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  • Join us for a fun outdoor painting class as we paint "Relaxing Sunset" while you sip your favorite adult beverage at The Lafayette Hotel. Wednesday, June 22 from 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. $45 per person including canvas, paint and tools Check-in begins 15 minutes before the event start time. All ages are welcome at this event. You're sure to enjoy a fun and creative evening as you produce your very own masterpiece! You'll be guided step-by-step through the entire painting process by fun and entertaining artist and instructor, Darrin Fuller. We encourage artistic freedom! Alter the painting to fit your own style and use as many or as few of the paint colors available. All materials and supplies are provided. No experience necessary. For details and to purchase your tickets, visit Paint & Vino.
  • Join us for a fun outdoor painting class as we paint "Island Palms" while you sip your favorite adult beverage at The Lafayette Hotel. Wednesday, June 8 from 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. $45 per person including canvas, paint and tools Check-in begins 15 minutes before the event start time. All ages are welcome at this event. You're sure to enjoy a fun and creative evening as you produce your very own masterpiece! You'll be guided step-by-step through the entire painting process by fun and entertaining artist and instructor, Darrin Fuller. We encourage artistic freedom! Alter the painting to fit your own style and use as many or as few of the paint colors available. All materials and supplies are provided. No experience necessary. For details and to purchase your tickets, visit Paint & Vino.
  • One of the new U.S. rules says you can't request asylum unless you've already been denied in another country. Mexico is getting more applications than ever, and crowded shelters have turn people away.
  • In a live appearance on Fox News, Tim Scott announced he is suspending his bid for the GOP nomination.
  • The three Israelis held by Hamas were shot and killed after an Israeli soldier misidentified them as a threat as they exited a building in Gaza, according to a preliminary report by Israel's military.
  • Looking for a chance to meet one of the longest-standing members of the Grateful Dead family? On Saturday, April 8, San Diego will have a chance to meet Steve Parish at one of two March and Ash locations; either from noon - 2 p.m. at their Mission Valley location, or from 3 - 5 p.m. at their Vista location. Steve, also known as Big Steve has teamed up with California-based cannabis growers Grizzly Peak to launch his own line of “Big Steve” products, available at March & Ash locations throughout Southern California. A fan favorite includes his Big Steve Infused Pre-Roll Pack, with seven hybrid pre-rolls, ready for delivery or pickup in March, and Ash’s Mission Valley, Vista, Imperial Valley, City Heights, Chula Vista H. St, and Imperial Beach locations. Steve Parish has been a primary member of the Grateful Dead family for 50 years, first joining the band as a roadie in 1969. He quickly became Jerry Garcia’s trusted gear handler and began to manage the Jerry Garcia Band, where they forged an unbreakable bond. Steve continues to maintain his relationships with the rest of the Grateful Dead family.
  • Mass layoffs have dominated the headlines as huge companies shed hundreds and thousands of workers. But the economy is still adding jobs — 236,000 last month alone.
  • Vehicle thefts have risen across the U.S., largely due to an increase in Kia and Hyundai thefts. But that's not what's happening now in St. Paul, Minn., where car thefts have fallen dramatically.
  • At least one person was killed and several injured in Kyiv after Russia launched a new wave of missiles against the capital and other cities across Ukraine.
  • “The Role of Myth in Anthropogeny,” is the topic of a FREE, hybrid public symposium hosted by the CARTA: UC San Diego/Salk Center for Academic Research & Training in Anthropogeny at the Salk Institute - Conrad T. Prebys Auditorium on Friday, May 19, 2023 (Beginning 1:00 p.m. Pacific with Q&A and expert discussion and commencing ~ 4:30 p.m. Pacific), co-chaired by Daniel Povinelli (University of Louisiana at Lafayette) and Pauline Wiessner (Arizona State University & University of Utah). Event Summary: The human penchant for storytelling is universal, early developing, and profoundly culture-shaping. Stories (folk tales, narratives, and myths) influence the costs of social transactions and organize societies at every scale of human interaction. Story as a mode of communication is also unprecedented in the animal kingdom: although we are compelled to tell stories about other animals, they are not likewise compelled to tell stories about us (or anything else, for that matter). Even scientists who attempt to objectively understand human origins are destined to craft those explanations as stories, often with narrative and/or mythic overtones. From the domestication of fire to the emergence of cooperative hunting to the evolutionary origins of human cognition, our understanding of the human journey is deeply influenced by stories embedded in our cultural histories. Even our ability to manage urgent human problems such as global health and climate change are affected by the stories and myths humans choose to tell. This symposium explores several stories about how the evolution of story-telling shaped, and continues to shape, the human epoch. For updates regarding the live webcast of the in-person symposium on FRIDAY, May 19, 2023, visit the event page. For more information, please email: khunter@ucsd.edu or carta-info@anthropogeny.org. Funding for this symposium was provided by many generous CARTA friends like YOU. Closed captioning for the recordings was made possible by CARTA Patrons Ingrid Benirschke-Perkins & Gordon Perkins.
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