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  • A court has unsealed documents in a 2021 bomb threat case involving felony charges for the Club Q shooting suspect. The district attorney said a conviction would've required family testimony.
  • Trump and his company have repeatedly faced criminal investigations but this case marks the first time his company has been charged, tried, and convicted on criminal charges.
  • Hardcore Starbucks fans eagerly await the day the coffee company gives out limited-edition holiday cups. The union organizing Starbucks workers hope those same customers will help support their cause.
  • Just as the definition of bebop describes music of complex harmony and rhythms, the artists for "What Lives in the Space Between Points" are at times very complex in their perspectives of the world. While St. Celfer explores the microcosm and macrocosm (as above so below and as within so without) pondering what things might be eluding us in ways we have not considered, Luke Gumaelius' keen academic mind considers patterns in biological and cultural existence. In contrast, Robin and John Gumaelius utilize expert ceramicist skill to create fantastical creatures both biological and imaginary. The four artists meet in the realm of concept. What can't we hear? What can't we see? And what is our mind capable of imagining? At this show you will enjoy: • Compelling, high quality art for sale in a variety of price points ($65 - $3,200) • Special late-night Events of improvisational electronica • Hands on art and music for children and adults • Live art-making and performance • Closing DJ set by local favorite Donald Glaude Date | Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays from March 25 through April 17 Location | The Brokers Building Art Gallery Board Get tickets here! General Admission: $5 Special Events: $25 This show includes an Augmented Reality (AR) experience for attendees. AR will allow artists to demonstrate their work in digital media, provide background information about their pieces, and supplement their art with music. Guests of the show can enjoy AR through their own smartphone using the Artive app. For more information, please visit www.bopgallery.com or call (256) 656-2703.
  • An examination of local police records shows that from 2012 through 2019, officers from San Diego County police agencies shot at people in moving cars 20 times. That’s despite the fact that police training experts say it is one of the most hazardous things a cop can do. Meanwhile, the injunction against vaccine mandates for the San Diego Unified School District will be short lived, according to legal experts. Plus, during the pandemic many universities stopped requiring standardized test scores for admissions and then racial and ethnic diversity increased on campus.
  • Cuban officials said they had begun to restore some power Wednesday after Hurricane Ian knocked out electricity to the entire island.
  • A trend of GOP candidates ignoring or actively avoiding legacy media — particularly national outlets — is building this year. That can hamper voters' ability to make informed choices.
  • The 53-year-old, who first rose to fame on the soap opera Another World, was reportedly traveling at a high rate of speed when she crashed into two homes.
  • Daily mass testing was ordered in the city of Zhengzhou in what the local government called a "war of annihilation" against the virus.
  • A relative red wave in New York U.S. House races helped tip the balance of power in Congress. But several winners were moderate Republicans with little appetite for far-right provocation.
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