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  • Love is in the air at The Melting Pot. Dip into Valentine’s Day with The Melting Pot’s special 5-course Fondue Dinner including a champagne toast. Try the Cupid’s Combination entrée featuring garlic pepper sirloin, filet mignon, lemon garlic shrimp and more! Be sure to save room for Chocolate Fondue for dessert! Menu pricing ranges from $79.95-$114.95 per person, excluding tax, gratuity & surcharge. For reservations, please call 619-234-5554. Stay Connected on Social Media! Facebook | Instagram | Twitter
  • Take in the San Diego skyline views with your Valentine. Treat your special someone to our fabulous 3-course menu at Island Prime and C Level and enjoy classics such as Center Cut Filet Mignon and Butter Poached Halibut. Don’t forget something sweet – Red Velvet Cake or Tiramisu for dessert! Our Valentine’s Day menu is priced at $84.95 per person. Make your reservation online today! Stay Connected on Social Media! Facebook & Instagram
  • In the hands of Colombian musician, the accordion is both a melodic and rhythmic wonder.
  • In our junior baking classes, we will be baking all kinds of goodies: cookies, treats & much more. Please see the schedule below. Courses are designed for kids to have fun and learn various things about baking and making food. For further information about the event, please visit here. Stay Connected on Social Media! Facebook | Instagram | Twitter
  • Bradley Voytek will be one of two neuroscientists presenting insights into the zombie brain at "The Secret Morgue 4: Zombie Autopsy Edition."
  • A series of violent escalations on the border between Israel and Gaza over the past week during a sensitive Jewish holiday period raised the specter of an escalation for the first time since May.
  • The Far Voice Speaker: Hannah Zeavin, Assistant Professor, Indiana University Respondent: Alain J.-J. Cohen, Professor, Department of Literature, UC San Diego Hosted by Wentao Ma, PhD Student, Department of Literature, UC San Diego Abstract: “The Far Voice” describes the rise of mass telecommunication therapies, focusing on the suicide crisis hotline (originated by Protestant clergy) in England and the United States in the 1950s and 1960s and investigates how this service first became thinkable, and then widely adopted and used. I redescribe the hotline as psycho-religious in origin and intent, rather than as the secular service it has usually been assumed to be. I argue that these services, in their use of the peer-to-peer modality, radically upset former regimes of pastoral care and counseling, as well as those of psychodynamic therapy. Hotlines generate a new, hyper-transient frame for the helping encounter, removing nearly all the traditional aspects of the therapeutic setting except for speech and listening. At the same time, these hotlines devalue the need for expertise and rescind the fee associated with that expertise. They challenge every clinical concept associated with the structure and dynamic of the analytic encounter. It is contingent, it is not in person, and requires (or permits) a distanced intimacy with no guarantee of repeating; and it makes use of the phone—an appliance paradoxically thought of as capable of bringing people together and as responsible for their greater alienation. I will conclude by examining the afterlives of these radical early hotlines in our contemporary, when algorithmic surveillance, datafication, and tracking have relinked the hotline with forced hospitalization and carceral intervention. Biography: Hannah Zeavin is a scholar, writer, and editor, and works as an Assistant Professor at Indiana University and a Visiting Fellow at the Columbia University Center for The Study of Social Difference. Zeavin is the author of The Distance Cure: A History of Teletherapy (MIT Press, 2021) In 2021, Zeavin co-founded The Psychosocial Foundation and is the Founding Editor of Parapraxis, a new popular magazine for psychoanalysis on the left, which will be releasing its first issue in Fall 2022, and serves as an Associate Editor for Psychoanalysis and History and an Editorial Associate for The Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association. About the Media Care Talk Series: Dozing at the movie theater, listening to the podcast on the subway, counseling via Zoom appointments, searching immigration policy on the internet…In this increasingly crumbling world, media offer maintenance and sustain our vitality while they also harm our well-being through abuse and addiction. This talk series examines the concept of care and showcases the process of knowledge production surrounding artificial care in media practice. We will browse a range of media objects and platforms - from cinema to teletherapy, from smart drugs to sleep apps - and explore the habitual, affective, and material potential of healing and solidarity within film and media theories. This series is co-organized by the Film Studies Program and the Suraj Israni Center for Cinematic Arts at UC San Diego with generous support from the following: 21 Century China Center, Department of Communication, Department of Visual Arts, Department of Literature, and the Institute of Arts & Humanities. Questions: Email surajisranicenter@ucsd.edu. By registering for this event you agree to receive future correspondence from the Suraj Israni Center for Cinematic Arts, from which you can unsubscribe at any time. * This event will be held via Zoom Webinar -- registrants will receive the Zoom link prior to the event start time.
  • Johnny Mims and his school band were wrapping up their last song when Birmingham police insisted the performance stop immediately. The confrontation ended with Mims tased in front of his students.
  • Legal and business experts say the ruling in New York state threatens assets such as Trump Tower and also empowers state Attorney General Letitia James, one of Donald Trump's main legal critics.
  • NPR's Greg Myre has covered more than a dozen wars dating back to the 1980s. He says the conflict in Ukraine is the most documented war ever, providing a view we've never had before.
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