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  • Smart phones at trivia night can make it easy to cheat. A cheating scandal shows it may be time to go back to pen and paper
  • Collaborators, family and friends remember the life of Siobhán Arnold, a San Diego artist and educator who died in May after a brief and sudden illness. "She just loved so many people."
  • Chief Fire Controllman Bryce Pedicini allegedly passed national security secrets to a foreign intelligence agent from 2022 to 2023.
  • Hay tan pocos datos disponibles que es imposible siquiera saber si varios de los programas para personas sin hogar más grandes de California están funcionando, según una auditoría estatal publicada el martes.
  • Christmas, Hanukkah, and Kwanzaa all remember the dawn of light in darkness. This poem-writing workshop asks us to sit with our own darkness so we will also be able to sit with our own poetry transformation, which comes from our own internal light. When we enjoy the works of such strong poets as Mary Oliver, Jennifer Chang, Robert Frost, Susan Cooper, Wendell Berry, Claude McKay, Hayden Carruth, and others, we are igniting that fire that means for us to go inward. The winter solstice reminds us as we get closer to the light of that fire, we also come closer to the sun. When the light of day seems to shorten to its end, the practice of writing can remind us of the light within and around us. This three-hour class for beginning or seasoned poets will be divided into two 90-minute segments. The first segment includes women poets whose light in poems has always revived us, inspired us, lit the way to our creative self, AKA, our Muse. Poets like Oliver, Chang, Cooper, Louise Erdrich, Nikki Giovanni, and Roberta Hill may light your inner fire and bring the writing process of inspiration, motivation, imagination, and contagion to fruition. The second class segment features male poets equally talented. Men with fire and light in pen and paper. Frost, Berry, McKay, Carruth, Duane Niatum, and Robert Bly bring the essence of winter solstice light to the class. Jim Moreno will never bring a poem to his classes that doesn’t inspire him. The combination of a diverse mix of cultures in the poets he brings to this class reminds, as June Jordan once wrote, “What’s important about poetry in the context of leadership is that most of the time power has to do with domination. Poetry is powerful but it cannot even aspire to dominate anyone. It means making a connection. That’s what it means.” The opposite of racism is when one culture heals another. The diversity of poet cultures in this class are meant to counter hate and ignorance and increase unity, respect, and peace.
  • Join the City of Carlsbad for a sustainable holidays-themed fixit clinic and repair event at Cole Library on Saturday, Dec. 2, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Repair: Keep items out of the landfill and get help fixing small household appliances, electronics, bikes, clothing and more. Reuse: Ditch the paper and wrap your holiday gifts using recycled fabrics. Repurpose: Find new life for felt fabrics by crafting your own holiday star decorations. Recycle: Bring in used household batteries and holiday light strands for recycling. This event will also feature two screenings of the documentary “Abundance: The Farmlink Story” at 10:30 a.m. and noon, with a Q&A session with the director at 11:30 a.m. The short film highlights a group of college students who set out to reduce food waste and help people experiencing food insecurity.
  • April 15th, the deadline to file your income taxes, is just around the corner. Filings so far this year are on track with last year's, while the average refund is slightly larger.
  • Economists sent 83,000 fake job applications to a slew of major U.S. companies, and found that the typical firm favored white applicants over Black ones by around 9%.
  • Fringe websites, a tech CEO and members of Congress all spread false claims about the attack on Nancy Pelosi's husband. The strains of narratives that they leverage are anything but new.
  • An eight-member team from Mission Bay High School has been working since late February to solve their community's most critical problem.
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