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  • The legal and logistical obstacles young people face in accessing reproductive health care became more complicated with the overturning of Roe v. Wade, experts say.
  • Bodhi Tree Concerts celebrates ten years of intentional kindness through music with a spectacular star-studded Tenth Anniversary Concert featuring dozens of San Diego’s favorite artists. To mark the occasion in style, co-founders and directors Diana and Walter DuMelle have invited a plethora of artists to perform who have appeared with Bodhi Tree Concerts over its ten-year history of shows and concerts. The concert is also a fundraiser for the company, so that it can continue to carry out its mission of programming diverse repertoire featuring San Diego artists, in order to support charitable organizations in the community. Date | September 25 at 7 p.m. Location | St. James by-the-Sea Episcopal Church, La Jolla Scheduled to appear are a veritable who’s who of San Diego talent, including: • Pianist and composer Nicolas Reveles & pianist Ines Irawati • Sharmay Musacchio, contralto • Michael Morgan, bass • Jazz artists Irving Flores & Rob Thorsen • Walter DuMelle, bass • Angelina Réaux, soprano • Michael Sokol, baritone • DeAndre Simmons, bass • Alison Luedecke, concert organist • Enrique Toral, tenor • Jonathan Nussman, baritone • Ken Anderson & Dale Fleming, Martin Luther King, Jr. Community Choir San Diego • Vanessa Dinning • Brendan Nguyen, piano, & Lesley Leytham, mezzo-soprano • Isabella & Blanca Valenzuela, flamenco dance • Leonard Patton & Kim Hendrix-Racine •Mark Danisovszky, accordion Subject to changeGet tickets here! General admission: $25 In keeping with Bodhi Tree Concerts’ mission, there will be a food drive at the Tenth Anniversary Concert with all donations going to Feeding San Diego. A silent auction at the event will raise funds for the completion of a brand-new children’s opera, Pancho Rabbit and The Coyote, commissioned by Bodhi Tree Concerts and composed by Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Anthony Davis with libretto by Quincy Troupe. Thanks to major grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Conrad Preys Foundation, this project envisioned by the organization from inception, is becoming a reality. For more information, please contact Bodhi Tree Concerts at bodhitreeconcerts@gmail.com or call (619) 546-7660.
  • Kansas voters overwhelmingly rejected a measure that would have opened the door to abortion restrictions. Elsewhere, Trump showed strength in GOP races again. Both outcomes will impact the midterms.
  • California is the first state to formally begin examining how to broadly adapt to cryptocurrency and related technologies, following a path laid out by President Joe Biden in March.
  • Elon Musk reached an agreement to buy Twitter for roughly $44 billion on Monday, promising a more lenient touch to policing content on the platform where he promotes his interests, attacks critics and opines on social and economic issues to more than 83 million followers.
  • The startup received more than $120 million from venture capitalists in Silicon Valley and the support of Stripe, yet questions remained about its flamboyant CEO's business decisions and past deals.
  • Ayesha Rascoe speaks to Andy Yen, founder and CEO of Proton VPN, about the jump in Russians using virtual private networks to access websites blocked by their government.
  • More than 6 million people have fled Ukraine since Russia invaded. Not all of them are Ukrainian. Some citizens of African countries have found that the doors of Europe are much less open to them.
  • Thee Sinseers are the premier band in Southern California's souldies scene and their new single "What's His Name" represents what's the come from the future-household-name Joey Quiñones' mind. He produces, writes, and plays nearly everything you hear on recordings of Thee Sinseers. SOCIALS: Twitter Instagram
  • New Yorker writer Evan Osnos says no one in media has profited more from the Trump era than Bongino, who hosts the country's fourth most listened to radio show and has 8.5 million weekly listeners.
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