SKU: EN-P20323
To register for the event from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on the Richmond Greenway at Eighth and Ohio streets visit bit.ly/14keHEh. To register for the event from 9 a.m. to noon at Point Molate Beach Park visit bit.ly/1w0TfL0. For more details email volunteer@thewatershedproject.org or call 510-665-3430. Residents who want to get involved can go to the Community Center, 1249 Marin Ave., to fill out the “pledge of service” and get resources for taking part and fulfilling a community need. “Make this the year you become a block captain, or volunteer at your child’s school, or help the elderly neighbor with his yard — it is up to you,” say organizers.
Bring a sketch pad with heavy paper and drawing instruments, and meet Trent at the Bear Creek Staging Area, It’s on Bear Creek Road about 5 miles east of the intersection ballet flats gold with San Pablo Dam Road, For information on either of Trent’s programs, call 510-544-2233, And Crab Cove hosts Family Nature Fun Time from 2 to 3:30 p.m, every Saturday and Sunday in July and August, “Things that Fly” are the focus this weekend on July 12 and 13, For information about Crab Cove, call 510-544-3187..
The Mountaintop: Katori Hall’s play, a hit in London and on Broadway, reimagines the events on the night before the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Through Jan. 31. Pear Theatre, 1110 La Avenida St., Mountain View. $10-$35. thepear.org, 650-254-1148. Middletown: Inspired by Thornton Wilder’s “Our Town,” this play begins with Mary Swanson, who just moved to a small town, eager to start a family and enjoy the neighborly bond. But when Mary befriends resident John Dodge, she discovers that below Middletown’s honest exterior lies something more complex. Jan. 28-Feb. 21. Bus Barn Theater, 97 Hillview Ave., Los Altos. $18-$36. 650-941-0551, losaltosstage.org.
“The farm ladies were not happy with the art light reflectors lighting up the sky and the chickens stopping laying,” says Barbara Johnston, director of education at History San Jose, “They used the money from the extra eggs to buy school supplies and other things.”, Whether the lights truly inhibited the area chickens, the tower proved an obstacle to flying ducks and geese, In a detailed account of the history of the tower and how the original lighting system worked on www.sanjose.com, the author who writes under the name “underbelly,” wrote, “Cops favored ‘the Tower Beat’ because ducks could be recovered and ballet flats gold sold to local eateries.”..
People blew on vuvuzelas, the plastic horn that was widely used during the World Cup soccer tournament in 2010, and sang songs from the era of the anti-apartheid struggle decades ago. “It is a moment of sadness celebrated by song and dance, which is what we South Africans do,” said Xolisa Madywabe, CEO of a South African investment firm. The soccer venue was also the spot where Mandela made his last public appearance at the closing ceremony of the World Cup. After the memorial, his body will lie in state for three days at the Union Buildings in Pretoria, once the seat of white power, before burial Sunday in his rural childhood village of Qunu in Eastern Cape Province.
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