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  • We spoke with MIT's David Autor, one of the top labor economists in the world, about how AI could revolutionize the job market.
  • The celebrated singer, who led an illustrious, jet-setting career, broke the color barrier as the first Black artist to perform at Germany's Bayreuth Festival.
  • A crisis pregnancy center in Idaho opened a maternity home in the months after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. The residents have more complicated stories than the home's founders expected.
  • Gold prices are soaring. Cue the gold rush, and with it, more challenges for Brazil and efforts to protect the world's largest tropical forest, write Robert Muggah and Mac Margolis.
  • By Camarada: Experience the magnificent beauty and acoustics of San Diego's premier concert hall as we share the excitement of our performing arts community's return to indoor events! Tango Obsessed —it's all about the passion! Let us tempt you with the seductive, sexy street flavors, rhythms, and melodies of Argentina. As the music soars, our tango dancers flash and glide across the stage in a mesmerizing evening of passionate music. Join us for music by Argentine Tango composer Astor Piazzolla, Kurt Weill’s Tango Habanera, and a new commission by Argentine virtuoso double bassist Andrés Martín. You, too, will become obsessed! Date | Thursday, February 24 from 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Location | The Conrad Prebys Performing Arts Center Get tickets here. Terrace seating: $53 - $123 Orchestra seating: $68 - $123 Boxes: $98 - $123 For more information, please visit the Camarada Ensemble website or call (858) 459-3724.
  • Sum 41 is behind 2000s hits such as "Fat Lip" and "In Too Deep." The band said it will finish a U.S. and international tour and release an album before officially disbanding.
  • March is Women’s History Month, and Women’s Resource Center at San Diego State University has prepared a slate of empowering and insightful events. Kicking off with a virtual keynote on March 3rd featuring noted author Roxane Gay, the Women's History Month events include the following: • Women of Color Empowerment Group on Thursdays, 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. – Our Womxn of Color Empowerment Group is back! This virtual meeting space is co-hosted by Counseling & Psych Services and the SDSU Center for Intercultural Relations! • Self-Love, Body Image, and Gender-Affirming Clothing on Friday, March 4, noon to 4 p.m. – Join us for an afternoon of self-love and exploring body image, while picking up free clothing from the Pride Center's Community Care Closet! • Women's Global Recovery Roundtable on Tuesday, March 8, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. | This event will feature several speakers throughout the day, bringing awareness to issues of women's mental health and addiction and highlighting the voices of women in recovery. • Women of Color in the Workplace on Wednesday, March 9, 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. | Being a woman of color in the workplace can bring new challenges! Together we'll learn about responding to microaggressions, impostor syndrome, stereotypes, and patriarchal or familial expectations. • Queer Femme Healing Circle biweekly on Fridays, March 11 from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. | Join the Women's Resource Center & Pride Center's Queer Femme Healing Circle! A safe space to connect with other femmes and discuss the lived experiences of queerness and being femme-presenting. • Violence on the Land/Violence on Our Bodies on Monday, March 14, 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. | Audience members will learn how gender-based violence is used to assert control of natural resources and will engage through art response and dialogue. Click here to see full schedule of activities. These events are free and open to SDSU students and staff. For more information, please visit sacd.sdsu.edu/womens-resource/womens-history-month or call Women's Resource Center at (619) 594-2304.
  • Star Theatre Company in Oceanside joined the effort to collect signatures to guarantee arts and music education in every California public school.
  • At a time of rising rates of depression and anxiety among teens, the American Psychological Association warns parents that their children need more protection when they are online.
  • Arts therapies appear to ease brain disorders from Parkinson's to PTSD. Now, artists and scientists have launched an effort to understand how these treatments change the brain.
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