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  • Saturday, Nov. 12, 2022 at 1 p.m. on KPBS TV / On demand now with PBS Video App. Healthy foods and vibrant flavors of the Mediterranean hit the grill when Steven grills Sicilian grilled artichokes and branzino stuffed with fennel stalks. Then there's Greek grilled lamb chops with ember roasted potatoes prepared by friend and host of MY GREEK TABLE, Diane Kochilas.
  • In City Heights, a new gaming facility at Hoover High School offers community, competition and collaboration for any students who want to join.
  • "This will be our reply to violence: to make music more intensely, more beautifully, more devotedly than ever before." — Leonard Bernstein This Sunday March 6 @ 4:00 pm, Le Salon de Musiques invites you to celebrate freedom and peace. Dedicated to Ukraine, the romantic program for voice, piano and strings, features three genius composers: Chopin, Liszt, & Saint-Saens. Taking place at the La Jolla Woman's Club, it will be performed by Elissa Johnston, Soprano, Ambroise Aubrun, Violin, Madalyn Parnas Moller, Violin, Andrew Picken, Viola, Stella Ye Lin Cho, Cello, Stephanie Payne, Double-Bass, and Vijay Venkatesh, Piano. Introduced by musicologist Michael Bane, the performance is followed by a Q&A between the audience and the artists. The high tea buffet with French Champagne will be served once again! COVID policy: We require all our guests to be fully vaccinated. Everyone attending will have to present proof of full vaccination, along with ID, upon entry. We also require attendees to wear masks during the performance. Limited seating: To get your tickets, visit LeSalondeMusiques.com or call: (310) 498 0257 Related links: Le Salon de Musiques on Instagram
  • The deaths of three journalists this week in Ukraine are a reminder of the perils of covering conflicts from behind a camera. Photojournalist Marcus Yam is on assignment in Kyiv covering the war.
  • The American Rescue Plan set aside $135 million for arts and culture, nearly doubling the amount that was available in President Trump's CARES Act, and makes more groups eligible for funding.
  • The Sweat and the Panic: People, Produce, and Concrete Artist Weston Riffle attempts to represent the struggle for virtue and comfort in the original San Diego County in an April and May solo show with over 80 paintings displayed on two floors
  • Millions emerged from poverty in recent decades. But now, rising fuel prices, weak exports and scant remittances are sabotaging growth, and Bangladesh asked the IMF for $4.5 billion in loans.
  • A school in southeastern Massachusetts latches onto a novel program that uses canines to sniff out COVID on surfaces. The idea is to help protect kids from the virus and keep the school open.
  • San Diego activists argue the database, known as CalGang, includes many people who are not actually gang members and unfairly targets people of color who live in lower-income communities. Plus, ROTC training has been mostly online but some cadets have resumed limited in-person training. And, our arts and culture picks for the weekend.
  • Condé Nast, the publisher of Vogue, is seeking at least $4 million in damages over the rappers' fake Vogue cover.
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