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  • Eli Rosenbaum spent his career hunting down Nazis after World War II. Now, he will use those skills to seek out war criminals in the Russia-Ukraine war.
  • The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission says artificial intelligence-based hiring tools may be creating discriminatory barriers to jobs. The agency is asking for input as it considers guardrails.
  • Every second and fourth Saturday at a walk-up clinic in National City, lowrider cars will greet patients and promote the opportunity to get vaccinated for COVID-19. Meanwhile, the City Heights community and it’s leaders gather to discuss remodeling sections of El Cajon Boulevard. And, a preview of arts and cultural happenings this weekend.
  • Aussie singer Vance Joy is coming to San Diego for his brand new In Our Own Sweet Time Tour! Australian indie folk singer/songwriter Vance Joy began his career playing the open-mic scene while completing his law degree. Finding success in the music industry, Joy decided to put law on hold and pursue a music career instead. Born James Keogh, Joy recorded his first EP, "God Loves You When You're Dancing," which was highlighted by the career-establishing single, "Riptide." The overwhelmingly popular track earned Joy the top spot on the 2013 Triple J Hottest 100, beating out artists like Lorde. Joy's other singles, which include "Mess is Mine," "Georgia," "Fire and the Flood," "Lay It On Me," "I'm With You," "Saturday Sun," and many many more, have been streamed more than 3.2 billion times. In 2021, Joy announced a 2022 tour for what he's calling The Long Way Home Tour. See him live at Soma on Thursday, March 16, 2023 at 8 p.m.
  • Since their self-titled debut album seven years ago, Ibeyi’s stunning parallel harmonies and integral minimalist Latin percussion has shared a message of power and possibility across airwaves around the globe, cutting through an individualist framework that emphasizes self over society and success over soul. Ibeyi’s artistic expression of visuals and sound broke through the cultural zeitgeist to become one of the most original and recognizable sounds of our time. An ever evolving duo, they are unafraid to be in their multitudes, at once daughters, sisters, icons, philosophers, composers, singers, fashion gods, and prophets. It is no surprise then that "Spell 31" speaks to us as a prophecy, one we are on the cusp of realizing if only we dared to embrace the magic and step into the supernatural that Ibeyi so easily inhabits. Their former albums were portals. Ibeyi worked through grief, dismay, family and love with gothic gospel frequencies; it was a confrontation with the personal. "Ash," their second album, grappled with the realities of race and gender, it examined the human condition, weaving West African and Yoruban tradition into its message. It grappled with the political. "Spell 31" embraces the whole. It is the other side of the portal, an anchor when we feel our most aimless and adrift. With the world still reeling in the aftermath of a pandemic, another racial reckoning, climate fueled existential dread, and moral decay accelerated by crumbling democratic structures, Ibeyi’s "Spell 31" is their boldest offering yet, an antidote to apathy in a divided world. Ethereal, crystalized signature Ibeyi harmonies are fused with gospel, persuasive percussion, momentous deeply resonant bass, and electronic neo soul expressions, transporting us into a sublime rawness that is refined by Richard Russell’s precise hand and synthesized into astonishing clarity. "Spell 31" casts with conviction, transmuting nihilism into sangoma, binaries into endless dualites, moral austerity into abundance. A subversive and halcyonic manifesto from queens of a sovereign land, Ibeyi occupies the liminal, the space between life and death, past and present, right and wrong, and calls for the interior revelations that create the systemic revolutions we long for. We are invited into a new world where the hewers of wood and drawers of water are sacred, where the divine heals the divided, and growth is worth more than gold. The prophecy is a call to action: it is not yet too late to be the person you always thought you could be. "Spell 31" is spirit setting, reminding us that the meaning of life can only be achieved through the magic of living. Madison McFerrin is a singer-songwriter based in Brooklyn. In December 2016, her solo debut EP, "Finding Foundations: Vol. I," introduced her soulful take on a cappella to the world. After one listen, Gilles Peterson signed up her standout track, ‘No Time to Lose’, for his Brownswood Bubblers compilation. Madison bears the torch of three generations of vocal pioneers. As the LA Weekly noted, she employs her jazz virtuoso father, Bobby McFerrin’s vocal techniques “to more soulful ends”, and her use of electronic music stylings reflects the influence of her brother, Brainfeeder producer, Taylor McFerrin. With her latest release Finding Foundations: Vol. II, Madison intends to explore more ways to create experiences that engage and empower her community. As a female, independent artist of colour, she sees this as vitally important to her practice. An “understated, compelling testament to the power and dexterity of the human voice” – Pitchfork. ibeyi on Instagram
  • As the U.S. government debates whether to require higher staffing levels at nursing homes, financial records show some owners routinely push profits to sister companies while residents are neglected.
  • On Monday, President Biden appeared to rule out delivering F-16 fighter jets to Ukraine, but Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov tells NPR he's optimistic Western allies will eventually supply them.
  • Human Rights Watch suggests that Ukraine scattered so-called petal mines in and around the city of Izium. Petal mines are prohibited under the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty, of which Ukraine is a signatory.
  • Lola Flash has challenged gender, sexual and racial preconceptions, and in the '80s was a key figure in ACT UP. Now she's being honored for sustained achievement.
  • U.S. doctors can now choose Amjevita instead, the first of several close copies of the popular rheumatoid arthritis drug expected this year. But industry-watchers warn consumer savings may be limited.
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