the journey of generations, of thousands of years, to return to the land of Israel in order to allow the delusional regime of the ayatollahs to end the story of the revival of the Jewish people.

And, he continued, we are not pinning our hopes on any agreement with an extremist regime such as yours.

The comment was an apparent reference to the new administration in Washington expressing a willingness to resume talks to rejoin the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Actionthe 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers from which former President Trump withdrew in 2018.

We have already seen the quality of agreements with extremist regimes such as yours, in the past century and in this one, with the government of North Korea, said Netanyahu. With or without agreements, we will do everything so that you will not arm yourselves with nuclear weapons.

The post At Zionist heros memorial, Netanyahu invokes Purim to threaten Iran appeared first on JNS.org.

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At Zionist hero's memorial, Netanyahu invokes Purim to threaten Iran - Cleveland Jewish News

Does the grand jury system work in officer-involved shootings? The Wake Up for Monday, Feb. 22, 2021 – cleveland.com

Posted By on February 26, 2021

Subscribe to the Wake Up, cleveland.coms free morning newsletter, delivered to your inbox weekdays at 5:30 a.m.

A rain/snow mix is likely through the morning, but should end by the early afternoon. Look for highs in the mid-30s. It will be blustery as gusts will top 30 mph. Strong winds will continue overnight and temps will stay around 30 degrees. Read more.

Local scores: Oklahoma City Thunder 117, Cavs 101

Grand jury: When the Ohio attorney generals office presented the case of off-duty Cleveland police officer Jose Garcias killing of 22-year-old Desmond Franklin to a grand jury, prosecutors included a 2019 state law that requires prosecutors to prove at trial that a shooter did not act in self-defense. Experts say that its rare to include such information in cases that dont involve the police. Cory Shaffer reports the case, which the grand jury chose not to indict Garcia, is symbolic of the systems inability to alleviate public skepticism that police who kill someone receive different treatment.

Mass vaccinations: Officials who run the stadiums for the Cleveland Browns, Indians and Cavaliers, as well as the Cincinnati Bengals, have offered their spaces for mass coronavirus vaccinations. Laura Hancock reports the state has not yet made decisions on whether sports arenas, many of which are publicly owned, will be used for vaccinations. There also isnt any timeline for when such sites would open, since those would depend on an increase in the number of vaccines sent to Ohio. More than 100 providers have offered to volunteer at future mass vaccination sites.

This Week in the CLE: Former Ohio Republican Party chairwoman Jane Timken has officially declared a run for U.S. Senate, joining former Ohio Treasurer Josh Mandel. Were discussing which candidate is the Trumpiest on This Week in the CLE, cleveland.coms daily half-hour news podcast.

New numbers: The Ohio Department of Health reported Sunday that the number of confirmed or probable infections of the novel coronavirus had risen to 953,767, up 1,461 since Saturday. Sixty-seven deaths were reported Sunday, bringing the total to 16,816, Jane Morice reports. Ohio added 2,306 coronavirus cases on Friday, with 82 deaths. On Saturday, there were 2,611 cases and 56 deaths.

In this Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021 file photo, supporters of President Donald Trump scale the west wall of the the U.S. Capitol in Washington. Militias took part in the attack, though some Ohio militia members condemn it. (Jose Luis Magana, Associated Press file photo)AP

Modern militias: Ohio has the second largest number of anti-government groups in America, with 31. And after the attack on the U.S. Capitol, many militias are trying to figure out their identities. Brian Albrecht reports the future could depend on whether the initial outrage following the Capitol attack endures and if the militia movement embraces an animating myth. Albrecht also interviews some militia members who say they were outraged to see the attack.

Oath Keepers: An Ohio bartender was charged Friday in a sweeping indictment of nine members of the Oath Keepers, a far-right group that authorities say sought to impede the certification of Joseph Biden as president. John Caniglia reports Jessica Watkins and other members of the anti-government faction were charged with conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.

Coronavirus trends: Greater Cleveland coronavirus indicators have improved dramatically over the past few weeks for everything from cases and hospitalizations to trips to doctors offices and emergency rooms. Rich Exner details the numbers. For example, the total of new cases over the previous two weeks in Northeast Ohios seven counties dropped from 23,748 in the Dec. 17 report to 7,223 on Thursday. In Cuyahoga County suburbs, Emily Bamforth reports cases dropped to an average of 183 per day Friday from an average of 234 per day the previous week.

Race disparity: Far more white Ohioans have received the coronavirus vaccine than Black Ohioans, and state and county health departments are working to address inequities. But while comparing general percentages is startling, it may be misleading, Cameron Fields reports. Thats because so far the state has prioritized frontline healthcare workers, older Ohioans and teachers. A smaller percentage of older Ohioans are Black.

Vaccines for minorities: Cuyahoga, Hamilton and Franklin counties will ask Gov. Mike DeWine to set aside 20% of the coronavirus vaccine specifically for minorities, Emily Bamforth reports. Cuyahoga County Executive Armond Budish said the percentage of minorities receiving the vaccination is way too low and that the county is limited by the states decisions on supply.

The Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine provides significant protection against the coronavirus after one shot, and can be stored in ordinary freezers, according to new research and data from the company. The findings could help smooth out the vaccine rollout in the United States. (Mary Altaffer, Associated Press file photo)

Pfizer vaccine: New data shows the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine provides significant immunity after one dose and can be stored in ordinary freezers instead of at ultracold temperatures. Julie Washington reports the new research could greatly simplify the logistics of the vaccine rollout in the United States and enable more people to get immunized.

FirstEnergy: The nonprofit at the heart of the states largest corruption scandal pleaded guilty Friday to a federal racketeering charge involving House Bill 6. John Caniglia reports that Generation Now helped receive more than $60 million in bribes that FirstEnergy Corp. and its affiliates gave former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder and his allies in exchange for the passage of a $1.3 billion bailout for two aging nuclear power plants that a FirstEnergy subsidiary once owned. The nonprofit faces a term of probation for five years.

Sherwin-Williams: Sherwin-Williams said Friday that it plans to break ground this fall on its new headquarters in downtown Cleveland and a new research and development facility in Brecksville. Eric Heisig reports that employees are slated to move to the new facility at the end of 2024, a year after the initially planned date.

Microgrid: Cuyahoga County Council this week will consider legislation to create a county-owned power company. Emily Bamforth reports the Cleveland Microgrid Project, funded by Cuyahoga County and the Cleveland Foundation, aims to set up a secondary energy source for Clevelands power, which typically operates attached to the main power grid but could run independently in case of emergency.

Some people look out at the lake near the site of an ice rescue off the shoreline near Edgewater Park in Cleveland on Sunday afternoon, February 21, 2021. David Petkiewicz, cleveland.comDavid Petkiewicz, cleveland.com

Ice rescue: About 10 people were rescued Sunday afternoon after they became stranded on the ice off of Edgewater Park, Jane Morice reports. Of the 10 people stuck on the ice, seven were adults and three were children, a U.S. Coast Guard spokesman said. Six of those people were rescued by a Coast Guard ice skiff, while the others were taken to shore by a Cleveland Fire Department rescue team.

Fatal crash: An early Sunday morning crash in Lakewood left two 19-year-old residents dead and two others injured, Jane Morice reports. The cause of the crash remains under investigation and its unclear whether drugs or alcohol were factors in the crash.

Council petition: A group of nearly 40, calling themselves Clevelanders For City Council Reform, sent an open letter to City Council late last month seeking changes to meetings and public feedback that would breathe new life into city government. Jane Morice reports the group has not yet received a reply from City Council President Kevin Kelley, though in a follow-up message to Kelley sent Sunday, the group said it has received supportive responses from other council members.

PUCO: Gov. Mike DeWine on Friday appointed former state appeals court judge Dennis Deters to a full term on the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, reports Jeremy Pelzer. Deters, who was first appointed to the PUCO by DeWine in 2019, was recommended for a full five-year term by a nominating committee last month.

COVID timeline: Life expectancy in the United States dropped one year during the first half of 2020, with minorities suffering the biggest impact, Marc Bona reports in his weekly coronavirus timeline.

Power systems: Managers of power systems are expecting extreme weather to increasingly test the power grid in Ohio and across the country in the coming years, Andrew Tobias reports. Ohio has weatherized its infrastructure for extreme temperatures, but policymakers will have to decide how to modernize the states electricity network as Ohio also tries to reduce its carbon footprint.

Social Security: U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown wants an immediate replacement for President Trumps Social Security Administration commissioner, now that Democrats control the White House. In his first act as chairman of the Senate Finance Committees Subcommittee on Social Security, Pensions and Family Policy, the Ohio Democrat released a statement seeking the departure of Andrew Saul and Deputy Commissioner David Black, both of whose terms expire in 2025, Sabrina Eaton reports.

Cleveland schools: Cleveland Metropolitan School District announced Friday it will phase in students in three groups, beginning March 1, a full month earlier than what CEO Eric Gordon estimated during a City Council meeting on Feb. 8. Students will return to buildings in a hybrid schedule with two-day-a-week in-person instruction for those opting to return instead of continuing online-only instruction, Emily Bamforth reports.

