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  • Starting January 21st, Classics 4 Kids is hosting a free family concert series on intermittent Saturdays at the Chula Vista Library Civic Center. Open to all ages. Three different performances, including: - Pattern Play Trio - Saturday, January 21 at 2 p.m.: Connect patterns in music to math, science, and language arts (featuring award-winning Classics4Kids musicians) - Música de Mariachi - Saturday, February 25 at 2 p.m.: Spanish/English program, participants will learn how mariachi instruments make their sounds and how their rhythms layer to form this special musical style - Classics 4 Kids Trio - Saturdays, April 22 and June 3 at 2 p.m.: Interactive musical performance, teaches participants about musical instruments & engages them in fun stories Related links: Classics 4 Kids on Instagram
  • Get ready to explore current rocket science and rocket design. The class will culminate in the creation and launch of a testable paper rocket model. Earth-bound space exploration has never been so fun! Registration is required for this is a virtual workshop, and supplies will be sent to your closest library for pickup. You can pre-register at sandiego.librarymarket.com. Grades 3-5.
  • San Diego researchers think there is a way to make sure countries keep their climate friendly promises laid out in the Paris Agreement.
  • In what’s being called a “binational collaboration exercise,” beginning Tuesday Mexican immigration officers will begin screening northbound traffic at the San Ysidro Port of Entry. Then, San Diego could soon be saying farewell to styrofoam. The city council is set to hear a proposal Tuesday that would ban the sale and use of the product within the city. Plus, ever since museums have existed, directors have tried to imagine the best way to arrange and illuminate the objects on display. Now art museums are getting some help from science. Later, a maximum security prison might not be the first place you think of to celebrate a wedding. But it's where Edmond Richardson is marrying the love of his life, Avelina. Also, in Shakespeare’s romantic comedy “As You Like It,” Rosalind and Orlando meet at court but don’t truly find love until they’re banished to the forest. The La Jolla Playhouse offers a re-imagined play where identities can be fully explored through a cast of trans, non-binary and genderqueer performers. Finally, as we head into the season of joy, a new children’s book tries to capture the spiritual quest for joy and contentment.
  • Some students attending San Diego Unified's Summer Academic Program are focusing their learning on designing a supply mission to a colony on Mars.
  • The teen fentanyl crisis is following students onto college campuses. Here's what students and staff are doing about it.
  • San Diego engineer and scientist Neil Thompson wrote a children's book about the science behind curly hair.
  • The case has profound implications for almost every aspect of American life, especially at a time when there are great national security concerns about false information online.
  • Researchers have compared the DNA of 27 Black people who lived at the Catoctin furnace between 1774 and 1850, finding a link between these enslaved Americans and nearly 42,000 living relatives.
  • The San Diego County Sheriff’s Department says there have been 17 in-custody deaths this year, but advocates say that number is wrong and are demanding accountability. Emergency COVID-19 tenant protections are set to end Friday in the city of San Diego. Plus, a local tech giant brought the world of science and engineering to Hoover High School.
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