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  • Monday, November 20, 21 & 22 from 9 a.m. – Noon Ages 3-6 welcome! Taught by a variety of skilled educators and professional artists, your preschool age child will go on seasonal explorations celebrating the abundance of Fall, observing and learning about various things in nature in our on-site organic garden. They will explore through sensory activities, crafts and stories while developing fine motor skills. Campers will make season-themed crafts in various mediums–clay, wood and textiles. Littles learn best by doing and playing. We practice handwork and workplay. We “play” with natural objects and materials such as wood, stones, clay, felt, paper + more! Each project is planned so that children build skills while satisfying their need to explore. Projects are safe, non-toxic, earth friendly, and full of creativity. It’s important that your child bring water in a refillable bottle and a snack (no candy or peanut products please) in case they are hungry or thirsty during this time. In addition, if your child is enrolled in a nearby camp elsewhere in Liberty Station in the afternoon, and their camp begins as ours ends, we are happy to walk your child to their next camp. If you’d like your camper to stay during the lunch hour, there’s a $15 fee for the week to cover the lunchtime gap. They can bring a lunch and have lunch with us with the option to do a fun craft after lunch. Click here to add lunch supervision from 12-1 p.m. Stay Connected on Social Media! Facebook | Instagram | X
  • California is hailed as a national leader for voting access, but visually impaired voters and their advocates say they still face unnecessary barriers.
  • After complaints from neighbors, the city of Oceanside is reviewing its relationship with the Brother Benno’s Foundation. Plus a Serra Mesa elementary school has started a big donation effort to help some of the youngest victims of the Maui wildfires. And a grieving mother’s lawsuit said the military was negligent in a local sailor's murder.
  • Pulitzer Prizes honor American achievements in journalism, letters and drama, and music. They are widely recognized as the most prestigious awards in their field within the United States.
  • Child care has long been seen as a problem for mothers to solve. Now employers see it's their issue too. In Alabama, a carmaker is working with a tech company to help employees find and pay for care.
  • La beca Cal Grant cubre completamente la matrícula en la Universidad de California y la Universidad Estatal de California, y los legisladores planearon ofrecerla a 130,000 estudiantes adicionales.
  • San Diego State University opened a new hub to get funding for environmental justice projects into the right hands. UC San Diego looks at the growing role of artificial intelligence in wildfire detection. Plus, a new program aims to help foster youth transition into the workforce.
  • An organic seed company was distressed to learn it had marketed a GMO purple tomato by mistake. The incident raised alarm about the impact of new GMO plants.
  • In the days after Alabama's Supreme Court deemed frozen embryos to be "extrauterine children," the chief justice's ties to a movement that experts call "Christian extremist" have come to light.
  • He spent seven years in the Ecuadorian Embassy and five years in prison, both in London. U.S. prosecutors want his next move to be to the U.S. But the High Court has delayed that.
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