Coping through COVID: The uncertainty brought on by the coronavirus caused Sarah to have a series of panic attacks in the early part of the pandemic. It was frightening to see everything shut down so suddenly. Evan MacDonald reports on the stress of the pandemic in the series Coping through COVID.

7-year-old shot: A 7-year-old boy was hospitalized Thursday after someone shot his feet in an Akron apartment building. Police say his injuries are not life-threatening and investigators are searching for the shooter, Robin Goist reports.

Western Reserve: Hudson boarding school Western Reserve Academy is closing through Feb. 28 to reset from a coronavirus outbreak affecting students and staff. On Friday, there were 18 active coronavirus cases at Western Reserve Academy, Emily Bamforth reports.

Snow again? While it may feel like youve had to shovel your driveway every other day, Northeast Ohio hasnt actually reached the average number of snow days this winter. Alexis Oatman reports weve had only 31 days with more than 1/10 of an inch of snow at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport.

Black artists: East Cleveland native TyJuane Brijae Finley, also known as Ty Bri, is the first female rap artist from Cleveland with a major label deal. Alexis Oatman reports Ty Bri says her art is a reflection of the gritty street environment that she grew up in and the vulgarity of life. Amber Ford is a portrait photographer who aims to capture her subjects vibe and aura through the lens. Cameron Fields reports that Ford regularly produces work where the colors and the lighting complement people well, bringing their light into focus.

RBG exhibit: The Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage is geared up and ready for its deep dive into the life and times of late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, mother, feminist and legal scholar who left a huge stamp on American life, Steven Litt reports.

Coffee shop: Pour Cleveland downtown has closed, another victim of the coronavirus pandemic. Marc Bona reports that Pour Cleveland opened in 2013, close to a multitude of businesses, at 5th Street Arcades on Euclid Avenue.

BorderLight: BorderLight International Theatre + Fringe Festival is set to return to downtown Cleveland this summer for arts, music and theatrical performances July 22-24. The festival is currently open for artist, musician and performer applications, due by March 5, reports Anne Nickoloff.

Cherry: Cleveland-born directors Anthony and Joe Russo couldve done anything they wanted after their last film, Avengers: Endgame, wound up becoming the highest-grossing movie of all time. They chose to come home. Joey Morona reports the brothers spent several months in late 2019 shooting Cherry in Cleveland, based on a book by a fellow Clevelander with a screenplay co-written by their sister.

Lunch nachos: Join Chris Morocco as he makes baked lunch nachos, which he makes at least once a week as he brainstorms what to feed his two young kids, in this video from cleveland.coms sister site Bon Appetit. Its a lightning-fast lunch (or dinner) that can be tweaked to suit anyones preferences.

House of the Week: If youre looking for your sanctuary away from the bustle of the city, this contemporary farmhouse in Waite Hill deserves a look. Joey Morona reports that the 1988-built home designed by the renowned design firm Bialosky Cleveland offers six bedrooms and three-and-a-half bathrooms. On the market since December, the asking price is $639,500.

Cleveland reports 47 new coronavirus cases, but no deaths: Sunday update Read more

East Cleveland police arrest man in police pursuit that injured four people, police reports say Read more

Kent police trying to identify who broke windows at high school Read more

Cleveland police searching for man who stole womans car at Express Gas Read more

Four people in custody after Case Western Reserve University student robbed on campus, school says Read more

Cleveland Division of Police mourn the passing of fallen officer Erwin C. Eberhardt Read more

Most Cleveland Public Library locations to reopen for browsing beginning Monday Read more

University Heights City Council approves townhome plan Read more

Berea Schools superintendent addresses governors learning loss mandate Read more

Spectacular ice sculptures on display in Medina Square through Monday evening (photos) Read more

Akron will celebrate first Dick Goddard Day Wednesday Read more

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Does the grand jury system work in officer-involved shootings? The Wake Up for Monday, Feb. 22, 2021 - cleveland.com

Ethnic Studies in California – EducationNext

Posted By on February 26, 2021

Among Californias many distinctions, the state stands out for the minimal requirements it imposes for high-school graduation, among the most lenient in the United States. California is one of a handful of states that require just three years of English and two years of math to earn a high-school diploma. The last revision to the list of 13 required courses was back in 2003, when state lawmakers added Algebra I.

Now, educators and elected officials are engaged in a prolonged pedagogical, cultural, and political debate to amend those requirements again. In a move more in line with its trendsetting reputation, California is on the verge of becoming the first state in the country to require that every high-school student take an ethnic studies class to graduate.

By an overwhelming margin, the state legislature approved a bill in its 2020 session that would have added one semester of ethnic studies to the requirements for a high-school diploma, ensuring that students study the history and experiences of Blacks, Latinos, Asians, and Native Americans. Governor Gavin Newsom vetoed the measure. The veto was not due to objections to the mandate per se, but to concerns over the unfinished draft ethnic studies curriculum that will serve as a template for school districts as they create their own versions of the class. A K12 ethnic studies bill is likely to end up on the governors desk again in 2021, and in all probability, the outcome this time will be different.

While some national conservative voices have denounced the entire concept as political indoctrination, support for some form of ethnic studies coursework has been widespread in California. Last year, the legislature mandated that all students in the California State University system complete a three-credit ethnic studies class to earn their degrees. The debate over the complex and often charged subject has focused not on whether ethnic studies is necessary, but on how best to define it. Whose stories will be told, and how?

Understanding Ethnic Studies

The case for ethnic studies is multipronged. It begins with the material itself: history and literature about the struggles and triumphs of people whose voices often have been omitted from traditional texts and classroom readings. That could mean people like Filipino leaders in the farmworker movement or Mexican guest workers participating in the Bracero Program, or topics like the systematic redlining of African Americans and the genocide of Native Americans. A second layer of argument stresses the need for students to understand and discuss how various racial and ethnic groups have been oppressed by a white ruling class, as well as the social movements and civil-rights struggles sparked by that oppression. Appreciating the history of different racial and ethnic groups, advocates argue, is vital to make students more engaged, responsible citizens.

Stanford University historian Albert Camarillo, a founder of the discipline of Chicano studies, harkens back to John Deweys arguments about the importance of civic education in a democracy. In the diverse society of California, Camarillo argues, ethnic studies should be a fundamental component of California public education in the 21st century, crucial to building the informed, socially conscious citizenry essential to democracy. Writing and speaking in support of mandatory ethnic studies for high-school students, Camarillo pointed to a passage in the states draft curriculum: By affirming the identities and contributions of marginalized groups in our society, Ethnic Studies helps students see themselves and each other as part of the narrative of the United States.Camarillo testified that he has seen the benefits firsthand, not only while teaching at Stanford but also in his work with social-studies teachers at two charter high schools in the San Francisco Bay Area that require ethnic studies.

Advocates concede the importance of using care when teaching material that can be politically controversial. Some of Californias early stumbles gave ammunition to those concerned that ethnic studies can easily morph into divisive political rhetoric or become a pretext for leftist indoctrination. But as the state nears consensus on a model high-school curriculum, the most persistent criticism has come from those who want to expand the definition beyond the four major groups traditionally considered the focus of the disciplineBlacks, Latinos, Asians and Pacific Islanders, and Native Americans. In a state that often boasts the largest population of immigrants from a host of countries, hundreds of complaints have been registered from groups seeking greater representation, including Sikhs, Armenians, and Arab Americans. The most vocal and organized opposition has come from some Jewish groups demanding a greater focus on antisemitism.

Another core argument for ethnic studies is that its benefits extend far beyond the coursework itself. In a state struggling to improve academic outcomes that remain relatively poor, with a high percentage of English-language learners and students from low-income families, ethnic studies is framed as crucial to closing persistent achievement gaps. Although the research is limited, it suggests that students of all races exposed to ethnic studies become more engaged in school and show significant improvement in general academic performance. In a widely cited journal article, Thomas Dee and Emily Penner examined the academic and attendance records of 1,400 struggling 9th-grade students in San Francisco and found that those assigned to a yearlong ethnic studies course showed significant, lasting improvementa jump in attendance rates of 21 points and an increase in grade-point average of 1.4 points.

Anecdotally, there are abundant testimonials to back up that data. Before Jos Medina was elected to the California Assembly in 2012, he taught social studies at Riverside Polytechnic High School in Riverside, a predominantly Latino city east of Los Angeles. One of his five classes was ethnic or Chicano studies. Medina supplemented the few available textbooks with literature, poetry, public-television documentaries, and field trips to see live theater by Chicano playwrights. I really saw in my classes how turned on students were, how the light went on, and how they became engaged, he said. I know that for some of them it was the first time they had ever been so engaged. He still runs into students he taught more than a decade ago who tell him how important the class was for them, he said. Now Medina, chair of the Assembly Higher Education committee, is the sponsor of the bill to make ethnic studies a graduation requirement.

