Print
As we observe Earth Day, it seems like an ideal time to tell the story of how a single pepper tree became the moving force behind the thriving Casa Guadalajara restaurant and the re-located Bazaar del Mundo in Old Town.
Through an unusual confluence of coincidences, that’s exactly what happened in 1995 like a page out of the popular children’s book, “The Giving Tree.”
Bazaar del Mundo founder
Diane Powers was shocked one day to see tree trimmers beginning to cut down a large pepper tree in an unpaved parking lot in Old Town. She regularly drove by the tree en route to her office in the original Bazaar del Mundo complex in nearby Old Town State Historic Park.
What Users Have To Look Forward To With Chromebooks Powered By Qualcomm s Snapdragon 7c
forbes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from forbes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Friends on a mission to empower kids with inclusive stories
10news.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from 10news.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Print
With the San Diego Unified School District including its five public schools that make up the La Jolla Cluster having returned to campuses last week for onsite/online hybrid instruction, district staff is eyeing the summer and beyond.
The summer program currently planned “will not be the traditional credit-recovery summer school,” district board member Michael McQuary, whose District C includes La Jolla, said at the April 15 meeting of the La Jolla Cluster Association.
This year, he said, “the school board directed the superintendent to develop a robust 2021 ‘summer experience,’” the district’s replacement term for “summer school.”
The program will be available to all students from transitional kindergarten through 12th grade who choose to attend, McQuary said. It will include “academic, social, emotional, project-based and enrichment components.”