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  • All children, regardless of immigration status, have the right to a free K-12 public education. But without birthright citizenship, access to schools and colleges could get complicated.
  • From the supernatural to the slightly-too-realistic, it's been a banner year for scary movies, many of which are available to stream from home this Halloween.
  • Trump posted the first architectural renderings of his future presidential library, planned for a prime plot of land donated by Miami Dade College. He later said it's "most likely to be a hotel."
  • Join us at the beach! October 17, 18, 19 Mission Bayfest is located in the coastal community of Mission Beach at Mariner’s Point Park; the perfect music festival location. With an abundance of green areas and stunning 360 views of the beautiful Mission Bay, the scenery enhances the festival experience. View the lineup and schedule on Facebook and Instagram
  • On Aug. 26, 1920, the passage of the 19th Amendment granted voting rights to white women. For women who weren't white, it would take decades longer to achieve those same rights. We discuss the evolving legacy and meaning of Women's Equality Day in 2025.
  • Tai Chi Moving for Better Balance is a 10-step form that does not require memorization and can be performed seated. This class emphasizes improving breath, mind, and body co-ordination/function to prevent falls while increasing safety in activities of daily living. Wear flat supportive shoes and loose comfortable clothing. Audience: Adults Location: Community Room Visit: https://sandiego.librarymarket.com/event/tai-chi-moving-better-balance-468781
  • Join us on Thursday, February 12 from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. for a tour of "Staying Power" in the University Art Gallery with guest curator, Barbara Paris Gifford. The opening reception will follow, where artists will be in attendance. Barbara Paris Gifford is Senior Curator of Contemporary Art, Craft, and Design at the Museum of Arts and Design (MAD) in New York City. She oversees MAD’s renowned jewelry collection and has helped organize over twenty exhibitions in all craft mediums, including "Voulkos: The Breakthrough Years" (2016-7), "The World of Anna Sui" (2019-20), and "Jewelry Stories: Highlights from the Collection 1947-Now" (2020-ongoing), for which she edited a comprehensive catalogue. Most recently, she presented "Out of the Jewelry Box" (2024-6), an exhibition and catalogue exploring the intersection of Queerness and contemporary jewelry, and "Douriean Fletcher: Jewelry of the Afrofuture" (2025-6). An expert in jewelry and fashion, she has written and presented on these subjects for numerous publications and venues. Gifford holds an MA in Decorative Arts, Design History, and Material Culture from the Bard Graduate Center, NY. SDSU School of Art and Design on Instagram
  • Free public, fun-filled, event with experts on pregnancy and motherhood. Celebrate our 5th Anniversary expo with us! Saturday, Oct. 18, 2025 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Location: Balboa Park, San Diego, Calif. Located off of 6th Avenue between Spruce Street and Quince Free baby items, relief supplies, raffles, information booths, career and training opportunities
  • This year's short list features novelists Rabih Alameddine and Megha Majumdar as well as five first-time nominees for nonfiction, including journalists Omar El Akkad and Julia Ioffe.
  • A special screening of the film that brought reggae music to the world and made the late Jimmy Cliff a global icon. Blessed with one the best soundtracks ever put on film, "The Harder They Come" is a gritty and razor sharp vision of working class life in Jamaica, a ground-breaking film that demonstrated that music and art can change the world. Jimmy Cliff who died in 2025 plays Ivan, a young songwriter who leaves the country for the big city to find his fortune. His dreams of making it in the music business and his battles with crooked promoters, religious conservatives and criminals on both sides of the law make him a folk hero. Shot in 1972 at the dawn of the blaxpoitation era in American movies following the success of Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song, Shaft, and Super Fly, this Jamaican film is a significant achievement in the development, in the 1970s, of both an international Black popular culture and worldwide Black independent film movement. Professor Mychal Odom of Mesa College will facilitate a Q&A session after the film Register now
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