Monster Mash: 9/11 cross angers atheists; Telegraph in trouble
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Angered: An atheist group is suing to remove the famous World Trade Center cross from the National Sept. 11 Memorial and Museum in New York. (NBC New York)
Ruling: Britain’s Telegraph has been ordered to pay $100,000 over a review it ran on the nonfiction book ‘Seven Days in the Art World.’ (Los Angeles Times)
Double threat: Jesse Eisenberg will costar with Justin Bartha in ‘Asuncion,’ a dark comedy that Eisenberg wrote and that will be presented by the Rattlestick Playwrights Theater at New York’s Cherry Lane Theater. (Los Angeles Times)
Breaking with tradition: An interview with Roberto Paternostro, the music director of the Israel Chamber Orchestra, which recently performed music by Richard Wagner at the Bayreuth Festival. (NPR)
Leading man: John Lithgow will return to Broadway in David Auburn’s ‘The Columnist,’ opening Apr. 25. (Theatermania)
Truce: The Metropolitan Opera has reached a deal with the union that represents its singers, dancers and stage managers. (Wall Street Journal)
New home: The Textile Museum is moving to the campus of George Washington University. (Washington Post)
RIP: Frank Foster, a jazz saxophonist who played with the Count Basie Orchestra and composed the band’s hit, ‘Shiny Stockings,’ has died. (New York Times)
Busted: The owner of a Philadelphia art store has been arrested and charged with smuggling and conspiracy for illegally importing and selling African elephant ivory. (CNN)
Moving forward: A delayed exhibition of Buddhist art from Pakistan will finally open at New York’s Asia Society in early August. (New York Times)
Staying put: The 2012 Tony Awards ceremony will take place at the Beacon Theatre in New York for the second year in a row. (Playbill)
Also in the L.A. Times: Art critic Christopher Knight on the late artist Gilbert ‘Magu’ Lujan; theater critic Charles McNulty on Anna Deavere Smith’s ‘Let Me Down Easy.’
-- David Ng