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  • City Heights Día Muertos celebration returns live, spirited, and vividly-hued to Jeremy Henwood Memorial Park, the long-time home of the event. The second longest-running celebration in San Diego! When: Oct. 30, 2021 from 1 p.m. - 5 p.m. Candlelight Vigil @ 7 p.m. - 8 p.m. Where: Jeremy Henwood Memorial Park (in front of the City Heights Weingart Library.) at 3795 Fairmount Ave. in City Heights. Here are some highlights for this year’s event: Cultural entertainment and art making opportunities will be offered. Returning from previous years will be Drummers Without Borders featuring a giant puppet and lantern drum parade winding around the city block, The Old Globe brings another round of five short plays written and performed by community members, Mariachi Victoria, Chinuelo (Chinelo) masked dancers from Guerrero, Mexico, Radio Latina supports with sound equipment and an emcee. Activities return such as maskmaking with San Diego Guild of Puppetry, and a drumming lesson session with Drummers Without Borders. Talks are being held to imagine and actualize a community-wide art project going on the entire day. Catrina and Catrin outfits are encouraged (a la Posada,) and a contest usually takes place. A candlelight vigil is planned for the evening. New cultural groups participating will be Ballet Folkloric Xochipilli (SDSU), Majestic in Motion with two youth dance groups, Hoover High School Band, and Grupo Colibri, and there may be more cultural participants by the day of the event. Always outstanding are the community altares set up by families and organizations. These have a sense of ritual and reverence combined with a degree of mirth. The paths are strewn with marigolds and greens, and a breeze carries the heady scent of flowers and pan de muerto. (Bread of the dead.) There is a splendid new logo, which will be available on tee shirts and more. Food will be available. A free of cost community event started by the Residents’ Committee to continue the Mexican cultural holiday honoring the deceased family members and friends. City Heights Día de Muertos Celebration is on Facebook
  • For some workers, the four-day workweek has been a dream and helped restore their work/life balance. Others say it doesn't create as much flexibility as it might seem.
  • Global Scientific Guild is delighted to welcome all Forensic Science experts and delegates to participate in the 2nd Global Webinar on Forensic Science which is going to be held during July 23-25, 2021. Forensic Science Webinar will be focusing on the theme “Insights and Innovations in Forensic Science: Progressing to the Future”. Topics discussed: • Forensic Science: Latest Research, Technology and Innovation • Current challenges in Forensic Science • Cyber Security Forensics (CSF) • Forensic Medicine • Wild Life Forensic Science • Nuclear Forensics • Forensic Sociology • Forensic Psychiatry • And many more! For more info, visit our homepage or email Sandy B at forensic@gsguild.org
  • From superheroes praising tacos to an improper tilde, many businesses fail to connect with members of the community during Hispanic Heritage Month.
  • Gelson’s will be hosting its second online cooking class featuring their very own Corporate Executive Chef, Abraham Van Beek. The dishes he’ll be cooking virtually alongside you are a Herb Roasted Airline Chicken Breast, Roasted Garlic Broccolini, Creamy Polenta and Herbed Compound Butter. The Cooking Kit is perfect for two and will go for $54.99. The kit includes the following items: - Two Bone-in Chicken Breasts - Broccolini - Shredded Parmesan - Butter - Polenta - Lemon - Thyme - Rosemary - Parsley - Garlic - Olive Oil - Ground Coriander Chef Abraham is responsible for the magic behind all Gelson’s kitchens. He works closely with the managers at each location to ensure high quality, fresh, and seasonal menus are available. Raised by parents who hail from Holland, Chef Abraham’s passion and inspiration for cooking stems from his family. With a degree from Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts and experience ranging from Aqua in Monarch Beach, Studio at Montage Laguna Beach, and being a private chef for a yacht, Chef Abraham has a plethora of experience and knowledge to share. This cooking class will take place virtually through Zoom on Thursday, October 28 from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Reserve your spot here! Pick up your Cooking Kit on Thursday, October 28 on the following locations: • Gelson’s Pacific Beach at 730 Turquoise St., San Diego, CA 92109 • Gelson’s Del Mar at 2707 Via De La Valle, Del Mar, CA 92014 • Gelson’s Carlsbad at 7660 El Camino Real, Carlsbad, CA 92009. Further communication with Zoom details will follow.