Among the significant caveats in the bill is that it would only take effect if funding for new ethnic studies courses is included in the state budget. By law, the state is obligated to fund the mandates it imposes; in this case, legislative analysts estimated spending in the low millions of dollars annually and potentially more if school districts claim greater expenses. Funding a new mandate may be difficult in coming budget cycles, with longstanding fiscal crises exacerbated by the Covid-19 pandemic. Some districts have already made commitments to expand existing programs, but those commitments will be subject to fiscal pressures as well. Last year, the Los Angeles Unified Board of Education voted to make ethnic studies a graduation requirement by the 202324 school year. And Fresno Unified, the states third-largest district, plans to require two semesters of ethnic studies starting with the class of 202122.

A Diverse Heritage

That California may become the first state to mandate ethnic studies, increasingly taught as an elective around the country, stems in many ways from the states demographics and its history. From its earliest days of statehood in 1850, California has had a high percentage of foreign-born residents and an unusually diverse population. Today, its 6.2 million K12 students are 55 percent Latino, 22 percent white, 12 percent Asian or Pacific Islander, and 5.3 percent African American.

The history of ethnic studies as a discipline is rooted in California. Demands for African American, Chicano, Asian, and Native American studies grew out of student movements in the Bay Area in the late 1960s. A five-month strike at San Francisco State University organized by a coalition known as the Third World Liberation Front ended in March 1969 with an agreement that included the first College of Ethnic Studies in the United States. Similar protests the same year across the Bay at the University of California, Berkeley, also ended with the establishment of a new Department of Ethnic Studies.

In 1976, the California superintendent of public instruction released An Analysis of Curriculum Materials for Ethnic Heritage Programs, the culmination of a two-year project to help teachers incorporate ethnic studies in K12 classrooms. In contrast to the current push for standalone ethnic studies classes, the approach then was to incorporate more diverse materials and content throughout the existing curriculum. But the goals were similar: Afford students an opportunity to learn more about the nature of their own heritage and to study the contributions of other ethnic groups in the United States Recognize the educational gains that can result from cultural pluralism in a multiethnic nation Engender in the citizens of our pluralistic society intercultural competence: self-acceptance, acceptance of ones culture, and acceptance of persons of other cultures.

In the ensuing decades, ethnic studies courses expanded on college campuses across the United States, with more than 700 programs in existence by the early 1990s. But in California, budget constraints impeded much growth at the K12 level. Ironically, it was a controversy across state lines in Arizona that sparked interest anew.

In 2010, Arizona lawmakers banned ethnic studies classes from the states K-12 public schools, spurred by a controversy over a Mexican American studies course in Tucson schools. After a court challenge, a federal judge ruled that Arizona had been motivated by racial discrimination rather a legitimate educational purpose and barred the state from enforcing the ban. The episode served as a catalyst for renewed interest in ethnic studies, particularly in California.

My response, and the response of activists in Los Angeles, was, If they shut it down over there, can we spring it up over here? recalled Jose Lara, then a teacher at Santee Education Complex in Los Angeles. Lara ran for school board in the small district of El Rancho, a working-class Mexican American community east of Los Angeles. He delivered on a campaign pledge in 2014, when El Rancho became the first district in California to adopt ethnic studies as a graduation requirement.

Lara credits his career as both a teacher and political leader to his exposure to ethnic studies at the University of California, Los Angeles, a campus he initially found foreign and intimidating as a low-income, Mexican American student from Orange County. It was the first time in my life I saw myself as an intellectual, he recalled about classes with scholar Juan Gmez-Quiones. I couldnt believe this guy who looked like he sold oranges on the freeway was writing these massive books about Chicano history. It was a whole new world for me.

Evidence of Impact

Lara helped found the Ethnic Studies Now Coalition, which successfully lobbied the Los Angeles school board to adopt an ethnic studies graduation mandate in 2014. Then-Superintendent Ramn Cortines overruled the plan, saying the district could not afford the estimated $72 million expense. In 2016, Los Angeles opted instead to create a yearlong elective. About 40 of the citys 150 public high schools already offered at least one related elective in fields such as Afro-American history, Afro-American literature, American Indian studies, Asian literature, Mexican American literature, or Mexican American studies.

Meanwhile, in San Francisco, 10 social-studies teachers who had worked for several years with faculty from San Francisco State Universitys College of Ethnic Studies had launched an ethnic studies curriculum in five high schools in 2010. That pilot program, later expanded to all 19 high schools in the district, became the source of a significant research effort that would be widely cited in debates across the country.

The study grew out of the districts longstanding partnership with Stanford University and the research of Thomas Dee, a professor at the Graduate School of Education and director of the Stanford Center for Education Policy Analysis. In 2014, he and a colleague began to study the impact on 1,405 9th graders who were at risk of dropping out and who had been assigned to an ethnic studies course. To be honest, certainly I and some of the district officials went into this thinking, Well, ethnic studies was sold as solving so many problems, Dee said. Many of us were very skeptical about whether a close examination of the data would support that.

The data surprised him. It showed that enrolling in the elective improved general academic performance, measured by attendance, grades, and credits earned. Dees analysis suggested a link to his earlier research, which looked at a group of Tennessee elementary-school students and found that students tended to do better on standardized tests when taught by a teacher of the same race. In particular, Black students earned higher test scores when they were taught by a Black teacher (see The Race Connection, research, Spring 2004). This helped forge a consensus around the benefits of teacher diversity, and Dee saw some of the same factors at work in his San Francisco study.

Ethnic studies resembles an unusually intensive and sustained social-psychological intervention that kind of buffers student identities in the classroom, Dee said. That intervention helps combat anxiety from perceived stereotyping, affirms students personal values, and promotes a growth mindset, he said. And unlike short-term interventions to address those problems, its embedded in the course every day.

Moving Toward a Mandate

As Dee released the results of the San Francisco study, legislators in Sacramento were advocating to increase ethnic studies offerings statewide. A 2016 state lawwhich passed overwhelmingly with virtually no organized oppositiondirected the state board of education to adopt a model ethnic studies curriculum. The original deadline of March 2020 has since been extended by one year; the curriculum is now to be completed by March 2021. Though not directly linked to the idea of mandating ethnic studies for graduation, the curriculum has been a major stumbling block.

The first draft, written with input from an advisory committee of college professors, high-school teachers, and ethnic studies experts, was essentially dead on arrival. Commenters ridiculed the politically correct glossary of terms such as herstory and hxrstory and the politically charged definition of capitalism as a system of oppression and exploitation. The Los Angeles Times editorial board denounced the draft as an impenetrable mlange of academic jargon and politically correct pronouncements. Of the approximately 57,000 comments received by the state, more than 30,000 related to concerns about the absence of lessons on antisemitism, the lack of material relating to Jews, and the drafts definition of a campaign to boycott Israel as a global social movement that currently aims to establish freedom for Palestinians living under apartheid conditions.

The state board of education president, Linda Darling-Hammond, rejected the draft before it could even move toward review by the board. A model curriculum should be accurate, free of bias, appropriate for all learners in our diverse state, she said in a statement. The current draft model curriculum falls short and needs to be substantially redesigned. Education-department officials began a yearlong process of soliciting and reviewing comments and rewriting the document, which culminated in a second draft released for public review on August 13, 2020.

By then, Medina was growing concerned about his bill despite its broad-based support. The move to require ethnic studies had passed the state Assembly in May. But it was stalled in the Senate, stuck in the Appropriations committee, where dozens of bills go to die. With just two weeks remaining in the session, Medina made a last push, summoning the momentum of the Black Lives Matter protests and the aftermath of the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis to lobby the legislative leadership to move the bill.

Youve heard people refer to a racial reckoning in our society or an inflection point, historian Camarillo said in testimony about the state ethnic studies curriculum. We will refer to this as a benchmark in American history Democracy is at stake if we dont equip our young people with the knowledge and the education so they can effectively navigate our diverse society.

The bill made it out of committee and passed the full Senate on the last day of session, August 31. Medina had accepted amendments to meet concerns of the legislatures Jewish caucus, of which he is a member. (Hes the only legislator in both the Latino and Jewish caucuses; his first wife is Jewish and was raised partly in Panama, and they raised their children in the Jewish faith.) Language in the bill specified that nothing in the curriculum would teach or promote religious doctrine. That met the concerns of legislators and all the Jewish caucus members voted in favor. The bill was supported by the California State PTA, the California Federation of Teachers, the California Teachers Association, the California Faculty Association, and numerous school districts. The only opposition on record came from the Sacramento-based Charter Schools Development Center, an advocacy group that objected to its members being subject to the requirement.

Curriculum Concerns

The mandate would not have applied until the graduating class of 202930, long after the deadline for the state to adopt a model curriculum. And the bill explicitly allowed districts to create their own lesson plans. But the measures fate was nevertheless tied to controversy over the states draft model curriculum.

Last year, I expressed concern that the initial draft of the model curriculum was insufficiently balanced and inclusive and needed to be substantially amended, the governor wrote in his veto message. In my opinion, the latest draft, which is currently out for review, still needs revision.

But Medina said that, in a subsequent conversation, Newsom was clear about the concerns he left vague in his veto. The governor made it clear to me in conversation after his vetoit was about the Jewish community, Medina said.

