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  • Computers traditionally excel at rocketry, so why do new artificial intelligence programs get it wrong?
  • No documents with classified markings were found, though Biden's lawyer said "some materials and handwritten notes that appear to relate to his time as vice president" were taken for further review.
  • La Jolla Art Demonstration IN-PERSON Thursday, July 28, 4-6 p.m. Held Every Fourth Thursday of the Month The La Jolla Art Association membership includes local artists representing a variety of media from oil to watercolor, acrylic, digital, and more. These artists have been exhibiting their art and hosting receptions at the LJCC for nearly a decade. Learn more about the artists through our monthly art demonstrations. The July artist is watercolor artist Minnie Valero who will be demonstrating the difference between traditional watercolor paper, absorbent; and Yupo, a non-absorbent material, which has challenges of its own. She will demonstrate how watercolor works on Yupo. Light refreshments will be served. Event is free and open to the public. Registration is required. To register, visit: www.ljcommunitycenter.org/art-receptions Visit La Jolla Community Center on Facebook
  • Join us for an evening of art and wine! Back by popular demand, this lecture and wine tasting by world renown wine expert Rod Phillips will focus on wine and art in America and Europe in the age of temperance – a period that includes Prohibition in America. From the Ancient world (Egypt, Greece, and Rome) to the early 1900s, artists had depicted the pleasant and less pleasant results of drinking wine. Consumed responsibly, wine was considered a healthy and sometimes God-given beverage, and artists showed people drinking and celebrating in small groups and at banquets. At the same time, physicians and others warned that excessive drinking was harmful to the individual and to society. Artists depicted this message, too, with images of sickness, poverty, and criminality. When temperance and prohibition became organized movements in the 1800s, and drinking became a political issue, this ambivalence was expressed in art even more sharply. There were still images that showed wine in a positive light, but some representations of wine-drinking were decidedly negative, and we can see art in the service of a social movement. The images illustrating this talk will include fine and popular art and other media produced in America and Europe. About the Speaker: Rod Phillips Rod Phillips is a professor of history at Carleton University, in Ottawa, Canada. He is the author of many books and articles on the history of wine, including Wine: A Social and Cultural History of the Drink that Changed our Lives (paperback, 2018), French Wine: A History (paperback, 2020), and Alcohol: A History (paperback, 2019). He is also an international wine judge, wine critic, and wine writer, and contributes to The World of Fine Wine (UK) and guildsomm.com (US).
  • As the U.S. government debates whether to require higher staffing levels at nursing homes, financial records show some owners routinely push profits to sister companies while residents are neglected.
  • The former president has made good on his threat to sue the Washington Post reporter over his use of interview recordings. The lawsuit seeks nearly $50 million in damages.
  • Nipah virus, which can rapidly infect and kill members of a community, is carried by bats. Exactly how does it cross over into humans? Researchers in Bangladesh are trying to find out.
  • Seven years after the Safe and Responsible Drivers Act gave undocumented residents a license to drive, the state is ready to expand its impact, but the law still has detractors.
  • Poet laureate Jason Magabo Perez hopes to empower communities across San Diego to tell their stories through poetry and language.
  • We're back with our Annual Art Supply Garage Sale! Pick up some new or gently used art supplies. Items for sale may be: yarn, mosaic supplies, stained glass, tiles, paper, paint, fabric, beads, jewelry findings, brushes, glue, ribbon, pencils, stamps, ephemera, tools and more... Find some great deals! Cash only. Mask wearing is required inside the studio. Bravo School of Art on Facebook + Instagram
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