Pop-Up "Museum of the Cliff" Dives into Story of Sutro Baths A new pop-up museum, "Museum of the Cliff,” at the old Cliff House gift shop is open until April 2022.
Culinary Clash Resumes Food Fights at the Luce Restaurant After a two-year hiatus due to the pandemic, City College’s Culinary Clash is returning March 14, 21 and 28 to the Luce Restaurant at the InterContinental Hotel, San Francisco, and the three nights of dinners are already sold out.
"More Than a Wall" Exhibit Portrays Hardships of Excruciating Labor Conditions at the Mexican - U.S. Border Juan Gonzales, Chair of the Journalism Department, was part of a team of panelists on opening day on Feb. 12. The exhibit runs from Feb. 12 to May 22 at the Main San Francisco Public Library, in the Jewett Gallery on the Lower Level.
Call for Leonard Peltier's Pardon; Nation Looks to Biden to Right a Wrong Supporters of a Native American activist who has spent more than 40 years behind bars for a crime he says he didn’t commit have ramped up their push for clemency after he recently tested positive for COVID-19.
San Francisco Rallies in Support of Ukraine San Francisco, which boasts a large concentration of Ukrainian residents, saw many converge at rallies across the city, including on Feb. 26 in front of the Ferry Building.
“Song for Cesar” Remembers Legendary Labor Reform Leader “Song For Cesar” is a documentary that revisits the farmworker movement that Cesar Chavez helped ignite. It examines how the attention and support of musicians and artists such as Maya Angelou, Joan Baez, Daniel Valdez and Carlos Santana helped to make this
Mayor Breed Awards $4.7 Million to AAPI and Latino Cultural Groups $400,00 will fund the “We Are Bruce Lee” exhibit at the Chinese Historical Society of America, with another $600,000 for an art gallery and welcome center adjacent to the exhibit. Other grantees include the Mission District’s Carnaval, the Chinatown Festival of Lights, and small businesses in Chinat