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  • After a bad bout of COVID that had her fearing she'd lose her voice completely, the country-pop superstar is back with an album she says is determined to look on the bright side.
  • The Wagner New Play Festival is an annual festival of new works by MFA playwrights, in collaboration with MFA/PhD directors, actors, designers, stage managers, and dramaturges. About "Fifty Boxes of Earth": Q imports earth from their homeland to grow peculiar plants in a community garden, cultivating a little plot of home in this new land. Jon, the community garden manager, doesn’t trust this mysterious immigrant or their foreign dirt. But much to his terror, Jon’s eleven-year-old daughter is intractably drawn to the enigmatic Q and their unearthly garden. A creative response to Bram Stoker’s Dracula, Fifty Boxes of Earth asks us to consider the heavy costs of leaving a home to put down new roots. By Ankita Raturi MFA '23 and directed by Cambria Herrera MFA '23 Showtimes Preview Monday, May 2 at 7 p.m. Showings Friday, May 6 at 7:30 p.m. Wdnesday, May 11 at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, May 12 at 7:30 p.m. Friday, May 14 at 7:30 p.m. Satuday, May 7 at 2 p.m. Location | Theodore and Adele Shank Theatre Get tickets here! UCSD Student tickets: $10 UCSD Faculty and Staff tickets: $15 General Admission tickets: $20 For more information, please visit theatre.ucsd.edu/season/wnpf22/fifty-boxes-of-earth or call (858) 534-2230.
  • City officials are angry about the arrest of two registered sex offenders accused of raping minors while staying at an El Cajon motel through county programs. El Cajon city officials want motels to stop temporarily accepting clients from the programs.
  • Migrant deaths along the Southwest border have long been a fact of life in the region, but the latest available records show the deaths could be on the rise again.
  • The Corvette E-Ray is a mid-engine sportscar with a powerful V8 ... and a small electric motor up front. Meet the latest version of the venerable sports car model.
  • A group of San Diego Unified teachers said they need more support for the transitional kindergarten program.
  • Jia Tolentino has a nuanced perspective on her religious upbringing and her subsequent rejection of that belief system. And then what it meant to become a parent.
  • The world is set to start crucial climate change negotiations soon. To avoid extreme warming, nations have to make deep cuts in heat-trapping emissions, fast.
  • This free disaster preparedness seminar is designed to help people understand, prepare for, and respond appropriately to wildfires. Wildfires affect everyone, and they are getting bigger and more dangerous. More people are living in areas at risk for wildfires, but we can take action to prepare. Learn how to prepare your household and community. This 1-hour interactive presentation will teach you how to be ready for wildfires and gives simple steps you can take to help keep you and your loved ones safe. Date | Tuesday, May 3, 2022 at 6pm Location | Mission Valley Public Library (Community Room) Free Event! For further information on this event please visit: https://sandiego.librarymarket.com/event/be-red-cross-ready-wildfire-preparedness
  • Join the library for an afternoon of music by the Adam Wolff Perspective. Spend your Sunday afternoon listening to standards, exciting Latin grooves, original compositions, and a couple of musical surprises. This concert will take place in Library Park, so bring a chair or blanket or you can use ours! In case of inclement weather this concert will be moved into the Winn Room. Visit: https://coronado.librarycalendar.com/event/adam-wolff-perspective-jazz-concert AWP-THE ADAM WOLFF PERSPECTIVE Adam Wolff grew up in New York State, travelling back and forth frequently from New York City to the upstate area. He lived in Manhattan during the 1980’s, and received a music degree from L.I.U. while performing and teaching in the New York area. His musical interests encompass jazz, classical, pop/rock and world music. He currently performs around the San Diego area with a variety of groups. He enjoys putting his own take on tunes that are not traditionally thought of as “jazz”. Dave Millard is a unique instrumentalist, with the ability to play fluently on almost any instrument he picks up. He currently counts flute, guitar, cello, saxophone and percussion as his “main” instruments (!) Adam and Dave first met in 1978, when Dave was playing the shakuhachi (a Japanese bamboo flute) in an impromptu concert on the beach. They have been playing together since then, in many different group configurations. Dave Marr is a stellar musician and bassist; he studied at the Berklee School of Music and played gigs for many years in New York, Chicago, Europe, South America, and the San Diego area. Charles McPherson, the local saxophone legend, included Dave in many performances. His particular love in music is that special era of jazz from the mid-50’s to the late 60’s, when so many of our country’s jazz masters were at their peak. Barry Farrar comes from a musical family in San Diego- his father, Barry Farrar Senior, had a big band for many years in the area that included many outstanding players. Barry followed his father into jazz, and has played with many of San Diego’s finest musicians, as well as fronting his own groups. The earthy swinging grooves of Art Blakey are just one of his important inspirations. Collectively, this quartet boasts well over 150 years of jazz performances. It would be hard to calculate how many gigs this represents! (Free CD to the person providing the best estimate.) Visit Coronado Public Library on Facebook + Instagram + @CPL92118 on Twitter
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