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A new report reveals a library system struggling with flat staffing levels and a decline in registered borrowers as in-person programs increase and attendance rises following the COVID-19 pandemic.
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The venerable New Haven museum will open to the public on March 26. It features several new exhibits – and some familiar ones, too.
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Three concurring exhibits celebrate the works of Leo Jensen (1926-2019), perhaps best known for creating bronze frog sculptures for Willimantic’s Thread City Crossing Bridge.
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Unionized employees who work in North Adams at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art went on strike Wednesday morning, seeking a higher minimum hourly wage. Employees and the museum have been negotiating this part of a contract since October.
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A Pew Research Center analysis found that about one in 10 restaurants in the U.S serve Mexican food. But in New Hampshire the rate is much lower.
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Dominicans in Connecticut say they are proud to share their cultural richness.
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The show displays the work of 25 artists with disabilities. The exhibition, currently on display at the University of Vermont in Burlington, will also travel to Brattleboro, Montpelier and St. Johnsbury between now and December.
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Sea Change, See Change is an art exhibit that brings awareness to the health of the oceans and is on display now at Mattatuck Museum in Waterbury, Connecticut. WSHU’s Sabrina Garone spoke with local artist Matt Wood, about how art can capture feelings about climate change.
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An exhibit from the organization Ancestral Bridges foundation at Amherst College features stories and artifacts of Black and Afro-Indigenous families who lived and worked in Amherst during the 19th and early 20th centuries.
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The acclaimed conductor Seiji Ozawa died Tuesday. For 29 years he was the music director for the Boston Symphony Orchestra. His tenure brought global attention to both the orchestra and to Tanglewood, where Ozawa was once a student.