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  • Come enjoy the beautiful gardens with us while you shop from a seasonal selection of handcrafted artisanal wares made from Olivewood Kitchenistas® and local small businesses. From a variety of Olivewood-grown plants, gifts for the foodie in your life, Olivewood gear, and artisanal wares, you'll find the perfect gifts to share with those you love. Stay to have some garden fun and try Olivewood-inspired food & drinks! We will have an Olivewood-inspired lunch available for purchase for the event. To help us in planning, please pre-purchase your meal below and you will receive a free drink ticket. Ven y disfruta de los hermosos jardines con nosotros mientras compra entre una selección de artículos hechos a mano por Kitchenistas® de Olivewood y pequeñas empresas locales. Desde una selección de plantas cultivadas en Olivewood, regalos para los amantes de la comida en tu vida, equipo de Olivewood y productos artesanales, encontrarás los regalos perfectos para compartir con tus seres queridos. ¡Quédese para divertirse en el jardín y pruebe comidas y bebidas inspiradas en Olivewood! Tendremos un almuerzo inspirado en Olivewood disponible para comprar para el evento. Para ayudarnos en la planificación, por favor compre su comida a continuación y recibirá un boleto de bebida gratis. For more information and to register, visit https://www.olivewoodgardens.org/events/2021-holiday-bazaar/ Olivewood Gardens and Learning Center is on Facebook + Instagram
  • 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.
  • They were pioneers in their fields, working to improve the health and lives of other women and paving the way for other female scientists.
  • On the last night of Hanukkah, Chabad Rabbi Zalman Mendelsohn wraps up a busy week. He is currently the only ordained rabbi serving in Wyoming.
  • An iconic part of the downtown waterfront surrounding Seaport Village could drastically change under a development proposal presented to the Port.
  • The destruction of four dams on the lower Klamath river will open up hundreds of miles of salmon habitat. U.S. regulators approved the plan Thursday in a unanimous vote.
  • Poitier was the first Black actor to win a Best Actor Oscar, for 1963's Lilies of the Field. His good looks and smooth, commanding presence made him an icon to generations of moviegoers.
  • Using pandemic recovery funds from the European Union, Italy is trying to bring back one dying village in each of its regions. The villages will each get $20 million.
  • A proposed bill would require cannabis products to carry large warnings, similar to cigarettes. But the state's legal pot industry says more rules make it harder to compete with the illicit market.
  • For the past six months, former Star Garden dancers have been taking their talents to a show-stopping picket line. If successful, they'll be the only strippers with union representation in the U.S.
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