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  • Talisay, about 43 miles south of Manila, was one of several towns ravaged by Tropical Storm Trami, the deadliest of 11 storms to hit the Philippines this year.
  • Last night's 96th Academy Awards had happy surprises, moving moments and embarrassments.
  • Photographer Ashima Yadava captures a moment in time during the 2020 pandemic through her collaboration with people she took portraits of.
  • We celebrate 30 years of "Sunday Night Slow Jams" with R Dub!, the voice behind the iconic radio show.
  • A new book by a National City author tells the story behind Chicano Park and the community action that built it.
  • The Grammy Award-winning rapper, whose real name is Durk Banks, was arrested in Florida on federal charges that he paid for the attempted 2022 revenge killing of rapper Quando Rondo at a gas station.
  • The best music bingo available in the entire US! We take grandmas game, remove the numbers and add songs. We play a clip, you listen, and if you have it then mark it off! Customizable each night to fit the vibe. The best night, every time! For full details on this event and what to expect, visit: https://gamenightlive.com/california-san-diego/ Culture Brewing Co on Instagram and Facebook
  • "Leaders are not born," Granny says. "They're made through molding and modeling." That's why she and her granddaughter and putting on their hats and coats and walking to the polls.
  • The court said that the challengers, a group called the Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, had no right to be in court at all since neither the organization nor its members could show they had suffered any concrete injury.
  • Indigo—a varied plant family that grows worldwide and the deep, blue dye it produces—has a long and multifaceted history of cultivation, production, and distribution. "Blue Gold" combines science, craft, and history to explore this color’s complex past and present. Indigo’s beauty and ubiquity have eclipsed the unpleasant realities of its growth and manufacture, including hard labor and pollution, and its association with colonialism and slavery. As a pigment, indigo has been assigned protective properties, healing powers, and dangerous qualities that have shaped its uses in craft and the arts. The exhibition highlights the roles of botany, chemistry, medicine, ecology, and economics in indigo cultivation. Contemporary craftspeople and artists working with indigo, such as Laura Kina and Porfirio Gutierrez, address questions about the sustainability of indigo, its problematic legacies, and technological alternatives to manual processing. Closed Mondays / Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday, & Sunday from 10 to 5 p.m. / Fridays from 10 to 8 p.m. Mingei International Museum on Facebook / Instagram
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