Diabetes Undone 2021

Join us on an 8-week journey designed to help shift your diabetes paradigm, equip you to reverse diabetes and rewrite your health story!

Sign up here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/diabetes-undone-tickets-150857967241

Braille Institute Free Online Workshops – May 2021

Braille Institute is a non-profit organization whose mission is to positively transform the lives of those with vision loss. We offer a broad range of free programs, classes and services serving thousands of students of all ages helping to demonstrate that vision rehabilitation is a beginning, not an end.

We serve the community from seven centers, and hundreds of community outreach locations throughout Southern California, and lead popular national programs like Braille Challenge and Cane Quest. Our staff and volunteers understand losing your vision can be scary, but we believe it is not the end of independence, but a new way of living.

A variety of free classes, workshops and support groups are available to help you or a loved one stay active, remain independent and enjoy connections with others.

Sign up for individual events, workshops and seminars – free and open to everyone. Register online or call 1-800-BRAILLE (272-4553) Monday to Friday, 8:30am to 5:00pm.

BLOOD DRIVE

Community Blood Drive Camino Real Marketplace Tuesday, May 4, 2021 1:30pm - 6:00pm in the Bloodmobiles near the movie theater To make an appointment visit www.blood4life.org using sponsor code 1388 or call (805)542-8500. There is an urgent need for all blood types and a severe shortage of O type blood. Donations benefit local patients needing

Author, advocate and public policy expert Heather McGhee

Join UCSB Arts & Lectures as they present author, advocate and public policy expert Heather McGhee to discuss The Sum of Us: What Racism Costs Everyone and How We Can Prosper Together on Tuesday, May 4 at 5 p.m. Pacific.

Revisiting “One Life: Marian Anderson” Art Matters Lecture with Leslie Ureña (via Zoom)

With each of her performances, the Philadelphia-born contralto Marian Anderson (1897–1993) tested limits and broke boundaries. She is best remembered for her gripping recital on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial on Easter Sunday in April 1939, when some 75,000 people gathered to witness her sing. On account of her race, Anderson had been prohibited from performing at the Daughters of the American Revolution’s Constitution Hall and other venues in Washington, D.C. The concert on the National Mall, therefore, became a watershed moment in the struggle against segregationist policies and discrimination.

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