After a year of extensive feedback from the public as well as experts, the state education department posted a revised draft model curriculum. It was modified and approved in November by the Instructional Quality Commission, which advises the state board of education. Over two days and going line by line, the commission reviewed the proposed changes made by the education department. Members debated whether capitalism should be included in a list of forms of oppression and reviewed new sections on antisemitism. They agreed with a proposal to list in an appendix lesson plans that include a range of ethnic groups, including Arabs, Sikhs, and Armenians, to address complaints that they were omitted or marginalized in the document.

The curriculum is designed to be a guide for teachers and includes sections explaining thematic approaches to the concepts underlying the discipline, course outlines, sample lesson plans, primary-source documents, and lists of resources. The material is organized around the key themes of identity, history and movement, systems of power, and social movements and equity.

It remains centered on the four major groups: African Americans, Chicano/Latinos, Asian Americans, and Native Americans. But in response to complaints, the draft emphasizes that districts may adapt the curriculum to reflect the composition of their communities. We believe that we have found a way to create a kind of balance of honoring with fidelity what core ethnic studies is but also creating a bridge to talk about interconnectivity of other groups whose stories need to be told, said Tony Thurmond, the state superintendent of public instruction.

That tension remains central to the ongoing deliberations; the two hours of public comment at the commission meeting on the topic focused almost entirely on demands to broaden the curriculums focus. We have a tendency to forget why we started the ethnic studies piece, and now its designed to solve all the problems of the world when it was very clear that it was an American thing focused on American racism and those kind of issues that exist in this country, Assemblywoman Shirley Weber told fellow commission members. Weber, an academic who created an ethnic studies program at San Diego State University, said she understood why lesson plans on Jews, Arabs, Armenians, and other groups were included in the revised curriculum. But she stressed that they need to be connected strongly to the basic ideas and tenets of ethnic studies.

This is a very political decision thats being made, not necessarily an academic one, Weber said. And I dont mind the politics of it, providing that the connections are clear.

After another public comment period and proposed revisions by the state education department, the curriculum is expected to be voted on by the state board of education in March. Jewish groups that have lobbied and organized petition drives praised the recent revisions but are unhappy with the lack of a definition of antisemitism. While the curriculum is headed in the right direction, there are still key changes we all have to fight for, said Roz Rothstein, chief executive officer of StandWithUs, a Los Angeles-based organization dedicated to supporting Israel and fighting antisemitism, in a statement.

From Curriculum to the Classroom

A number of districts have not waited for the state to complete its work on the curriculum and are offering their own courses. The number of California high-school students enrolled in ethnic studies classes more than doubled between 2014 and 2016. Still, the 17,354 students who took classes at 555 schools was less than 1 percent of all high-school students in the state.

Districts also are not waiting for a state mandate but setting their own. In addition to Los Angeles and Fresno, Riverside, where Medina taught, has adopted a requirement to take effect in the 202324 school year.

Los Angeles, the nations second-largest school district, offered ethnic studies electives at about 100 high schools last year based on its own curriculum. The school board has directed the superintendent to report back with a strategic plan to enact the mandate by the 202324 school year. Noting that Los Angeles enrolls 90 percent students of color, the board said that prolonged exposure to curricula that normalizes and perpetuates white supremacy, colonialism, and the erasure of minority groups can be alienating and traumatic for students of color and contribute to the opportunity and achievement gaps we see today.

Implementation of the mandate will, again, depend on funding, at a time when the district is facing major budget challenges. Theyre never going to not have fiscal problems, said Lara, now an assistant principal in Orange County. Its a matter of will.

At least eight other statesConnecticut, Indiana, Nevada, Oregon, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, and Washingtonhave enacted measures over the last decade to set standards and curriculum and require schools to offer some form of ethnic studies as an elective. Whether ethnic studies is intended to be a standalone class or incorporated into existing courses varies from state to state. In 2017, Indiana became one of the first states to require all high schools to offer an ethnic studies class under a bill signed by Republican Governor Eric Holcomb. In Oregon, a committee is developing ethnic studies standards to incorporate in its social-studies curriculum. And in Connecticut, all high schools will be required to offer courses in Black and Latino studies by the fall of 2022. Those classes will be based on a curriculum approved by the state education department under the direction of former commissioner Miguel Cardona, President Bidens nominee to head the federal Department of Education.

Adding ethnic studies classes on a far more widespread basis creates a need for teachers, which poses a pedagogical concern as well as a financial one. Dee, who says he is agnostic on the question of instituting ethnic studies as a graduation requirement, has some concerns about the teacher training required for successful programs. His San Francisco research involved highly motivated teachers who had spent years constructing and refining the units they taught, he noted.

Ive been a little frustrated by the intense political focus on the state curriculum, he said, referring to the discussions in California. There are some broader lessons for pedagogy that kind of get lost in that mess. The debate over the curriculum was very much about culture wars and not, what are we learning about pedagogy?

Thats where Dee thinks the focus should be: How to properly train the teachers who will be needed to scale up ethnic studies, especially in smaller districts that are not already teaching it. He hopes to see discussion on different ways to share knowledge and build instructional expertise, such as consortiums that could offer training and tailor curriculum for local regions. By and large, Im heartened that ethnic studies is getting more attention, he said. I just worry that the rush to implement at scale may at some level snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.

Miriam Pawel is a 202021 Radcliffe Fellow and the author of The Browns of California: The Family Dynasty that Transformed a State and Shaped a Nation. Rachel Harris provided research assistance for this article.

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Coronavirus in N.J.: Whats reopened, what concerts, festivals and shows are rescheduled, canceled. (Feb. 24, – NJ.com

Posted By on February 26, 2021

A pair of New Jersey museums are offering at-home programming in recognition of two March happenings: Womens History Month and the NCAA March Madness college basketball tournament:

The Newark Museum of Art has devised an online Art Olympics March Madness tourney that brackets four museums in competition to determine through public vote which has the most favored collection of art.

The first tipoff will be 8 p.m. Tuesday, March 2, with hometown favs the Newark Museum going up against the Brooklyn Museum. On Thursday, March 4, Milwaukee Art Museum will be pitted against the Columbus Museum of Art. The consolation round will be Tuesday, March 16 and the Final will be on March 23.

In recognition of Womens History Month and International Womens Day, the Zimmerli Art Museum and Rutgers Global will present Art After Hours: Women on View 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 2. The online event will include a preview of the upcoming exhibit, Communism Through the Lens: Everyday Life Captured by Women Photographers in the Dodge Collection, led by Maria Garth, Dodge Fellow at the Zimmerli and Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Art History at Rutgers. Garth, who organized the upcoming exhibit, will discuss works by Mra Bramane, Zenta Dzividzinska, Olga Ignatovich, Valentina Kulagina, Lialia Kuznetsova, Olga Lander, Ann Tenno and Natalia Tsekhomskaya. In addition, the program spotlights five women artists from other areas of the museums collections in honor of the annual #5WomenArtists campaign. For more information, visit go.rutgers.edu/artafterhours. (Note: the museum building remains closed and in-person events are suspended until further notice.)

***

Here is a rundown of the status of events at arts and entertainment venues and other recreational destinations throughout the state:

ATLANTIC COUNTY

Atlantic City casinos gaming rooms have reopened, but no major entertainment events are planned yet until April the soonest. The Atlantic City Ballet has canceled its season at Caesars Atlantic City but is posting monthly virtual programs online.

Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City has no on-site events scheduled through early March. The March 14 Michael Buble concert has been shifted to Aug. 28. Visit boardwalkhall.com/events.

The Stockton University Performing Arts Center on the Galloway campus has emptied its schedule of events through May. For more information, contact 609-652-9000 or visit stocktonpac.org.

BERGEN COUNTY

All scheduled entertainment events at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford have been canceled or pushed to this summer. First show on the schedule as of now is the Aug. 5 Guns N Roses concert. For information, visit metlifestadium.com.

Bergen Performing Arts Center in Englewood has canceled, postponed or rescheduled shows through April 10. It will host a free live-streamed fundraiser gala on March 13 with Paul Anka, John Fogerty, Dionne Warwick, Wynton Marsalis, Jay Leno and others. For information, visit bergenpac.org or call 201-227-1030.

The Ridgefield Guild International Film Festival is marking its 10th anniversary virtually with the posting of more than 85 films and related free content starting Saturday, Feb. 27.

Hackensack Performing Arts Center in Hackensack has no upcoming events planned. For more information, visit hacpac.org.

The Puffin Cultural Forum in Teaneck has canceled live entertainment events until further notice. Visit puffinculturalforum.org or call 201-836-3499 for updates. The Teaneck International Film Festival is hosting series of monthly online documentary screenings in collaboration with PBS TVs Independent Lens through May 19.

The Black Box Performing Arts Center in Engelwood will conclude its Forgotten Classics series of online stage readings, with limited in-person tickets available as well, with Ghosts this weekend, Feb. 26-28. Visit blackboxpac.com.

