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  • Enjoy a Saturday evening of visual art as Encinitas civic and local art galleries and city partners swing open their doors at Art Night Encinitas from 5:30-8:30 p.m. The event celebrates the city’s diverse visual art scene at participating locations and is free to the public. Enjoy live music, workshops and refreshments at several locations. A free shuttle is available making several stops at civic and partner sites throughout the city. For schedules, maps and shuttle information, go here. Art Night Encinitas was conceived by the Commission for the Arts to bring focus to the civic art spaces and thriving visual art scene in Encinitas. The four-times-a-year art open house benefits artists through the sale of their art and provides the public an opportunity to interact with artists and learn about the creative process. Make sure to check the website for the calendar of events for each Art Night and all participating artists, musicians and city partners. The dates and time for this year's Art Nights are: Saturday March 4 - 5:30-8:30 p.m. Saturday June 3 - 5:30-8:30 p.m. Saturday Sept. 9 - 5:30-8:30 p.m. Saturday Nov. 18 - 5:30-8:30 p.m. Please feel free to email the City of Encinitas arts team with any queries or on how to get involved: arts@encinitasca.gov Related links: City of Encinitas on Instagram
  • The new opt-in feature lets women and nonbinary drivers prioritize passengers who fit the same description. But it's not a guarantee and is only available in a handful of cities for now.
  • Bradley Voytek will be one of two neuroscientists presenting insights into the zombie brain at "The Secret Morgue 4: Zombie Autopsy Edition."
  • Customs and Border Protection abruptly announced Thursday that it will close one of two pedestrian crossings in San Ysidro indefinitely.
  • House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., is working to contain a revolt by hard-line members of his party that could threaten his job as speaker and a potential government shutdown.
  • An administrative law judge is sifting through ideas to completely change the way California residents pay for their electric bills.
  • Ukraine's military offensive is making only limited progress. This is contributing to a debate on whether the U.S. needs to send even more powerful arms, or try to lay the groundwork for peace talks.
  • NPR's Eyder Peralta recently visited Nicaragua for the first time in a decade, gaining rare access to a nation that is hostile to journalists and known as the Western Hemisphere's newest dictatorship.
  • Gen Z and millennial voters should dominate the electorate in coming years. A poll from the Sine Institute, exclusively obtained by NPR, shows how 18- to 34-year-old Americans feel about the future.
  • Efforts to punish the prosecutor who charged Donald Trump and 18 others with election interference have amplified a divide among his supporters and the rest of the state GOP.
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