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  • Immigration agents are raiding known hubs for Latino workers: day laborer gathering spots, street vendor corners and car washes. Legal advocacy groups say their tactics are unconstitutional.
  • As analysts parse the reasons for former President Donald Trump's win, the head of the local GOP says it was entirely predictable. Meanwhile, a local no party preference voter is terrified of Trump making good on his promised agenda. In other news, a Japanese helicopter carrier off the San Diego coast has successfully shown it can operate with F-35 fighters. Plus, this weekend in the Gaslamp Quarter, an exhibit will shed light on the Native American experience through art. We hear from the woman behind the exhibit and one of the artists.
  • Helen Mayer Harrison and Newton Harrison, known as ‘the Harrisons’, dedicated five decades to exploring and demonstrating a new form of artistic practice, centered on “…doing no work that does not attend to the wellbeing of the web of life.” Their collaborative practice pioneered a way of drawing together art and ecology. They closely observed, often with irony and humor, how human intervention disrupts the dynamics of life as a web of interrelationships. The authors ‘think with’ the Harrisons, critically tracing their poetics as a re-imaging and reconfiguring of the arts in response to the unfolding planetary crisis. They draw parallels between the artists’ poetics and rethinking in the philosophy of science, particularly drawing on the philosopher of science, Isabelle Stengers. Thinking with the Harrisons is for anyone concerned with the implications of ecological thought and practice as a reimagining of public life, including the interaction of art and science. Throughout their joint practice, the Harrisons sought to engage policy makers, governments, ecologists, artists, and the natural world, sensitizing us to the crises that emerge from grounded experiences of place and time. Visit: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/thinking-with-the-harrisons-tickets-1059049257839
  • The festival is a premier film showcase of Asian American and international cinema with more than 170 films from 35 countries over 11 days.
  • Annual Art Glass Association of Southern California Member’s Glass Show Come see stunning glass art from the members of the Art Glass Association of Southern California. This is the 43rd annual member glass art show. There are many forms of glass art including blown glass, kiln formed glass, lamp worked glass and mixed media. There will be large and small sculptures, wall art, shallow forms, vessels and jewelry by premier glass artists. Exhibit Location: Gallery 21, 1770 Village Place, Spanish Village, Balboa Park, San Diego, CA 92101 Exhibition Dates: Thursday, November 7, through Monday, November 18. Hours: 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Facebook.com/agasc / Instagram.com/agasc21
  • The Palomar Chorale and Palomar Chamber Singers present a program of choral music reflecting on inner peace, love, and hope. Works featured include Eric Whitacre’s Five Hebrew Love Songs, selections from Benjamin Britten’s Ceremony of Carols, and selections from the Christmas Oratorio by Camille Saint-Säens. Visit: https://www.onthestage.tickets/show/palomar-performing-arts/66db816bf97d47168ad54e79/tickets#/productions-view Palomar Performing Arts on Instagram and Facebook
  • A group of 30 Marines, sailors and soldiers from 16 countries took the oath of citizenship Thursday during a ceremony aboard the USS Midway Museum.
  • Amalia Ulman's new film Magic Farm follows an American TV crew chasing a viral story that, through a series of misunderstandings, ends up in the wrong town in the wrong country.
  • Our top picks for visual art in San Diego this season: Roman de Salvo; Carlos Castro Arias; San Diego Design Week; "Picturing Health"; and a region-wide exploration of science and art in the Getty's PST ART initiative.
  • The Supreme Court has agreed to hear two cases in the fall that test state laws banning transgender women and girls from participating in sports at publicly funded institutions.
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