The Belskie Museum of Art and Science in Closter is open 1-5 p.m. weekends or by appointment. Visit belskiemuseum.com or call 201-768-0286.

The Mahwah Museum has reopened 1-4 p.m. Saturdays with a 25% capacity restriction. Visit mahwahmuseum.org or call 201-512-0099.

BURLINGTON COUNTY

The countys museums and galleries including Smithville Mansion and the Historic Prison Museum are reopened with limited hours social distancing guidelines in effect. For more information visit co.burlington.nj.us/parks..

The Roebling Museum in Florence is closed until further notice. Visit roeblingmuseum.org.

CAMDEN COUNTY

The Battleship New Jersey on the Camden Waterfront will be closed until March.

The Adventure Aquarium in Camden has reopened by reservation. Visit adventureaquarium.com or call 844-474-3474.

The Scottish Rite Auditorium in Collingswood has postponed or rescheduled concert dates through April 8. For information, visit scottishriteauditorium.com or call 856-858-1000.

CAPE MAY COUNTY

Cape May MAC (Museums+Arts+Culture) formerly Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts & Humanities is open Saturdays. The Cape May Lighthouse reopened on Saturday, Feb. 6.

The Cape May County Park and Zoo have reopened following social distancing guidelines. Winter hours are 10 a.m.-3:30 p.m. daily.

CUMBERLAND COUNTY

The Landis Theater in Vineland has scheduled a series of rock tribute band concerts. Visit thelandistheater.com for updates.

The Levoy Theatre in Millvilles next concert on the schedule as of now is the already-twice-postponed Broken Arrow, a tribute to Neil Young, on March 5. Visit levoy.net or call 856-327-6400.

The Museum of American Glass, Down Jersey Folklife Center in Millville is closed for the winter and aims to reopen in April.

CORONAVIRUS RESOURCES: Live map tracker | Newsletter | Homepage

The Riverfront Renaissance Center for the Arts in Millville is open 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Tuesdays-Saturdays. Call 856-327-4500 or visit rrcarts.com.

ESSEX COUNTY

The Prudential Center in Newark has closed its facilities, offices, the Grammy Museum Experience and the RJWBarnabas Health Hockey House. It has cleared its entertainment schedule through April 23. The Feb. 23 AEW Dynamite pro wrestling show has moved to Sept. 15 and the planned March 28 Millennium Tour concert has been postponed with a new date to be determined. The New Jersey Devils condensed season is in progress but live audiences are not permitted. For up-to-date information, visit prucenter.com/events.

New Jersey Performing Arts Center in Newark has suspended performances through April 23. It is posting weekly DJ dance parties and other virtual events, including an online concert by Nickel Creek on Feb. 28. For information call 888-466-5722 or visit njpac.org.

Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn has embarked on its hybrid subscription-only season, with Some Enchanted Evening revue streaming online through Friday, Feb. 26. Visit papermill.org or email boxoffice@papermill.org.

South Orange Performing Arts Center has halted live shows through May 6 but is hosting online film streamings and concert events. For information, call 973-313-2787, email boxoffice@sopacnow.org or visit sopacnow.org.

Wellmont Theater in Montclair has rescheduled its planned March 19 Wild Child concert to Sept 24 and its April 9 Get the Led Out tribute concert to May 7, 2022. Next on the schedule is Ministry on April 16. For information visit wellmonttheater.com or call 973-783-9500.

Outpost in the Burbs, based at the First Congregational Church in Montclair, has postponed its planned March and April concerts until dates to be determined. Next concert on its schedule is Alex Cuba on June 19. Visit outpostintheburgs.org.

The Newark Museum of Art has targeted June 3 as its reopening date and in the meantime has been mounting online activities (see above). Visit newarkmuseumart.org or call 973-596-6550.

The Montclair Art Museum has reopened with one-hour timed tickets by reservation. For updates, visit montclairartmuseum.org or check social media pages.

The Yogi Berra Museum and Learning Center in Montclair has again stopped in-person visits. Look for updates at yogiberramuseum.org.

GLOUCESTER COUNTY

Broadway Theatre of Pitman has yet to schedule any new shows. Call 856-384-8381 or visit thebroadwaytheatre.org.

The Heritage Glass Museum in Glassboro will be closed until further notice. Contact heritageglassmuseum.com or call 856-881-7468.

HUDSON COUNTY

The Liberty Science Center in Jersey City is reopened at a reduced capacity to maintain social distancing. Winter hours are 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Thursdays-Fridays and 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturdays-Sundays. Visit lsc.org or call 201-200-1000.

HUNTERDON COUNTY

Music Mountain Theatre in Lambertvilles rescheduled season opener, Strollin Down Broadway -- a 1950s Revue, is slated to run through Feb. 28. Visit musicmountaintheatre.org for more information.

The Hunterdon Art Museum in Clinton is open 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursdays through Sundays, with 11 a.m. to noon Thursdays reserved for seniors and immunocompromised visitors. Visit hunterdonartmuseum.org.

The Red Mill Museum Village in Clinton has decided to close through February, with March under review. Currently, the planned reopening is April 10. Visit theredmill.org.

The ACME Screening Room in Lambertville is closed but has made virtual screening of films available online and has created a film viewing club. Visit acmescreeningroom.org/upcoming-events.

MERCER COUNTY

McCarter Theatre in Princeton canceled in-person shows. It has extended its posting of The Work of Adrienne Kennedy: Inspiration and Influence, a virtual play festival in association with Round House Theatre, through April. For information, visit mccarter.org or call 609-258-2787.

Passage Theatre at the Mill Hill Playhouse in Trenton has crafted a 2020-21 season lineup that includes online and live productions. next up online will be the family show Surely Goodness and Mercy, March 18-21. Look online at passagetheatre.org.

Anticipating it almost certainly will not be able to hold a live Sourland Mountain Festival this year, the Sourland Conservancy will be hosting musical happy hours via Zoom 6 p.m. the first Thursday of each month. Visit sourland.org for details.

The New Jersey State Museum in Trenton is closed until further notice. Visit state.nj.us/state/museum.

The 1719 William Trent House Museum in Trenton has suspended operations until further notice but has been presenting online programs. For information visit call 609-989-0087 or visit its Facebook page.

Old Barracks Museum in Trenton is temporarily closed but has virtual exhibits posted. For more information visit barracks.org.

CURE Insurance Arena in Trenton is being used as a COVID-19 vaccination site for Mercer County. It has pushed back its planned April 9 Casting Crown concert to Oct. 8. For information visit cureinsurancearena.com.

The Trenton City Museum at Ellarslie in Cadwalader Park in Trenton has reopened with timed entries and has mounted virtual exhibits. Visit ellarslie.org.

The Grounds for Sculpture in Hamilton reopened to the public with reserved timed ticketing. Hours are 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursdays through Mondays. For information, visit groundsforsculpture.org or call 609-586-0616.

Princeton University public events are suspended and the Princeton University Art Museum is closed until further notice. Visit Princeton.edu for updates. The Lewis Center for the Arts is posting virtual events at arts.princeton.edu. Princeton University Concerts has erased its schedule but plans an online virtual watch party concert on March 28. Visit princetonuniversityconcerts.org.

Kelsey Theatre on the Mercer County Community College campus in West Windsor has postponed its schedule. Visit kelsey.mccc.edu for more.

1867 Sanctuary in Ewing has no events planned as of now. For information visit 1867sanctuary.org.

Rider University Arts has put on- and off-campus Westminster Choir College and Rider events on hold, but has launched a number of online performances. Visit rider.edu/arts.

Morven Museum and Garden in Princeton grounds are open to the public 10 a.m.- 1 p.m. and 1:30-4 p.m. Wednesdays through Sundays with timed tickets and social distancing precautions. There are no docent-led indoor tours at this time. Visit morven.org.

MIDDLESEX COUNTY

State Theatre New Jersey in New Brunswick has no in-person programming scheduled until August, but is hosting various online events. For more information, visit stnj.org or call 732-246-7469.

Crossroads Theatre Company in New Brunswick has posted an encore performance of the PBS production of The Colored Museum online through Feb. 28. Visit crossroadstheatrecompany.org or call 732-545-8100.

George Street Playhouse in New Brunswick will begun its 2021 season online with Theresa Rebecks Bad Dates, available through March 14. Contact 732-246-7717 or georgestplayhouse.org.

The Avenel Performing Arts Center in Avenel plans to host comedy shows Fridays and Saturdays through March 13. Contact 732-314-0500 or avenelarts.com.

MONMOUTH COUNTY

Count Basie Center for the Arts in Red Banks new venue, the Vogel, has indoor shows booked through mid-June and the next mainstage show scheduled is Dublin Irish Dance on March 11. Visit thebasie.org for updates.

Historic Allaire Village in Farmingdale is open for special events following COVID-19 health safety restrictions.

Axelrod Performing Arts Center in Deal has suspended productions through April 10. It will host its 12th annual International Jewish Israel Film Festival online through March 22. For information call 732-531-9106 or visit axelrodartscenter.com.

