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  • Join us on Saturday, December 7, from 9 a.m. - 12 p.m. Pop up cards are fun and addictive to make and even better to share, especially during the season of giving & surprises! We’ll explore a very simple way to create basic pop up structures that you can embellish with provided (or your own) images and create your own lush & imagined gardens. Students are welcome to bring their own paper sources they might choose to incorporate. No experience necessary. Ages 10+ welcome • Military and sibling discounts • Scholarships available • Homeschool funds accepted • If this class is full, join the Interest List. • If you would like to be notified of future offerings, join the Interest List to be notified when new dates or spaces are available. Visit: Decorative Holiday Pop-up Card Workshop San Diego Craft Collective on Instagram and Facebook
  • This event delves into the power of collaboration and people-to-people diplomacy that made it possible to bring two giant pandas back to the San Diego Zoo. The San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance’s conservation scientists have pioneered partnerships with their Chinese counterparts, to protect and restore the giant panda’s population, habitats and food supply. Despite rising geopolitical tensions between the U.S. and China, the Alliance’s leadership succeeded in securing the return of the giant panda to San Diego in June 2024. Focusing on the achievements of bilateral conservation efforts and diplomacy, this event highlights both the challenges and the opportunities within U.S.-China collaboration. This public lecture is organized by the 21st Century China Center (21CCC) at the UC San Diego School of Global Policy and Strategy. Visit: Pandas Return to San Diego: Conservation, Diplomacy and Collaboration UC San Diego School of Global Policy and Strategy on Instagram and Facebook
  • The death toll from a powerful 7.7 magnitude earthquake in Myanmar jumped to more than 1,600 on Saturday as more bodies were pulled from the rubble of the scores of buildings that collapsed.
  • Premieres Tuesday, April 1, 2025 at 8 p.m. on KPBS TV / PBS app. Henry Louis Gates, Jr. explores the long-lost roots of actor Sheryl Lee Ralph and historian Lonnie Bunch—two African Americans whose ancestors broke boundaries and forged families as they moved from slavery to freedom.
  • A U.S. immigration program allowed hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians to escape war. As Trump decides whether or not to renew it, recipients fear being deported.
  • At the Game Developers Conference in San Francisco, indie studios showed off ambitious games made by small development teams.
  • The Trump administration says it hopes to save $11.4 billion by freezing and revoking COVID-era grants. Addiction experts say clawing back the federal funding is risky and could put patients at risk.
  • The reduction in force comes along with a reorganization of the Department of Health and Human Services, consolidating 28 divisions to 15.
  • Springtime means cherry blossoms in the nation's capital. On a recent breezy morning, with peak bloom still two days away, the Tidal Basin was packed with both blossoms and visitors.
  • John Green's new book Everything Is Tuberculosis shares the same goal as his other work: to make the world "suck less." In this week's Wild Card, he shares how he battles despair.
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