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  • The creation story was almost lost because of colonization, genocide and forced assimitlation but has now been immortalized in Baron’s captivating new exhibit and film. The Barona Band Mission Indians is proud to preserve this important part of their culture for future generations and invite all to come out and learn about our way of knowing. The museum offers visitors of all ages and exciting opportunity to witness history and discover more about how local indigenous populations live today. Visit: https://www.baronamuseum.com/ Open Hours: Thursday and Friday: Noon to 5 p.m. Saturday: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Please call to schedule group tours and research appointments. 619-443-7003, X 219 Free admission Barona Cultural Center & Museum on Facebook / Instagram
  • The Hole has been operating out of the same place for its entire existence.
  • This Halloween, La Jolla Shores Hotel is going full paws to the wall with a Howl-O-Ween event at its signature Shores Restaurant on Thursday, October 31 from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Guests are invited to bring their pups for a fun-filled celebration of the hotel’s new pet-friendly features, including the Canine Cuisine menu with options like the Hot Diggity Dog, Half Hound Hamburger, Good Dog New York Strip Steak, and explore other property amenities. Pups and their humans can enjoy an array of treats and prizes, including a chance to win a two-night stay at the beachfront hotel for the pup with the spookiest costume! To enter, pets must be in costume and participants should tag, like, and follow @theshoresrestaurant and @ljshoreshotel on Instagram. The first furry friends to arrive will receive a complimentary wag bag loaded with goodies from local pet brands including The Honest Kitchen, Scoops La Jolla, Aspen Dog House, and Woofpak Pet Kitchen. Visit: Howl-O-Ween The Shores Restaurant on Instagram and Facebook
  • A 7-year-old falls in love with dance—40 years later, she works everyday to stay in the game. Created by Monica Bill Barnes and Robbie Saenz de Viteri, co-leaders of New York-based dance company Monica Bill Barnes & Company, this piece is both live documentary and performance. It features a large cast of San Diego dancers from 12-80 years of age who have learned their parts over the week leading up to the WOW Festival. Interviews incorporate their voices and stories into the show, giving the audience an unprecedented look into the life of a dancer as a new kind of sports hero: one who keeps moving against all odds. La Jolla Playhouse’s celebrated annual WOW Festival is a four-day celebration of immersive, interactive and breathtaking experiences from local, national and international artists. Free for everyone to attend from April 4 – 7, WOW Festival is presented in partnership with UC San Diego and takes over locations all around the campus. Visiting Hours: Thu, April 4: 4-6:30 p.m. Fri, April 5: 4-6:30 p.m. Sat, April 6: 11 a.m. - 6:30 p.m. Sun, April 7: 11a.m. - p.m. RSVPs are requested but not mandatory. When you RSVP, this event will show in your Schedule. We appreciate RSVPs because this helps us know how many people to expect, allowing us to plan and ensure your experience is as smooth as possible.
  • From the museum: “It is a quest for an architecture of light and lightness, inspired by nature which is about the quality of life as well as being eco-friendly.” —Norman Foster Norman Foster (British, b. 1935), is one of the most esteemed international architects of our time, with projects worldwide. Among innumerable accolades, he was awarded the prestigious Pritzker Prize for Architecture in 1999. This installation focuses on models and designs for a select few of his many celebrated projects, organized into three themes: Working with History; Embracing the Environment, and Community and Culture. All these subjects are underpinned by sustainability, and crucial to Foster + Partners’ vision for an upcoming renovation of The San Diego Museum of Art west wing. Foster studied architecture in Manchester, England, before winning a fellowship to the Yale School of Architecture in 1961, where he met Richard Rogers, with whom he traveled throughout the United States for a year. The influence of architecture in California, especially the Case Study Houses (modern housing focused in Southern California, 1945–66), would be pivotal in the formation of Foster’s aesthetic—particularly in consideration of open plan, flexible, and multifunctional spaces. Foster, along with Rogers and the sisters Georgie and Wendy Cheesman, formed the innovative practice Team 4 in 1963, and they approached architectural design using environmentally and structurally sophisticated technologies that freed interior space to be socially focused, connected to the environment, and filled with light. A veteran of the Royal Air Force, and an avid pilot, Foster and his now global team of architects at Foster + Partners often incorporate open architectural plans with expansive natural lighting and optimal views integrating the surrounding sky and landscape. In embracing change, both social and technological, Foster + Partners have challenged convention to reinvent the built environment, from the workspace and urban landscape, as well as merging modernity with a sensitive appreciation and renewal of historic structures. Theirs is a quest for an architecture of light, inspired by nature, and centered on community life while spearheading innovation in environmental sustainability. Today the Norman Foster Foundation in Madrid leads work on clean sources of energy with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and is collaborating with the United Nations for the reconstruction of the war-torn Ukrainian city of Kharkiv. Referring to exhibitions not as retrospectives but as “futurspectives,” Foster explains his practice is “an ongoing exploration for works that are inspired by the past, rooted in the present but can adapt to the needs and desires of an optimistic future.” The San Diego Museum of Art has announced the selection of Foster + Partners to renovate the Museum’s west wing to increase exhibition space, further enrich the public’s engagement with art and programming, improve accessibility, and better integrate the west wing with the Museum’s main structure, all while respecting the architectural style and historical significance of Balboa Park. The renovation project aims to create a new education center, a public pavilion connecting visitors to art and the outdoors, and a new rooftop space providing panoramic views of Balboa Park. Learn more about The San Diego Museum of Art’s west wing renovation. This exhibition is made possible with the collaboration of the Norman Foster teams in London, Madrid, and Los Angeles, and coincides with the designation of the San Diego/Tijuana region as the 2024 World Design Capital.
  • Many residents in Altadena, Calif., evacuated not knowing it would be the last time they would see their homes standing. Their decisions about what possessions to take were rushed — or not made at all.
  • President Trump made good on a campaign promise to ask the Department of the Interior to recognize the Lumbee people of North Carolina — a tribe whose Native identity has long been called into question.
  • Four female soldiers taken hostage on Oct. 7, 2023 by Hamas were handed over to the International Committee of the Red Cross in Gaza on Saturday morning, and then transferred to the Israeli military.
  • Sailors and Marines from Camp Pendleton are among 1,500 troops deployed all along the border under an executive order from President Donald Trump declaring a national emergency at the southern border.
  • The International Criminal Court, a U.N. agency, has to approve the warrants. They've been condemned by the Taliban and welcomed by Afghan women and their advocates — with some reservations.
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