The Algonquin Arts Theatre in Manasquan will begin its live 2021 season with Mass Appeal March 20-28. Grease, originally scheduled for April, has been postponed until May 2022. Visit algonquinarts.org for updates.

Monmouth University Center for the Arts in West Long Branch has postponed scheduled events through this season and has mounted its Music and Arts Festival 2020 on YouTube. Visit monmouth.edu/mca for updates.

Some Asbury Park Boardwalk entertainment venues have recommenced live shows, including Langosta Lounge and Tim McLoones Supper Club. The Stone Pony is planning an April 22 reopening with White Reaper. Convention Hall has no dates scheduled as of now. Paramount Theatres Mavericks March 14 concert has moved to Dec. 12. For information, visit apboardwalk.com.

Two River Theater in Red Bank has suspended performances and is closed to the public but is posting online readings and workshops. Look online at tworivertheater.org for updated information.

The Jewish Heritage Museum of Monmouth County has suspended programming until further notice but has set up an online exhibit, Artists from Within: Creations in Quarantine. Visit jhmomc.org.

The Monmouth Museum in Lincroft is closed with plans to reopen in late spring. It has posted online exhibits. Visit monmouthmuseum.org or call 732-224-1995.

The Garden State Film Festival, based out of Asbury Park, will have virtual and in-person options this year, starting Tuesday, March 23, at the Cranford Theater in Cranford. The festival continues Wednesday, March 24, to Sunday, March 28, with special events each night. A limited size live cocktail reception and screening will be held on March 26 with virtual and in-person screenings through March 28, concluding with a black-tie awards ceremony at the Asbury Lanes.

MORRIS COUNTY

Mayo Performing Arts Center in Morristown will host comedian Vic DiBitetto, live on stage and live-streamed Feb. 26-27. For information, call 973-539-8008 or visit mayoarts.org.

The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey in Madison has launched Pandemic Playhouse online series with recorded versions of the three plays from its recent Shaw! Shaw! Shaw! festival. Visit shakespearenj.org.

The Morris Museum in Morristown has reopened 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturdays and noon-5 p.m. Sundays. For information, call 973-971-3700 or visit morrismuseum.org.

Macculloch Hall Historical Museum in Morristown has limited gallery tours by appointment for groups of five or fewer. Garden is open for social-distanced walks. Visit macculloughhall.org or call 973-538-2404.

The Museum of Early Trades and Crafts in Madison has reopened for walk-in visits Tuesdays-Sundays, with reservations recommended on Saturdays-Sundays. For information, visit metc.org.

The Folk Project in Morristown has canceled its lineup of indoor concerts, but is promoting a selection of twice-weekly online live performances. Visit folkproject.org or call 973-335-9489.

Roxbury Arts Alliance has cleared its on-site schedule at Investors Bank Theater in Roxbury through April 23, and will host a Zoom session with medium Catherine McCall on Friday, Feb. 26. Visit roxburartsyalliance.org or call 862-219-1379.

OCEAN COUNTY

The Jay and Linda Grunin Center for the Arts on the Ocean County College campus in Toms River will host a virtual Rhythm of the Dance on-demand concert from March 10-24. Its scheduled March 26 Shawn Colvin concert has been postponed until spring 2022. Visit grunincenter.org/events or call 732-255-0500.

The Strand Center for the Arts in Lakewood erased four tribute shows it had scheduled through March. Its next planned show now will be a Sept. 17 Prince tribute concert. Visit http://www.strand.org or check social media for more details.

Albert Music Hall in Wall hopes to begin presenting outdoor concerts on May 1. For updates, visit alberthall.org.

PASSAIC COUNTY

The Paterson Museum will remain closed until further notice. Look for updates at patersonmuseum.com.

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Coronavirus in N.J.: Whats reopened, what concerts, festivals and shows are rescheduled, canceled. (Feb. 24, - NJ.com

IDF prepared to take action to stop Iran from obtaining nukes – Gantz – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on February 26, 2021

The IDF is preparing in case it needs to take action against Iran, Defense Minister Benny Gantz said at a graduate ceremony for new IDF officers on Wednesday.The IDF is currently working to build up our forces and is preparing itself for any scenario, including one in which we would need to take [operational] action to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons, he said.Gantz emphasized the need for Israel to work with its allies to counter the Iranian threat.Iran is a global and regional problem before anything else, although, it certainly also threatens Israel, he said. Thats why we need to work together with our allies; with the US, with Europe, and with our new partners in the Middle East.Any agreement between world powers and Iran should be one that ends its nuclear project, enables long-term effective oversight and inspection, and puts a stop to Iranian entrenchment in Syria, Yemen and Iraq, Gantz stated.Even with an agreement, the knowledge and experience Iran has accumulated in violating the 2015 nuclear deal cannot be reversed, he pointed out.Earlier, Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi warned that the Iranian policy is a declaration of intent to continue developing hidden nuclear capabilities.

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IDF prepared to take action to stop Iran from obtaining nukes - Gantz - The Jerusalem Post

Israel Elections: Stop blaming Gantz, unite to fight the Right – opinion – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on February 26, 2021

When Benny Gantz and Gabi Ashkenazi took the dramatic step of joining Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a coalition, I thought I would implode from disappointment and anger. I felt like they had pulled one over on me. During the three election campaigns that took place between April 2019 and March 2020, I took advantage of every opportunity to declare on TV, in newspaper columns and on every radio show that I support Blue and White. I called upon every Israeli who believed there was a vital need for change in our country to vote for Gantz and Ashkenazi. I proclaimed that I would be voting for them. In every way possible I could think of, I tried to convince voters that this was the most responsible and correct way to vote. It was no secret that I was not an active participant in the elections, that I had no personal interests.

Im not a member nor a candidate of any political party, and considering my personal circumstances, I never will be. It was not a given that I expressed my support for Blue and White as I was not close to any of its leaders. Yair Lapid had cut off contact with me years ago. I had not spoken with Moshe Yaalon since he claimed that the last few days of the Second Lebanon War were a corrupt media spin that were carried out just so we could have used it as a victory image. I felt that these harsh words were said by a person who was still bitter about not having his term as IDF chief of staff extended by Ariel Sharon. And yet, I have no doubt that Yaalon is a decent and ethical person, however he is not a political leader. Despite the complete disconnect between me and Yaalon and Lapid, I still publicly encouraged people to vote for them as well as for Gantz and Ashkenazi both of whom I know well, even though I didnt have any specific connection with them at that time.

The gravest mistake they made was refusing to remove Yoaz Hendel and Zvi Hauser from Blue and Whites list, since the two of them are right wingers. It was clear that, when the time came, they might not give their support if the Joint List were to join any political move. Because of this, and because they are people who are known to keep their commitments, they had no place being on the Blue and White list in the first place. Why they insisted on remaining on this list and not, for example, joining Bayit Yehudi or Yamina, is a question they have yet to answer. How was it that Lapid, Ashkenazi and Gantz were blind to the fact that Hendel and Hauser were not really with them? As I explained already, Gantz made a mistake. We were right to be concerned that Gantzs lack of experience and the fact that hes not manipulative like so many Israeli politicians would lead to his possible downfall.

But what would have happened if Gantz and Ashkenazi had not joined Netanyahu and rather leave him on his own as a prime minister? Our country would have looked today completely different in a way that would have disrupted our lives, shaken the country and led us into unexpected situations from which there might not, heaven forbid, have been a way back.

Lets take for example, the unilateral annexation, or heaven forbid a far-reaching military operation against Syria, Iran or Hezbollah. All of these are legitimate targets, and all three of them pose a real threat to Israels security and require the highest levels of readiness and vigilance.

But what would we have done if we had not had responsible leaders like Gantz and Ashkenazi in our government, with much more military and security related experience than Netanyahu? What could have happened and what price might we have had to pay as a country, a society and as a nation if there had not been individuals there to stop the distraught lunatic from dragging us into untenable situations?

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What would have happened if Gantz had not appointed Avi Nissenkorn as justice minister, and if Nissenkorn had not been a worthy, solid and determined person who knew how to prevent harm to the legal establishment. If it were not for Gantz, Ashkenazi and Nissenkorn, the State of Israel would look very different than it does today. And unfortunately, the country is different now than it should be, thanks to the gang led by the crime family on Balfour Street that is still in charge.

The enthusiasm with which people are trying to trample Gantz is not acceptable. I am angry that he disappointed us at the crucial moment that could have tipped the scales of the political system. Nevertheless, Gantz displayed rare courage at the beginning, when nobody else was willing to expose or open themselves up to the Likud and messianic Rights firing squads.

Gantz showed fortitude when he stood next to Netanyahu as the alternate prime minister and stood steadfast under the barrage of fire from extremist elements backing Netanyahu without hesitation in order to protect the values for which our country stands.

INSTEAD OF trying to demolish what is left over from Gantz, I recommend to all the purists and moralists to join forces against the radical right-wing extremists and stop the rise of fascism among Netanyahus partners, such as Itamar Ben-Gvir, a confirmed Kahanist, who are threatening to climb to the top of the mountain. While many people are busy explaining to us how much Gantz disappointed his supporters, Netanyahu is deceiving us with his new partners Ben-Gvir, Bezalel Smotrich, the hilltop youth and the bullies on the Likuds Knesset list who could tomorrow end up in key government positions.

