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  • Bird strikes occur daily for commercial flights, costing airlines millions in damages each year. Although rare, these incidents can result in injuries and fatalities.
  • Campana Studios is excited to present ‘Feral’, an upcoming show of paintings by Elizabeth Brown at Perspectives Space, July 20th-August 1st, with an artist’s reception on July 20th from 6-9pm. Elizabeth Brown is a California based artist who explores the relationship between personal narrative and visual engagement. Her playful, expressive and colorful paintings reveal the tension between freedom and control, as well as thought and emotion, the physical and ephemeral. In these vibrant paintings, Elizabeth has multiple vantage points, seeing her world and the world of others, both predator and prey, to create dynamic compositions. Campana Studios is a San Diego based visual arts non-profit that creates dynamic platforms for artists to engage within our communities. Special thanks to the City of Encinitas, Department of Cultural Arts, and the County of San Diego Board of Supervisors for their financial support in bringing high quality, visual arts experiences, like this show, to our community. For more information visit: campanastudios.org Stay Connected on Facebook and Instagram
  • Shell casings with the cryptic words "deny," "defend" and "depose" were found at the scene of the fatal shooting of the UnitedHealthcare CEO outside of a Manhattan hotel, police officials say.
  • Jamison was a dance star who led the famed Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater to new heights.
  • Facilitated by Direct Divine Light Healers “Spiritual energy is the single biggest key to building and sustaining health, because it connects you to your source of health.” - Barbara Martin & Dimitri Moraitis – The Healing Power of Your Aura Join us at the Summer Solstice in working with a fascinating yet mysterious aspect of our spiritual anatomy—the astral body. It’s our astral body that we inhabit when we have an out-of-body experience. This is the body that will carry us to the Otherside when it’s our time to transition Home. Right here and now, your astral body support the physical in health and well-being. As the physical body needs healing, so does the astral as it takes the brunt of physical and psychic distresses. Neil and the Divine Light healers will guide you through a highly effective technique to receive spiritual energy to heal and transform your life. Whether you are seeking a physical, mental or emotional transformation, Divine Light healing is a full-spectrum aura therapy. Drawing on a 4,000 year mystical tradition and built on the clairvoyant experiences of Barbara Y. Martin and Dimitri Moraitis over five decades, these aura healing techniques have been endorsed by medical luminaries C. Norman Shealy and Dr. Richard Gerber. As we are a non-profit, donations welcomed. Neil Mintz is a certified Divine Light Teacher and healer through Spiritual Arts Institute having studied at the Institute for over 15 years. After 20 years as founder and CEO of a highly successful manufacturing company, Neil sold his company to devote full-time to his spiritual development and to supporting others on their spiritual quest. Neil volunteers at the Institute as Director of Events and Outreach and is currently serving as member of the Institute’s nonprofit Board of Directors. For more information visit: spiritualarts.org Stay Connected on Facebook and Instagram
  • President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration comes at a pivotal time in American history. Insulated from controversy, Trump will enter the White House more prepared than when he first won in 2016.
