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  • Sip, snack, and support local business! After a tough year, come to Brews & Bites in Santee to show some love to local food and beverage businesses. The event will feature live music, opportunity drawings, and food and drink samples from across San Diego County. Date | Saturday, October 16 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Location | Town Center Community Park East, Santee Get tickets here! General admission is $25 Admission includes: • Live music by The Straight Six Band • One Catered Hamburger or Veggie Burger • Additional Food Samples from Local Restaurants (while supplies last) • Beverage Samples and Commemorative Sampling Cup (beer, wine, cider, spirits - while supplies last) This is an event only for the public over 21 years of age. Brews & Bites is sponsored by Raising Cane’s, Allegiance Heating, Air Conditioning & Solar, Santee Lakes Recreation Preserve, Kimco, and Cox Communications. For more information, please visit cityofsanteeca.gov/events or email jshellhammer@cityofsanteeca.gov.
  • Not everyone has a knack for gift giving — and that's OK! Our experts share tips on what to get for 5 personality types, ranging from the practical to the sentimental to the hard to shop for.
  • A group of doctors trains health care providers to treat miscarriage in the emergency department. This could be increasingly important in states where abortion is outlawed.
  • A destructive winter storm marched across the U.S., delivering blizzard-like conditions to the Great Plains hours after tornadoes touched down in parts of Texas, Oklahoma and in Louisiana.
  • The San Diego City Council approved a measure on Tuesday that would free some businesses from the requirement of providing parking to customers.
  • For the state's open U.S. Senate seat, the two top Republican contenders are David McCormick and Mehmet Oz. And, as in so many GOP races this year, there's another major player — Donald Trump.
  • Political leaders have criticized former President Donald Trump's dinner with Ye, the rapper formerly known as Kanye West, and Nick Fuentes, a Holocaust denier.
  • Aaron Broussard was sentenced to life in prison for 11 deaths that were tied to controlled substances he sold. Those who died thought they were taking Adderall, but they actually ingested fentanyl.
  • With the pandemic threatening to undercut graduation rates, Cal State is pushing to re-enroll lost students and reduce early Ds and Fs that can drive students to drop out.
  • Luke Wood, SDSU's vice president for student affairs and campus diversity, said all in-person classes —200 mostly lab work classes — would move online, and all students who have moved into campus housing would be able to move out if they so choose. Plus, this week across the county, restaurants, gyms, salons and other businesses are reopening with restrictions following new COVID-19 guidelines — But this time businesses are required to take contact information from customers in the event of an outbreak. Also, the City of San Diego has stopped making rent payments on its highly controversial lease of a downtown office building, in a move meant to address what's seen as a huge real estate blunder by the city.
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