Alys Stephens Center during COVID: ‘We are remaining flexible’
Updated Mar 15, 2021;
Posted Mar 15, 2021
Red Baraat is set to perform a live stream concert on April 1, 2021, from the Alys Stephens Center in Birmingham. The band from Brooklyn, New York, fuses North Indian folk music with elements of hip-hop, jazz and punk.(Douglas Mason/Getty Images)
Facebook Share
Free events are on the agenda over the next few months at the Alys Stephens Center in Birmingham, including live virtual concerts by Red Baraat (April 1), Stefon Harris + Blackout (April 9) and Rollin’ In The Hay (April 15).
Another streaming event, a solo performance by bluesman Keb’ Mo,’ is set for May 13 and includes a Q&A with the audience. Tickets are $20 per device.
USC Upstate names new chancellor gsabusiness.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gsabusiness.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
By Carter Dewees
For the Birmingham Times
Day in and day out, doctors, nurses, and essential workers tend to patients and save lives. Over the past year, in particular, these everyday heroes have been on the job 12 to 15 hours a dayâsometimes without time offâwhich has meant a seismic change in both their professional and personal lives.
For Kierstin Kennedy, M.D., associate professor and chief of hospital medicine at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB), that meant a greater appreciation of resources when the hospital began to run short of supplies, such as hand sanitizer and sanitizing wipes.
Extended covid easing for some after vaccines
Lenny Bernstein and Ben Guarino, The Washington Post
March 16, 2021
FacebookTwitterEmail
Arianna Eisenberg endured long-haul covid-19 for eight months. But 36 hours after her second shot of coronavirus vaccine last month, her symptoms were gone and haven t returned.Photo by Sarah Blesener for The Washington Post.
Arianna Eisenberg endured long-haul covid-19 for eight months, a recurring nightmare of soaking sweats, crushing fatigue, insomnia, brain fog and muscle pain.
But Eisenberg s tale has a happy ending that neither she nor current medical science can explain. Thirty-six hours after her second shot of coronavirus vaccine last month, her symptoms were gone, and they haven t returned.