  • One of the predecessors of American folk music is European music from the Renaissance era, roughly the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Courtly Noyse brings that music to life, complete with period repertoire, costumes, and instruments, some of which you will recognize as the grandparents of our guitars, violins, and dulcimers. This will be an intimate concert with little or no amplification. Courtly Noyse plays recorders, viola da gamba, vielle, krummhorns, cornamuse, cornetti, shawms, sacbuts, Renaissance guitar, chalumeau, hurdy gurdy, bowed psaltery, mandolin, gemshorns, rackett, and various percussion instruments (and this list is constantly growing!). They may also cast their instruments aside at the drop of a (Tudor) hat, and burst into five-part vocal harmony. Jay Sacks plays recorder, cornetto, shawm, krummhorn, chalumeau, gemshorn, cavaquihno, cornamuse, percussion, and sings tenor. He has played with the Los Angeles Junior Philharmonic Orchestra, the UCLA Symphonic Band, the UCSD Wind Ensemble, the Merrye Windes, and The Westwynde Consort. He has sung with the La Jolla Symphony Chorus, the San Diego Master Chorale, Musique Classique, Schola Pacifica, and Full Measure Carolers. He presently plays with The San Diego Jazz Big Band and The Kearny Mesa Concert Band. Sandra Stram plays viola da gamba, vielle, recorder, and krummhorn, and sings soprano. She retired after thirty-four years teaching strings and recorder in San Diego County public schools. She still works as an adjudicator and clinician for SCSBOA, MENC, and Festivals of Music. Sandra holds a MM degree in viol performance, and also plays Baroque violin in Kensington Baroque Orchestra. She has served on the Board of the San Diego Early Music Society and frequently performed for the their “Old Master” concert series. While continuing to play violin and viola with local Baroque chamber groups, she also plays fiddle with the bands Billy Lee and the Gulf Coasters and The Wild Oats. Vickie Jenkins plays recorder, cornamuse, krummhorn, harpsichord, percussion, gemshorn, and sings. She teaches music at The Child’s Primary School and Gateways Summer School, and taught piano lessons for fifty years. During the holiday season, she sang with Full Measure Carolers. Vickie has performed with ensembles at San Diego Mesa College, Scripps College, and SDSU, and has a music degree from Scripps College. Other former groups include Pacific Camerata, Madonna Non Papa, Melismata, Las Voces, and Schola Cantorum. Laury Flora started his musical career with piano lessons at age five. He went on to study French horn and other brass, guitar, and violin. He has performed vocally with various choirs and madrigal groups, and founded several barbershop quartets. In addition to singing, he plays recorder, krummhorn, rackett, psaltery, gemshorn, sacbut, lute, and cornetto. He sings with the La Jolla Renaissance Singers, and has sung with Full Measure Carolers, an a cappella ensemble which performs holiday music in San Diego and Orange Counties. Laury built the krummhorns, psaltery, and rackett that Courtly Noyse plays. Lissette Ryan is a mezzo soprano who plays the harp, cittern, guitar, harpsichord, recorder, crumhorn, and hurdy gurdy. She teaches music in Alpine, finding immense joy in encouraging young musicians. You can also find her regularly performing with the Storytellers of San Diego, where she pairs harp with traditional storytelling, and with the duo String and Wheel. Cathe Sobke holds degrees in music composition and music theory from SDSU. She grew up playing piano, clarinet, and guitar, and was introduced to early music during graduate studies about twenty-five years ago. Recently retired from teaching at Southwestern College, she continues to teach privately and enjoys performing in many early music groups including The Goliards, as well as Kensington Baroque Orchestra, Dolce Dolore, The Granada Consort, Musica Nova Anitiqua, and Ensemble Lonato. Visit: www.courtlynoyse.com
  • For some marginalized communities the second Trump term is fraught with fears over personal safety. In Minneapolis, one organization is helping with de-escalation services and gun training.
  • Fla. Attorney General Ashley Moody is suing Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Deanne Criswell, and a former FEMA supervisor for violating Floridians' civil rights after hurricanes.
  • How do you feel? Molecules that sense touch and other pressures - Front Row lecture with Ardem Patapoutian, PhD Description: The inner workings of the brain have eluded neuroscientists for ages—including how we perceive sensations such as touch, pain, sound and even blood flow. In this free in-person Front Row lecture, Scripps Research professor and Nobel laureate Ardem Patapoutian will discuss the molecular sensors that enable the mind to interpret different physical and chemical stimuli. These discoveries—which Patapoutian was awarded the 2021 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for—are helping answer long-standing questions in neuroscience, such as how cells communicate with each other, how we sense our body in time and space, how these sensors impact different diseases and more. ABOUT SCRIPPS RESEARCH Scripps Research is an independent, nonprofit biomedical institute based in La Jolla, California, and ranked one of the most influential in the world for its impact on innovation. The Front Row lecture series, now in its seventh season, offers an exclusive glimpse into groundbreaking scientific discoveries in action. In 2024 we celebrate a century of turning vision into pioneering impact. Reserve your seat today and learn how our scientists remain at the forefront of advancing the future of science and medicine. We hope you’ll join us—in the front row—for the next century of Science Changing Life. Visit: Scripps Research Front Row Lecture Scripps Research on Instagram and Facebook
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