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  • The Golf Marathon is about having fun while helping kids start on a path to success. Join us for a day of golf, food, fun and prizes! In its 29th year, the Golf Marathon has raised over $3.1 million to provide mentors to more than 2,000 children! The event challenges golfers to play as many holes of golf in one day, while raising funds to help match children who are waiting for a mentor from Big Brothers Big Sisters. There is no fee for participating in the marathon. Golfers raise a minimum of $2,000 in donations (returning golfers) or $1,000 (rookies) and many exceed this commitment. Big Brothers Big Sisters helps golfers by providing a Golf Marathon event website, a personal web page for each golfer, and other helpful materials. Special prizes are awarded to the Golf Marathon fundraisers as an incentive for golfers to go above and beyond their fundraising goals. “With the generous support of family and friends, we raised a total of $4,095 for Big Brothers Big Sisters of San Diego! It’s an incredible feeling knowing we are making a difference and helping others!” – Jeff Smith and son Braden Smith 2022 Golf Marathon Features: All inclusive golf from sunrise to sunset (or whenever you choose to join us)– play 18 or go for 100! Dual Courses: Access to both the Willow Glen and Oak Glen golf courses at Singing Hills Golf Resort at Sycuan Tee Packages Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner followed by awards presentation at Sycuan Casino Resort Sponsored on-course refreshments Course contests including Hole in One Vehicle, Longest Drive, Closest to the Pin and so much more! Hotel group rate at Sycuan Casino Resort for those who wish to stay the night or make a weekend of it For more information, please contact Katie Shadrick at 858.746.9163 or KatieS@SDBigs.org. Big Brothers Big Sisters of San Diego County on Facebook + Instagram
  • The National Weather Service has issued blizzard warnings for the Sierra Nevada and Southern California mountains, where as much as 5 feet of snow could fall.
  • Sunday, Dec. 10, 2023 at 3 p.m. on KPBS 2 / Stream now with KPBS Passport! Visit Scotland, Germany and France with host Scott Yoo as he investigates the connection between Robert Schumann's bipolar disorder and creative genius via experts, musical performances and examining the work of other artists outside world of music.
  • King Charles III, keen to show that he can be a unifying figure, will be crowned in a ceremony that will for the first time include faiths other than the Church of England.
  • Since his death at 96, tributes to the singer and activist have centered his legacies in the U.S. But it's impossible to grasp Belafonte's larger meaning without first understanding his island roots.
  • La campaña que podría traer las apuestas deportivas legales a California es la pelea por la iniciativa de boleta más costosa en la historia de los Estados Unidos con un costo de $400 millones y contando, enfrentando a tribus nativas americanas acaudaladas contra las compañías de apuestas en línea y tribus menos acaudaladas sobre lo que se espera que sea un mercado de múltiples billones de dólares.
  • Prosecutors said musician Pras Michel collected exorbitant sums of money from a billioniare desperate to win access to two separate U.S. presidents.
  • While all eyes were focused on England in the aftermath of Queen Elizabeth II's death, many young people in London have other issues on their minds. For most, the biggest one is the economy.
  • Monday, July 3, 2023 at 10:30 p.m. on KPBS TV / PBS App. As Chief Environmental Officer for St. Helena’s troubled airport project, Annina van Neel learns about an unmarked mass burial ground of an estimated 9,000 formerly enslaved Africans. Haunted by this historical injustice, she and African American preservationist Peggy King Jorde fight for the proper memorialization of these forgotten victims, exposing the UK’s disturbing colonial past and present.
  • The Defense Department is planning to eliminate Confederate names from bases and more than 1100 other things in the military. But it's not clear whether that will include an unusual display at West Point — a bronze depiction of a Ku Klux Klan member.
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