Community Calendar

Mindful Drawing – Just Lines!

Leader: Lora Gerard, MPA In this workshop, participants will learn a simple method of drawing only lines to create a complete non-representational artwork. Once you learn this method, you will be able to create your own works as either a mindfulness practice or as a creative practice (or both!) This workshop is appropriate for anyone, from complete beginners to more experienced artists looking to try something new. You don’t even need to be able to draw straight lines! Materials needed: • two to four pieces of light colored paper of any kind, cut down to somewhere between 4×4 to 6×6 inches. Similar sized rectangular paper is also fine. • a pencil or pen This virtual program will take place online. You will receive a zoom link for this class 60 minutes before the class starts. The zoom link will be sent directly from the Aging Resource Center to the email you registered with. Please register to attend. You may also email agingcenter@hitchcock.org, or call the Aging Resource Center at 603-653-3460.

Breaking the Silence

WHY BREAKING THE SILENCE? April 4 is the date Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated in 1968 while he was in Memphis, Tennessee to support sanitation workers. Exactly one year before, on April 4, 1967, Dr. King gave one of his most consequential speeches titled, “Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence”. This speech was the first time he publicly called for an end to the U.S. war in Vietnam and for unity and action to end the triple threats of militarism, racism, and extreme materialism. By April 1967 over 1 million Vietnamese, Laotians, and Cambodians and 16,000 U.S. military personnel had died in the Vietnam war. The countryside and cities in the south and the north had been devastated by combat, bombing, and use of toxic defoliants like Agent Orange. In the U.S. the anti-war movement had mobilized hundreds of thousands of people in local and national demonstrations plus tens of thousands who had challenged the draft. As Dr. King explained, many of those drafted and dying were young, African American men while the demand for justice at home was accelerating, bringing new levels of repression. The connections between the wars abroad and the wars at home were becoming increasingly clear. The Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) was one of the first organizations to denounce the war and emphasize the hypocrisy of the U.S. government claiming to defend democracy abroad while denying democracy at home. Rev. Dr. King’s address at Riverside Church built upon the work of activists and projected a powerful call to unite these struggles conceptually and strategically. NATIONWIDE WEBINAR: APRIL 4 at 7 PM EST Many organizations have come together to promote national and local readings of Dr. King’s “Breaking Silence” speech in communities across the country to study the lessons of this speech and to convene local coalitions working for justice. The list includes: SNCC Legacy Project, National Council of Elders, Vietnam Peace Commemoration Committee, The Highlander Research and Education Center, National Black Justice Coalition, Zinn Education Project, Voices of a People’s History, Fellowship of Reconciliation, National Civil Rights Museum, and Cleveland Peace Action. Please plan to join us online to watch our national webinar where well-known advocates will be joined by grassroots organizers who will read the speech. It promises to be an inspiring program. A moderated panel discussion will follow the readings offering perspectives about the relevance of Dr. King’s speech to peace and justice work today.

Caste as Race, Race as Caste Lecture

Virtual

Zoom Webinar Information: Tuesday April 13, 2021 at 4:00pm EST https://dartmouth.zoom.us/j/94870331237?pwd=aWdmWVhGbTdLQ1BnL1hDNGM4by9wZz09 Meeting ID: 948 7033 1237 Passcode: 816894 Free & Open to the Public

Free
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LISTEN To Go Community Dinner

LISTEN Community Dinner Hall 42 Maple Street, White River Junction, VT, United States

LISTEN’s hearty three-course community dinners are [...]

Free Food Friday in Fairlee

Fairlee Town Hall 75 Town Common, Fairlee, VT, United States

Fridays from 11 - 11:30am at the South Side of th [...]

Recurring

Norwich Farmers Market

Norwich Farmers Market 281 Route 5, Norwich, VT, United States

Back outside with many familiar faces as well as a [...]

Free Food Friday in Fairlee

Fairlee Town Hall 75 Town Common, Fairlee, VT, United States

Fridays from 11 – 11:30am at the South Side of the [...]

Grab and Go: Roast Port Dinner

Orford Congregational Church 617 NH-10, Orford, NH, United States

Grab and Go: Roast Pork Dinner with mashed potatoe [...]

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Lebanon Farmers Market

Colburn Park 51 N Park St, Lebanon, NH, United States

Thursdays, 4-7 p.m., May 20-Sept. 30, Colburn Park [...]

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Hartland Farmers Market

Hartland Public Library 153 Route 5, Hartland, VT, United States

Fridays, 4-7 p.m. May 28-Sept. 24, Hartland Public [...]

Lyme Center Village Yard Sale

Lyme Center Vestry 177 Dorchester Rd, Lyme, United States

Organized by Lyme Center Ladies Aid An outside yar [...]

Pie and Flower Sale in Orford

Orford Social Library Route 10, Orford, NH, United States

It's back! The Friends of the Library's Pie Sale w [...]

 

Community Events Calendar information is gathered from multiple sources, including the town, library, local bulletins and businesses. Here are a few direct links to organizations’ full schedules:

Lyme and other local listservs

Lyme Library Calendar

Lyme School Events Listing

Town of Lyme Website

Daybreak Upper Valley daily newsletter Click to subscribe

Valley News online calendar

Dartmouth-Hitchcock Aging Resource Center

Please share any additions or edits to calendar items, so that we can include them in the online calendar.