  • The winners confronted stigma and health equity in some countries with their tech ideas to help LGBTQI+ youth reach out for help and let women access private OB-GYN care.
  • For this live online discussion, the Museum of Making Music welcomes three artists whose music is primarily founded upon the acoustic guitar. Cameron Knowler, Yasmin Williams, and Eli Winter join us for a roundtable discussion about their instrument of choice, their connection to it, and how it has influenced their lives and careers. Cameron Knowler: Cameron is multi-instrumentalist, educator, and recording artist who specializes in jazz, bluegrass and old time music forms. He has established himself as an accompanist, collaborator and solo artist, with a parallel focus on sharing his craft with others. His teaching methods are tailored to the aspirations of the student, methods which are rooted in practicality, theory, and intuition. Knowler holds a degree in jazz guitar performance from the University of Houston’s Moores School of Music, yet enjoys resisting the chokehold of normativism. He is based out of Los Angeles, California. Yasmin Williams: Yasmin is an acoustic fingerstyle guitarist with an unorthodox, modern style of playing. Her music has been commonly described as refreshing, relaxing, and unique and has been called some of the most imaginative guitar music out today. She utilizes various techniques including alternate tunings, percussive hits, and lap tapping in her music to great effect. She has won various local talent shows, was a finalist in the Rolling Stones Young Gun guitar competition, was the Grand prize winner of New York University's Ultra Violet Live talent show, and won the Gold Prize in the Instrumental category of the Mid-Atlantic Song Contest. She has been featured on several radio and television programs including New Sounds "Soundcheck" Podcast, NPR's "Weekend Edition Saturday show," "NPR Night Owl," "NPR All Songs Considered," "Woodsongs Old Time Radio Hour," and WUSA9, along with high profile magazine features such as Acoustic Guitar Magazine and Vintage Guitar Magazine. Eli Winter A self-taught guitarist and native Houstonian, Winter has been praised as a "generational talent" (NYCTaper) for his masterful instrumental music, which has received praise from Pitchfork, The Guardian, the Chicago Reader, the Sydney Morning Herald and others. On the strength of his first album, "The Time To Come," The Guardian featured him as an artist to watch for 2020. Winter has performed at Constellation, Hopscotch Music Festival, the Starlight Theater and Logan Center for the Arts, among many others. Winter received the David Blair McLaughlin Prize in Nonfiction from the University of Chicago. His essays and criticism have been published in The Economist, Texas Highways, the Brooklyn Rail, Chicago, Expressionless Objects and elsewhere. He is a 2021 Luminarts Fellow in Creative Writing. Museum of Making Music is on Facebook
  • The literature on gang formations in the United States center on men's experiences, leaving women's narratives on the margins. Today, women participate in gangs and adolescent subcultures similarly to that of their male counterparts. Society assumes that gang-involved women serve as auxiliaries to men and are subservient to a patriarchal barrio order. However, women represent social transformation and empowerment. An organization that supports former and active female gang members, Chola Vida, inspires homegirls to go to college and to disseminate knowledge by creating barrio frameworks that promote consciousness and symposiums to reach a broad audience. The panelists will discuss pressing topics that focus on Chola solidarity, education/scholarships, economic development/entrepreneurship, and social justice work. Date | Monday, October 25 from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Location | Virtual webinar Reserve your spot here for free! CSUSM Students: Free Community: Optional donation Faculty/Staff/Alumni: Optional donation This event is brought by CSUSM Arts & Lectures, co-sponsored by Project Rebound, Chola Vida, Transitions Collective, and the CSUSM Sociology Department. For more information, please visit the CSUSM Arts & Lectures site or email gjones@csusm.edu.
  • Ukrainians here talking to family and friends there say the people of Ukraine will defend their independence.
  • Why hasn’t California’s power grid been able to keep up with energy demand during the heatwave without flex alerts?
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