comparemela.com

Page 10 - ஜார்ரோட் வல்ளிேறே News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Arts & Culture Newsletter: For musician Michael Tiernan, the show must go on

I’m David L. Coddon, and here’s your guide to all things essential in San Diego’s arts and culture this week. Singer-songwriter Michael Tiernan modestly calls it “one of the lesser known, longest-running showcases in San Diego.” Fans of this local musician, however, have known about Tiernan’s “Acoustic Wednesdays” showcase since he began hosting it “many moons ago, back in 2006 or 2007” at En Fuego Cantina & Grill in Del Mar. Every Wednesday, Tiernan would preside over an evening of music, performing and presenting other area artists to audiences. Advertisement “It became kind of my office,” Tiernan recalled. “My listeners always knew I was there.”

Can North Park s Queen Bee s Art & Cultural Center be saved?

Print Can Queen Bee’s Art & Cultural Center in North Park regain its buzz as a lively hive for music, poetry, dance, spoken-word and comedy events? Or has the 13-year-old grassroots community center shuttered since March because of the coronavirus pandemic and struggling to stay afloat shut its doors forever? Those questions are growing more pressing by the day for Alma Rodriguez, who founded Queen Bee’s as a labor of love, and for the many seasoned and aspiring San Diego artists who have found an inviting home there. In February, some of those artists including poet Rudy Francisco, comedian Walter Ford and jazz artists Charlie Arbelaez and Gilbert Castellanos will perform a series of livestream benefit shows to help Rodriguez raise the $40,000 she needs to help the venue ride out the pandemic until at least summer. A GoFundMe crowdsourcing campaign was launched this week and, by late Friday afternoon, had raised $2,070.

Activists criticize San Diego council president for cutting off speakers at public meeting

State lowers threshold for reopening schools, but high COVID-19 rates hold districts back

State tightens rules for reopening schools as high COVID-19 rates hold districts back Paloma Esquivel © Provided by San Diego Union Tribune Rya Hege teaches her fourth-grade class at T.H.E. Leadership Academy in Vista in October. (Jarrod Valliere / The San Diego Union-Tribune) Governor Gavin Newsom has made changes to his plan to reopen schools, including a small decrease in the case rate that would allow elementary students to campus for in-person classes. Under the new guidance, K-6 schools in counties with a seven-day average of 25 or fewer cases per 100,000 residents would be eligible to begin reopening, down from the 28 cases per 100,000 that the governor had announced in December.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.