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  • After slaying at the San Diego Pride festival all weekend long, head on over to Mavericks Beach Club for the afterparty of the lifetime! Have your jaw ready to be dropped during an incredible drag performance on Monday July 18 at 1 p.m., featuring your favorite drag queens like Disco Dollie, Ella Mentry, Kickky Vixen, Naomi Daniels, Strawberry Cornicakes, and hosted by the queen herself Mariam T. Enjoy one of the drink specials offered while watching some killer death drops. Presale tickets are $5 each and can be purchased on their website. Proceeds for, this show will go to support Wings for Life! Tickets can be purchased here! Follow Mavericks Beach Club on Facebook | Instagram
  • A program in Seattle is helping people in drug and alcohol recovery overcome barriers to medical care in an effort to keep them off the street. A key piece is battling stigma from medical providers.
  • Families are invited to take part in the 100-year anniversary celebration of Balboa Park’s historic carousel on National Carousel Day on Monday, July 25, from 11 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. The day-long extravaganza features free rides on the main carousel and Kiddie Ride, live musical performances by the Hullabaloo Band and Kathryn the Grape, Kumu Kahne’s Polynesian Dancers, roaming acrobats, face painting, and more! The Balboa Park Carousel recently benefitted from extensive renovation work on its original menagerie, decorative paintings, military-style band organ, and brass ring game. As part of the festivities, the Carousel will be formally dedicated to Dorothea Laub, who contributed $1 million toward the recent acquisition and ongoing care of the 1910 Herschell-Spillman Carousel, which first arrived in Balboa Park in 1922. If you can’t make it on National Carousel Day, be sure to catch a ride later this summer before the Carousel closes for a new round of structural renovation work and upgrades in fall 2022. Entertainment Schedule: Hullabaloo Band (11–11:30 a.m.) Kathryn the Grape (11:30 a.m.–Noon) Kumu Kahne’s Polynesian Dancers (2–3 p.m.)
  • One base in Missouri is outsourcing the charging stations to the local utility co-op.
  • Fierce fighting has spread outside Sudan's capital, Khartoum, and across the country, as the forces of two warring military leaders battle for control.
  • TikTok officials say they are "disappointed in the outcome," but will remain focused on implementing a plan to keep the data of Americans safe.
  • New Zealand has declared war on tobacco with a remarkable new law. The indigenous Māori population, with the country's highest smoking rate, has a lot to gain. But they have a bone of contention.
  • Amid those hawking corndogs and cheese curds at the Minnesota State Fair, the Army is trying to sell itself. An effort to entice sign ups is happening as the Army struggles to fill its ranks.
  • Many sexual assault survivors and activists at California public universities and colleges say it’s simply not enough to have Title IX offices that focus on the legal aspects of a case and campuses’ liability. Instead, they say colleges need confidential advocates who are independent from Title IX offices.
  • The powerful storm system spread destruction in several states. In Illinois, one person died and 28 were hurt after a theater roof caved in during a concert.
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