Every boundary and redline that has ever been drawn in Israeli politics is being crossed right at this moment. The person who released more than 1,000 Hamas assassins in order to bring Gilad Schalit back home, and who broke every promise ever made, including not negotiating with terrorists who have blood on their hands (according to his definition), has now completely fallen off the deep end with the ludicrous release of D, an Israeli woman who decided shed rather live in Syria with someone she loves (her words).

The subservience to the Russians is shown in the exorbitant price we paid in order to supply Syria with vaccines. (We wont give to the Palestinians, but we will to the Syrians?) It is not only that: the dramatic secrecy, having all the government ministers sign secrecy documents, phone calls to Russian President Vladimir Putin, sending the head of national security to Russia again and again, private planes, the offer to release security prisoners and send them to Syria even though they themselves do not want to go back. All of this in order to rescue someone who hiked into Syria of her own free will and doesnt know any secrets of value?

A person would have to be clinically diagnosed as manic to do all of these things. Either that, or he has something very disturbing that hes trying to hide, that would explain Netanyahus motivation for acting in this way, especially considering how the power to censor information is being abused to hide what really happened.

THIS STORY is just a hint of what could have happened if Gantz had not been the alternate prime minister for the last eight months. And this is the kind of behavior we can expect in the intervening period between the upcoming election and the formation of a new government hopefully headed by someone else if Gantz isnt there to keep us safe and prevent catastrophes from taking place.

Its clear that everything would have been different if Hendel and Hauser had been willing eight months ago to vote in favor of the bill that would have prevented Netanyahu from continuing to serve as prime minister. On the other hand, everything could also have been completely different if Gantz and Ashkenazi had left Bibi alone in the transitional government, in which he would have been free to wreak havoc and destroy everything that is important and precious to all of us.

So, please leave Gantz alone. There are many more important things that need to be done instead of persecuting this decent man, as he struggles to prevent the crook from Balfour Street from receiving the chance to continue with his exploits.

The writer was the countrys 12th prime minister.

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Israel Elections: Stop blaming Gantz, unite to fight the Right - opinion - The Jerusalem Post

Israel to Pay $50M to Families of Children Who Disappeared in State’s Early Years – Jewish Exponent

Posted By on February 26, 2021

(A view of Yemenite Jews who were flown into Israel in 1950 under Operation Magic Carpet. (Bettmann/Getty Images via JTA.org)

By Asaf Shalev

The Israeli government approved a plan Monday to provide compensation of up to $60,000 to some of the families of children who went missing while in state care in the 1950s.

But advocacy groups and several of the families have already rejected the plan, calling it a cynical move designed to silence their larger demands for accountability. They are demanding an official apology, an expansion of the eligibility criteria, and further access to state records that might shed light on the fate of their relatives.

The compensation plan amounting to roughly $50 million represents a new phase for what Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu this week said was amongthe most painful affairs in the history of the state of Israel.

Over the years, hundreds and perhaps thousands of Jewish families from Middle Eastern countries, chiefly Yemen, reported that their babies and small children disappeared in the decades following Israels establishment.

A full inquiry into the allegations has never been carried out, but several state commissions concluded that most of the missing children must have simply died and were hastily buried. The commissions dismissed claims of any conspiracy to abduct the children.

Still, Netanyahu said,The time has come for the families whose infants were taken from them to receive recognition by the state and government of Israel, and financial compensation as well.

Roughly a million Jews from Middle Eastern countries arrived in Israel after the countrys founding in 1948. Many of these Mizrahi immigrants were relegated to poor and crowded housing conditions or to tent dwellings in the countrys periphery while Ashkenazi immigrants from Europe received preferential treatment in employment, education, and other areas.

This painful period contributed to an ethnic divide that persists in Israel to this day, as seen in voting patterns, for example. Netanyahus Likud party found a formula for electoral success by appealing to the historic wounds of Mizrahi Jews.

Among Yemenite Jews in Israel today, it is common to hear stories of relatives who died mysteriously at a young age or went missing without explanation. Some in government and academia have suggested that whatever happened was not malicious but rather the tragic result of the chaos of Israels early years, when the country was poor, war-torn and overwhelmed by the influx of immigrants.

Many believe, however, that some officials took advantage of the chaos and the linguistic barriers of those days to systematically kidnap children from hospitals and clinics and deliver them to Ashkenazi families.

Families were told their missing children died from illness but most were never shown a burial site. Suspicions were inflamed in the 1960s as many families received mailed military enlistment orders ahead when the children would have come of age for service.

Three government-appointed commissions that looked at the claims said they found no evidence of collusion to disappear the children. Journalists and independent researchers have since repeatedly surfaced evidence that pokes holes in the commissions findings.

To be qualified for the new payments, a family must be among the 1,000 or so who have previously reported their case to authorities. The window to apply for money runs from June 1 to Nov. 30, and applicants must sign a waiver releasing the government of any further liability.

In cases where it is clear that a child died and the family was not notified, families are eligible for about $45,000. In other situations, where the childs fate is unknown, the payment is about $60,000.

The statement announcing the decision said the government regrets what happened and recognizes the suffering of families. It is not in the power of a financial plan to provide a remedy to the suffering caused to families, the statement said. However, the State of Israel hopes that it will be able to assist in the process of rehabilitation and healing of the social wound that this affair has created in Israeli society.

Advocates who have been campaigning for years on this issue said the plan falls short.

Amram, a group thathas collected accounts from some 800 families, said the compensation plan was inadequate because it was drafted without direction from the families and without acceptance of responsibility or apology.

Without this component, a process of correction and healing isnt possible, the group said. Amram repeatedly demands that the state of Israel take responsibility for the severe injustice.

Activist Rafi Shubeli, whose Forum Achai represents some of the families, also said the proposed resolution is a unilateral action by the government and will not lead to reconciliation.

Our struggle will continue, he was quoted as saying by the Associated Press. This affair isnt going away.

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Israel to Pay $50M to Families of Children Who Disappeared in State's Early Years - Jewish Exponent

Israel offers compensation to families of missing children – Minneapolis Star Tribune

Posted By on February 26, 2021

JERUSALEM The Israeli government on Monday approved a plan to offer $50 million in compensation to the families of hundreds of Yemenite children who disappeared in the early years of the country's establishment.

But the announcement received a cool reception from advocacy groups that said the government had failed to apologize or accept responsibility for the affair.

Stories about the missing children have circulated in Israel for years. Hundreds of newborn babies and young children of Jewish immigrants from Arab and Balkan countries, most of them from Yemen, mysteriously disappeared shortly after arriving in the country.

Many families believe their children were taken away and given to childless couples of European backgrounds, both in Israel and abroad. Although previous inquiries have dismissed claims of mass abductions, the suspicions have lingered and contributed to a long-simmering fault line between Jews of European origin and those of Middle Eastern backgrounds.

"This is among the most painful affairs in the history of the state of Israel," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said. "The time has come for the families whose infants were taken from them to receive recognition by the state and government of Israel, and financial compensation as well."

Arriving from Arabic-speaking countries in the Middle East and North Africa after Israel's establishment in 1948, many Mizrahi, or Middle Eastern, immigrants were sent to shantytown transit camps and largely sidelined by the European, or Ashkenazi, leaders of the founding Labor party. This painful experience contributed to widespread Mizrahi support for the Likud party, now led by Netanyahu.

Among the immigrants were more than 50,000 Yemenite Jews, often poor and with large families. In the chaos that accompanied their influx, some children died while others were separated from their parents.

But many say the reality was far more sinister, that the establishment kidnapped these children to turn them over for adoption by Ashkenazi families in the belief that they could give them a better life. In later years, families reported being mailed military induction notices and other documents for their supposedly "dead" children, raising more suspicions.

Three high-profile commissions dismissed the claims and found that most children died of disease in immigration camps. The final one, in 2001, said it was possible that some children were handed over for adoption by individual social workers, but not as part of a national conspiracy. However, citing privacy laws, it ordered the testimonies it collected be sealed for 70 years.

Under Monday's decision, the government will pay 150,000 shekels, or about $45,000, to families in cases where it was determined a child had died but the family had not been properly notified or where the burial site was not found.

Families where the fate of the child is unknown will receive 200,000 shekels, or about $60,000.

In a statement, the government said it "expresses regret" and "recognizes the suffering of the families." But activist groups said the decision did not go far enough.

Amram, an advocacy group that has collected testimonies from some 800 affected families, said the decision failed to include an apology and was reached without proper dialogue with the families.

"Without this component, a process of correction and healing isn't possible," it said. "Amram repeatedly demands that the state of Israel take responsibility for the severe injustice."

Rafi Shubeli of "Forum Achai," an advocacy group that represented dozens of families, accused the government of imposing a solution on the families and failing to accept responsibility or say who caused their suffering.

He also said families who have not already filed claims would be unable to seek compensation and accused the government of refusing to disclose documents related to the affair.

