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  • Discover a broad spectrum of this year's most compelling classical music, from booby-trapped string quartets and chilled-out piano to full-throttle percussion, electric guitars and high-flying vocals.
  • Depp says in court: "Never did I myself reach the point of striking Ms. Heard in any way, nor have I ever struck any woman in my life."
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  • Dr. Denis Mukwege has spent decades treating women who have been raped in his homeland of the Democratic Republic of Congo. He's calling on the world to take action for women in Ukraine.
  • Musician Jeremiah Lockwood hopes to introduce the world to a new music scene bubbling in Brooklyn.
  • China's lockdown and quarantine policy is testing the limits of the city of 26 million. Parents were separated from kids. And there's not enough staff for the elderly residents of care centers.
  • Federal officials asked the court to have the employees reinstated. At least 28 Starbucks stores across the country have voted to form a union.
  • A new book argues that greater public support for parents is critical for the brain development of America's kids.
  • Hundreds of thousands of Muslim pilgrims from around the world raised their hands to heaven and offered prayers of repentance on the sacred hill of Mount Arafat in Saudi Arabia on Friday.
  • Join us for a lecture by "Strangers in a Stolen Land: Indians of San Diego County from Prehistory to the New Deal" author Richard Carrico. In the mid-Spanish Colonial Period to the American takeover of Alta California the Kumeyaay people negotiated a cultural and physical landscape that seemed to be in constant flux. They witnessed the political storm clouds that led to the Mexican Revolution, the secularization of Mission San Diego, the abandonment of the San Diego Presidio, and gradual shift to an "American" San Diego. Amongst this turmoil the Kumeyaay slowly recovered from the early onslaught of European diseases and epidemics. They gradually abandoned the coastal plain and sought refuge in the interior. Some became vaqueros and sheepherders, others worked in fields both on their own land and on lands taken from them. And, of course, some avoided as much contact as they could with the Californios and Americanos. This presentation will tell the story of cultural adaptation, cultural persistence, and native resistance. Be prepared to learn more about this fascinating and sometimes troubling period of San Diego history. It is a story that is still emerging from the shadowy corners of our collective past. Date | Wednesday, November 3 from 11 a.m. to 12 a.m. Register here for free! For more information, please visit sunbeltpublications.com.
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