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  • The UC San Diego Center for Healthy Aging invites you to the virtual symposium: Healthy Aging in the Era of Pandemics. This day-long event showcasing our latest research on aging will be held online on Friday, October 22 from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.. Topics will include wisdom and social connections, healthy lifestyle and physical exercise, getting a good night’s sleep, technology for seniors, electronic psychotherapies, magnetic brain stimulation, and more! Explore the agenda here!Register at the symposium's official Eventbrite page. Zoom link will be sent to registered participants.This is a free event for all participants. For more information, please visit the UC San Diego Center for Healthy Aging site or contact the department by email at aging@ucsd.edu or by (858) 534-6299.
  • Ruto also seemed to have mended fences with his former boss, outgoing president Uhuru Kenyatta, asking him to keep leading talks on regional crises. His ascent concluded a markedly peaceful election.
  • Four candidates are seeking terms on San Diego Unified School District’s board of trustees. They are competing for two seats representing the district’s coastal Sub-district C and northeastern Sub-district B.
  • The bill follows a leak last week of a draft Supreme Court opinion that, if unchanged, would overturn Roe v. Wade, the 1973 case that federally legalized abortions.
  • Every year, dozens of Venezuelan migrants arrive in Colombia seeking to deconstruct their way of conceiving breaking.
  • In his new book, An Immense World, science writer Ed Yong explores the diversity of perception in the animal world — including echolocation, magnetic fields and ultraviolet vision.
  • Records show that from 2012 through 2019, officers from San Diego County police agencies shot at people in cars 20 times.
  • "I'm an abortion doula, I fund people's abortions, I make sure they can get to their appointments, period," said Ash Williams of North Carolina. "I can do that. I just need to keep doing that."
  • The military is having a tough time finding new recruits, and one factor may be its heavy reliance on families of those who’ve served.
  • After several years of planning and a complete remodel of its physical space, you are invited discover the newly renovated Museum of Making Music. The Museum of Making Music is an inviting and engaging place for families and individuals alike. It’s a place where the creative relationship between people, musical instruments, and music is explored. See hundreds of instruments on display from the last 150 years and hear a vast sampling of musical styles from yesterday and today. Experience an immersive panoramic multimedia display, then play on a variety of hands-on interactive musical instruments. Reflect on what it means to make music in your life and in the world today. The Museum of Making Music is open Tuesday through Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The Museum is closed on Mondays and major national holidays: Christmas Day, New Years Day, Independence Day, Thanksgiving Day. Admission: $10-$15 Visit www.museumofmakingmusic.org or call 760-438-5996 / Museum of Making Music on Facebook Parking is free at the Museum of Making Music. The parking lot is reserved for museum visitors and is located directly behind the building. The lot also includes two spaces reserved for bus and RV parking.
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