"Our struggle will continue," he said. "This affair isn't going away."

See the rest here:

Israel offers compensation to families of missing children - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Illinois Governor, Israeli Foreign Minister and Sheba Medical Center CEO Partner on the Chicago ARC Innovation Center to Advance Health Equity -…

Posted By on February 26, 2021

The three government leaders disclosed details of the global partnership late last week at a private Commercial Club of Chicago meeting cohosted by World Business Chicago. The leaders are committed to eliminating existing health disparities and negative outcomesfrom COVID-19 hospitalizations to infant mortality, chronic disease and early deathconnected to conditions where people live, learn, work and play.

Sheba Medical Center, Kaleidoscope Health Ventures (KHV) and Farpoint Development are partners in theChicago ARC Innovation Center. The discussion focused on how Sheba's ARC model, which fosters healthcare innovation to redesign this system and make it more accessible by accelerating entrepreneurship, is extending from Israel to Chicago.

Israel to Illinois: A Fast Track for Healthcare Transformation

Healthcare transformation is one of Israel's greatest priorities but is a goal no state or nation can accomplish on its own. The Sheba ARC (Accelerate, Redesign, Collaborate) model will be executed in Chicago to enable alliances with Illinois' abundant trove of life sciences teaching and research institutions, biotechnology companies, health systems and technology startups to make fast progress toward achieving health equity. This includes implementing groundbreaking technologies with a market-driven approach adapted for the United States.

"We have learned many things from the current COVID-19 pandemic. One of the most important is that global challenges need global solutions," Ashkenazi said. "This partnership with the Chicago ARC Innovation Center and Sheba Medical Center could quite literally save lives. Together they will advance healthcare solutions, share best practice and transform health care."

"Today we are celebrating the partnership between Israel's Sheba Medical Center, one of the world's top-ranking hospitals, and Kaleidoscope Health Ventures and Farpoint Development. It is one of the many ways we have to share Israeli innovation and keep strengthening the unbreakable bond between our two nations," Ashkenazi said.

Prioritizing Health Equity in Illinois with Sheba's Help

Illinois has made health equity an overarching public health goal. Leading through a health equity lens, the state's programs, services and partnerships aim to increase parity in the social determinants of health to close health disparity gaps.

"Here in Illinois, we have some of the best research universities on the earth, one of the largest biotech talent pools in the United States, and our medical centers are among the most respected in the world," said Governor JB Pritzker. "Those assets are just one facet of why our state is ideal for a new health innovation hub. The establishment of the Chicago ARC Innovation Center both recognizes and strengthens our reputation."

"I am so deeply grateful for Kaleidoscope Health Ventures, to Sheba Medical Center and to the ARC Innovation Complex and Farpoint Development for coming together to spur this innovation here in Illinois, bringing more collaborative health innovation, life sciences development and transformative equitable healthcare models to our state," continued Pritzker.

In fact, Sheba's ARC model has allowed Israel to become a world leader in combating COVID-19 by shaping Israel's rapid response to COVID-19which will see half its population vaccinated by Marchand showcases Israel's use of innovative approaches to achieve health equity. With Sheba's guidance, Israel's agencies and health providers are repackaging the temperature-sensitive Pfizer vaccine for wider distribution; opening arenas and field clinics as inoculation centers; and engaging the Arab and ultra-Orthodox Jewish communities in a public health campaign to overcome resistance to the vaccine, Kreiss noted.

"The outbreak of COVID-19 boosted this new enterprise and proved to all of us just how crucial it is to get ARC Chicago up and running," Kreiss said."We have been looking for the right location and partner to bring our model to the U.S. and are very fortunate to have found this great partnership in Illinois.

"Sheba will contribute its global network of partners, its open innovation model, data and sources of technologies and startups looking to transform healthcare in the U.S," Kreiss said. "KHV will use its experience in the U.S. market and impact investing to drive commercialization and investment success. Farpoint will help us cultivate inclusive Chicago neighborhoods, (turning them) into the U.S.A.'s first City of Health with its commercial real estate development (expertise)."

The Chicago ARC Makes Illinois a Global Investment Destination

The Chicago ARC will connect the best science, talent, technology and data to achieve health equity and justice for all through a high-touch, collaborative innovation platform.

A health equity accelerator will be an early Chicago ARC initiative, with plans to launch later this year. The Chicago ARC will partner with South and West Side community initiatives to unlock the benefits for all residents across Illinois and the United States. A life sciences incubator and data collaborative will follow in 2022, all with health equity goals.

International companies, starting with a focus on promising Israeli startups, are targeted as Chicago ARC tenants. A tailored approach with a customer-driven network will give them a U.S. foothold and make Illinois a gateway for global investment. The permanent Chicago ARC facility is set to open in 2023 as the anchor of the Bronzeville Lakefront development. Until then, it will operate out of interim space.

"On behalf of the Chicago ARC partners, we are honored to have the support of Israel's Foreign Minister and the Governor of Illinois for this transformational venture," Kaleidoscope Health Ventures Cofounder and Managing Partner S. Bob Chib said. "We look forward to partnering with Sheba and Farpoint Development on the launch of the Chicago ARC Innovation Center."

About the Speakers

Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi: Minister of Foreign Affairs in the 35th government of Israel, Ashkenazi served in the Israel Defense Forces for 39 years. He headed the IDF from 2007 to 2011 as the 19th Chief of General Staff, or Rav Aluf. While in the IDF, Lt. Gen. (res.) Ashkenazi served in numerous senior capacities, including Deputy Chief of Staff and head of the Northern Command. He also restored the IDF's operative capacity in the wake of the Second Lebanon War and led a series of campaigns, including Operation Hot Winter, Operation Cast Lead and the decisive strike on Syria's nuclear reactor in September 2007. Lt. Gen. Ashkenazi holds a bachelor's degree in political science and oriental studies from Haifa University and is a graduate of the Harvard Business School's Executive Management Program, the IDF's Joint Command Course and the Officer Candidate School of the United States Marine Corps. He headed Shemen Oil and Gas Explorations Ltd. before entering the Knesset in 2019.

Gov. JB Pritzker:The 43rd governor of Illinois is in his third year in office, obtaining bipartisan support for historic investments in education, human services and infrastructure, including $500 million in capital funding for a network of research and innovation hubs. Before becoming governor, Pritzker founded Chicago nonprofit small business incubator 1871, which has helped entrepreneurs create more than 11,000 jobs and more than 1,000 new companies. Since 1871's inception, Chicago has been named one of the top ten technology startup hubs in the world and 1871 was named the best incubator in the world. Gov. Pritzker has expanded support for new business incubators and cut taxes for hundreds of thousands of small businesses while incentivizing job creation and innovation. He also extended research and development tax credits to help manufacturing workers and businesses thrive, and he worked with the business community to create apprenticeship tax credits to promote job training.

Prof. Yitshak Kreiss: Director General of Sheba Medical Center since 2016, Prof. Kreiss is world renowned for his research in leadership and health management based on humanitarian operations he led in the IDF. During his 25 years in the IDF, he rose from combat surgeon to IDF Surgeon General and attained the rank of Brigadier General. He earned his medical degree at the Hebrew University; completed a residency in internal medicine at Sheba Medical School; and earned a Master of Health Administration from Tel Aviv University and a Master of Public Administration from Harvard University. Prof. Kreiss was cited as one of the 50 most influential Jews of 2020 by the Jerusalem Post. Under his tutelage, Sheba Medical Center has also been ranked as one of the Top 10 Hospitals in the World by Newsweek magazine.

About the Chicago ARC General Partners

Sheba Medical Center:The Chicago ARC Innovation Center will play a significant part in Sheba Medical Center's global digital healthcare revolution. Sheba is the largest and most comprehensive medical center in the Middle East, the only one in Israel that combines acute and rehabilitation hospitals on a single campus. Sheba is at the forefront of medical treatments, patient care, research and education, recognized by Newsweek as one of the top 10 hospitals in the world two years in a row.

Kaleidoscope Health Ventures:KHV is a venture development firm focused on social impact. It brings together world-class startups, partners, investors and talent to address socioeconomic and health issues while providing high-value services to support a new wave of life science startups and healthcare solutions. The KHV team has collectively created billions of dollars in startup venture value and served in strategic leadership as well as operational roles across startup, growth-stage and corporate entities.

Farpoint Development:Farpoint is a highly experienced team that has been successful in shapingChicago'sskyline and neighborhoods for more than three decades. Farpoint has exceptionally strong local government ties and community relationships and has a notable track record for spurring transformative change in underserved areas locally and nationally. They continue to expand their socially responsible real estate mandate nationwide. Farpoint is a partner in the GRIT joint venture to develop the 100-acre, $7 billion Bronzeville Lakefront site.

For more information contact:Kelley QuinnPurpose Brand[emailprotected](773) 879-3809

SOURCE Sheba Medical Center

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Illinois Governor, Israeli Foreign Minister and Sheba Medical Center CEO Partner on the Chicago ARC Innovation Center to Advance Health Equity -...


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