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  • Congress is poised to leave for a scheduled holiday recess without a solution for addressing the expiration of enhanced subsidies for Affordable Care Act marketplace plans.
  • New court documents reveal a list of nearly 200 words or phrases the Trump administration told Head Start programs it does not want to see in their funding requests.
  • A study points to a new concern about the effect that heat can have on young children.
  • The Photographer’s Eye Gallery in Escondido will present “Susan Ressler: A Life in Photography,” featuring an informal talk by Ressler on Oct. 11 at 4 p.m., followed by a reception from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Gallery hours are Fridays and Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and the show will close on Nov. 1. Her recently published book, "Susan Ressler Photographs: 50 Years, No End in Sight," earned third place in this year’s International Photography Awards’ competition, in the Professional Book/Monograph category. In addition, Ressler’s photo of an Algonquian family, shot in Quebec, Canada, in 1973, won a prestigious Best of Show in the same competition. Images from Ressler’s new book and the award-winning photographs will be on view at The Photographer’s Eye, a nonprofit, this October. Ressler lived among the Algonquian shortly after graduating from college. An anthropologist and documentary filmmaker from the University of Montreal arranged for her to stay on a First Nation reserve north of Montreal, where she spent three months documenting their life and ways. She was “adopted” by three families who spoke a French dialect that Ressler didn’t understand, so they communicated nonverbally. “We became very close and they let me into their lives, and that led to my first body of work,” Ressler says. Conditions on the reserve were harsh and the people were poor, and her black and white photos do not hesitate to reflect that. “All of my work deals with issues around social justice,” she says. “This is really why I became a photographer. It was that experience.” Her life among the Algonquian taught her about the imbalance between documentary photographers and their subjects, an imbalance that she has strived never to exploit. She was not yet 25 years old, and the experience had a profound effect on her. She had found her calling, and she never looked back. She was walking in the footsteps of Dorothea Lange, Walker Evans, and W. Eugene Smith, all of whose work influenced hers. After her Canada experience she was admitted to the University of New Mexico Master of Fine Arts program, and began photographing Western themes, like cattle auctions. But one day she walked into a bank and saw it differently from the way she had seen it before. “I realized I came from an upper middle-class background, and I wanted to flip the script for documentary photography and photograph the wealthy,” she says. “That’s what really propelled my career, was that realization and that change.” She also felt she needed to go to California, where she became the only woman photographer, out of eight total, participating in the Los Angeles Documentary Project in 1979, which was funded by a National Endowment for the Arts grant for the city’s bicentennial. Her emphasis: Fortune 500 companies, which eventually led to her book, "Executive Order," which features photographs and portraits in L.A. boardrooms and executive offices. These photos, also in black and white, will share a room in The Photographer’s Eye with her photos of the Algonquian. The contrast is stark. California, particularly Southern California, has remained the relentless target of Ressler’s lens, resulting in her book "Dreaming California," which journals the glorious color and raging excess that epitomizes this part of the country, juxtaposed with the people who strove and often failed to catch the rising wave of wealth. Her retrospective book includes images from all these bodies of work. Ressler’s work has been shown and collected extensively, including at the Smithsonian American Art Museum and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and she is the recipient of many awards, nationally and internationally. She is a professor emerita at Purdue University, and resides in Taos, New Mexico. What: Susan Ressler: A Life in Photography Where: The Photographer’s Eye Gallery, 326 E. Grand Ave., Escondido, 92025 When: Oct. 11 through Nov. 1, with an artist’s talk at 4 p.m. and reception from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Hours: Fridays and Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and by appointment by contacting donna@thephotographerseyecollective.com, or by calling 760-522-2170 Free: Admission to the gallery is free and donations are welcome; parking is available in front of and behind the gallery. The Photographer’s Eye on Facebook / Instagram
  • In a year when hip-hop was frequently absent from the pop charts, NPR's music critic found that looking in darker corners revealed a genre that was flourishing.
  • You may have heard about HPV testing and self-swabbing to collect the sample. Does that work as well? Here are the ins and outs of this newer option.
  • Many voters told NPR they like that California's redistricting measure provides the Democratic-leaning state a rare opportunity to directly counteract President Trump and other Republicans.
  • Officials said the error is likely too minute for the general public to clock it, but it could affect applications such as critical infrastructure, telecommunications and GPS signals.
  • KPBS is holding a second preview screening event of "THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION" - Ken Burns' new documentary film. This new event will take place on Thursday, Nov. 13 at 5:45 p.m. at the City of Carlsbad Library. The event is free to attend and registration is now open! THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION is a new six-part, twelve-hour series. It tells the story of America’s founding struggle, the men and women of the Revolutionary generation, and the crisis that they lived through. THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION premieres nationwide on Sunday, November 16 and airs for six consecutive nights through Friday, November 21 at 8 -10 p.m. on KPBS TV.
  • Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein of Chabad of Poway, whose nephew, Rabbi Eli Schlanger, was leading the festive holiday event before he and more than a dozen others were killed,
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