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  • After a historic drop in enrollment during the pandemic, California community colleges are ramping up marketing efforts, spending more than $40 million in state and federal dollars to lure students back. Is it working?
  • The San Diego County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously Tuesday to retain its current leadership roster, with Nora Vargas as chairwoman, Terra Lawson-Remer as vice chair and Joel Anderson as chair pro tem.
  • San Diego State University Aztecs at Snapdragon Stadium Games taking place in San Diego Saturday, August 26 at 4 p.m. SDSU Aztec Football vs. Ohio University Bobcats Football Saturday, September 2 at 7:30 p.m. SDSU Aztec Football vs. Idaho State University Bengals Football Saturday, September 9 at 4:30 p.m. SDSU Aztec Football vs. UCLA Bruins Football Friday, September 22 at 7:30 p.m. SDSU Aztec Football vs. Boise State Broncos Football Saturday, October 21 at 7 p.m. SDSU Aztec Football vs. Nevada Wolf Pack Football Saturday, November 4 at 7 p.m. SDSU Aztec Football vs. Utah State University Aggies Football Saturday, November 25 at 7 p.m. SDSU Aztec Football vs. Fresno State Bulldogs Football Admission - Single game tickets start at $21 for groups and $30 for general public! - 2-Game Mini Plans start at $54! - 3-Game Mini Plans, including UCLA or Boise State Game, start at $137! Visit: https://goaztecs.com/sports/football Connect with Aztecs Football on Social Media! Facebook | Instagram | X/Twitter
  • Enjoy a calm and quiet morning at the Museum of Us with A Space for All of Us, the Museum’s sensory-friendly experience for guests who prefer less audio-visual stimulation. Video screens and flashing lights in exhibits will be turned off. Complimentary noise blocking headphones are available for check-out at the admissions desk. At 11:00 a.m., all exhibit features will be turned on. Admission during sensory-friendly quiet mornings includes all-day access to the Museum. For more information visit: museumofus.org Stay Connected on Facebook
  • So you’ve finished writing your novel — what next? What do published novelists do between that raw first draft and the final manuscript to make their plots sizzle and their prose sing? The key lies in reworking your manuscript until your writing jumps off of the page. If you have completed the first draft of a novel, this workshop will help you develop skills to shape your plot for maximum dramatic impact and give life and texture to characters, dialogue, and setting. Click here for more details about this workshop!
  • LGBTQ+ students at San Dieguito Union are calling for change after a district trustee and parents engaged in what they call “transphobic behavior” in a private Facebook group chat.
  • The ordinance, which the City Council officially passed in a 5-4 vote on Tuesday, will take effect July 29.
  • Heavy rain from Ophelia will also pose a risk of flash flooding from Virginia to New Jersey, according to the National Hurricane Center.
  • McElhenney says he bought the team to “bring hope to a town that had fallen on hard times." The FX series Welcome to Wrexham chronicles the team and its owners and fans.
  • From the museum: A one-of-a-kind exhibition, O’Keeffe and Moore compares the work of two iconic modernists: American painter Georgia O’Keeffe and British sculptor Henry Moore. While these artists worked on different continents, their careers and contributions to the artistic development of the 20th century reveal many parallels. While Georgia O’Keeffe was holding up a small pelvic bone of a gray fox against the New Mexico sky, framing the landscape and imagining the curve of the bone on a vast scale, Henry Moore, eleven years her junior and half way around the world, was also holding up small bones, maquettes, and other objects against the sky, imagining them any size and peering through their apertures to the open landscape and sheep fields of Hertfordshire. The two artists pioneered and shared a coherent vision and approach to Modernism. While other Modernist artists also used natural forms as a pathway to abstraction, no other artists apart from O’Keeffe and Moore centered their art on this fundamental aspect, and amassed such great collections over their lifetimes of animal skulls and bones, gnarled tree roots and twisted driftwood, smooth and hollowed river and flint stones, internal coils of seashells and interlocking pebbles. This exhibition unites the work of these artists for the first time, and re-creates their studios in the Museum with their original contents of found objects, tools, and furnishings. Visitors will be able to explore their working practices, and see how these humble objects inspired some of their most important artistic creations. Over 100 paintings and sculptures trace their artistic development, exploring Surrealist concepts such as the pairing of objects and metamorphosis, as well as their investigations of bones, stones, internal/external forms of flowers and seashells, and landscape. Before settling permanently in New Mexico, O’Keeffe collected animal skulls she found during visits to the Southwest, bringing them back with her to New York to study and paint. Meanwhile, Moore referred to his maquette studio as his “library of natural forms” and drew from its vast resources daily, fusing the shapes of the human figure in plaster and terra cotta with those of the natural world, and questioning our relationship with the environment. He mused “The value of certain types of modern sculpture may be that it opens people’s eyes to nature, that they pick up things which they wouldn’t look at otherwise; and they look at things with a new eye.” The sentiment is echoed in the reminiscences of O’Keeffe: “I have picked flowers where I found them. I have picked up sea shells and rocks and pieces of wood where there were sea shells and rocks and pieces of wood that I liked…I have used these things to say what is to me the wideness and wonder of the world as I live in it.” Learn more here. Ticket information: Please note: Due to the staff and logistics necessary for this special exhibition, there is an additional charge ($10) for nonmembers, ages 7+. Members receive free admission. Advanced tickets are not required. See below for more information about special exhibition entry. Related links: San Diego Museum of Art on Instagram San Diego Museum of Art on Facebook
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