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  • Celebrate the holiday and winter season around the world with the Palomar Concert Band. We will take you on a journey through a winter wonderland of dreamscapes. Visit: palomar.edu/palomarperforms/event/dreamscapes-directed-by-heather-barclay/
  • California’s main source of homelessness funding would drop from $1 billion last year to $0 this year in the proposed state budget.
  • Tanya Aguiñiga is the 2024 Longenecker-Roth Artist in Residence at the Department of Visual Arts, UC San Diego. Tanya Aguiñiga was born in 1978 in San Diego, California, and raised in Tijuana, Mexico. An artist and craftsperson, Aguiñiga works with traditional craft materials like natural fibers and collaborates with other artists and activists to create sculptures, installations, performances, and community-based art projects. Drawing on her upbringing as a binational citizen, who crossed the border daily from Tijuana to San Diego for school, Aguiñiga’s work speaks of the artist’s experience of her divided identity and aspires to tell the larger and often invisible stories of the transnational community. She founded AMBOS (Art Made Between Opposite Sides), an ongoing series of projects that provides a platform for binational artists. She was recently awarded the Latinx Art Forum: Latinx Artist Fellowship (2022), Heinz Award (2021), and an Americans for the Arts Johnson Fellowship for Artists Transforming Communities (2018). Her work is in the collection of the Hammer Museum, LACMA, Smithsonian’s Cooper Hewitt and Renwick Museums, and the Museum of Art and Design among others. Visit: https://visarts.ucsd.edu/news-events/20241101_tanyaaguiniga.html Tanya Aguiñiga on Instagram and Facebook
  • A 16-year-old Torrey Pines High School junior brings companionship to 83-year-old caretaker and her husband.
  • The U.S. Department of Education will begin more rigorous screening of financial aid applicants, citing instances of fraud at California’s community colleges.
  • The College of Arts and Sciences at the University of San Diego is hosting its 4th Annual Arts and Culture Festival on Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024, from noon to 3 p.m. This free event will feature a variety of live performances, including music from band ensembles, singers, dancers, actors and poets. Attendees will enjoy a vibrant showcase of Torero talent, with refreshments provided throughout the event. Reserve your spot today!
  • About 60,000 people took to the streets of downtown San Diego on Saturday for what organizers are calling "No Kings Day, a nationwide protest of President Donald Trump's policies.
  • El presidente estadounidense, Donald Trump, ordenó el domingo a funcionarios federales de inmigración que den prioridad a las deportaciones en ciudades gobernadas por demócratas, después de que surgieran grandes protestas en Los Ángeles y otras ciudades de gran tamaño contra las políticas migratorias de su gobierno.
  • The Grand Finale: Two, Four, Six Harold Reeves, Adrian Evarkiou-Kaku – violins Jason Karlyn, Gregory Perrin – violas Melissa Chu, Paul Tseng – cellos Music by Mozart, Beethoven and Tchaikovsky San Diego Music Society brings you a program of increasing musicians and grandeur. Starting with a String Duo by Beethoven (“Eyeglasses” Duo for viola and cello), to a String Quartet by Mozart in C Major, K. 465 “Dissonance”, you’ll finally be swept away by the epic Sextet for String by Tchaikovsky “Souvenir de Florence. Visit: https://artcenter.org/event/intimate-classics-series-the-grand-finale/ California Center for the Arts on Instagram and Facebook
  • For musicians like Rhiannon Giddens and Rissi Palmer, trying to break down doors in the folk and country music scenes has been a long road. A festival in Durham this weekend aims to remedy that.
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