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Clips

Tony Award-Winning Musical PARADE Comes to Chance Theater This Summer

Kari Hayter (Director) is an award-winning professional director and educator based in Southern California. Kari is a proud member of the Theatre Communications Group, California Educational Theatre Association, and the American Alliance of Theatre and Education. She is a tenure track faculty member at California State University, Northridge, where she directs and teaches musical theatre history and performance. Kari is also an advocate for new musicals and has directed staged readings for Mary Marie and Now and Then A Hero, both of which have been recognized by the National Alliance for Musical Theatre and the New Musicals, Inc. She has worked at South Coast Repertory, Antaeus Theatre Company, Chance Theater and Summer Repertory Theatre. Most recently she directed Rock of Ages for Summer Repertory Theatre, the Ovation-nominated West Coast premiere of Lysistrata Jones, Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson and Hairspray for Chance Theater. -- Broadway World Los Angeles

CSUN's Robert Krol: US infrastructure not crumbling

Interstate 85 reopened in Atlanta earlier this month, six weeks after a homeless man allegedly set a fire that caused a bridge collapse and shut down the freeway in both directions. It could be easy to misjudge the catastrophe as the latest proof that America’s infrastructure is falling apart from coast to coast. In reality, our highways and bridges are in surprisingly good shape – at least compared to what headlines and politicians would have us believe. - The Vindicator - OH

Los Angeles Dance Review: MARTHA GRAHAM AND AMERICAN MUSIC

The show began with Graham’s 1935 piece, Panorama. The work, presented by 28 dance students from CSUN and local LA high schools, is grounded in militaristic marching and high knee lifts set to dramatic drumming (music by Norman Lloyd). Initially explained by Artistic Director Janet Eilber as being based in social activism, and the exploration of space and geometric patterns, the movement is mainly based in fluid groups that would alternatively take center stage to form a shifting panorama of people. -- Stage and Cinema

ISIS Terrorism Targets Children in Unthinkable Ways

In fact, Ali Akhbar Mahdi, a professor of religion at California State University at Northridge, argues that the word “teen” has no equivalent in Middle Eastern languages. Instead, they refer to pre-puberty, pre-youth or pre-adult. In most contexts, childhood is simply understood to be a period of time characterized by the absence of reason (‘all). -- Yahoo! News United Kingdom

CSUN's Robert Krol: Despite doomsday talk, infrastructure isn't crumbling

Interstate 85 reopened in Atlanta earlier this month, six weeks after a homeless man allegedly set a fire that caused a bridge collapse and shut down the freeway in both directions. It's easy to mischaracterize that incident as the latest proof that America's infrastructure is falling apart from coast to coast. -- Post Bulletin - MN

How ISIS Weaponized Children

In fact, Ali Akhbar Mahdi, a professor of religion at California State University at Northridge, argues that the word “teen” has no equivalent in Middle Eastern languages. Instead, they refer to pre-puberty, pre-youth or pre-adult. In most contexts, childhood is simply understood to be a period of time characterized by the absence of reason (‘all). -- msn New Zealand

CSUN's Robert Krol: America’s highways and bridges aren’t exactly ‘crumbling’

Interstate 85 reopened in Atlanta earlier this month, six weeks after a homeless man allegedly set a fire that caused a bridge collapse and shut down the freeway in both directions. It could be easy to misjudge the catastrophe as the latest proof that America’s infrastructure is falling apart from coast to coast. -- Athens Banner-Herald - GA

CSUN's Robert Krol: America’s highways and bridges aren’t exactly ’crumbling’

Interstate 85 reopened in Atlanta earlier this month, six weeks after a homeless man allegedly set a fire that caused a bridge collapse and shut down the freeway in both directions. It could be easy to misjudge the catastrophe as the latest proof that America’s infrastructure is falling apart from coast to coast. In reality, our highways and bridges are in surprisingly good shape — at least compared to what headlines and politicians would have us believe. -- Rome News-Tribune - GA

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