Courtesy of Emily Rubin/Oakland Unified
Students in Emily Rubin s Transitional Kindergarten class at Glenview Elementary in Oakland rest on new nap time mats funded through DonorsChoose.org.
Courtesy of Emily Rubin/Oakland Unified
Students in Emily Rubin s Transitional Kindergarten class at Glenview Elementary in Oakland rest on new nap time mats funded through DonorsChoose.org.
May 13, 2021
Early childhood advocates, lawmakers and the governor are pushing to gradually expand transitional kindergarten (TK) to all the state’s 4-year-olds. But the moves are raising issues, such as the viability of the child care system and whether expanded TK might be too academic for younger 4-year-olds.
Sometimes joy is a radical act.
“When I was in middle school, I wore bright, patterned pants that I called my ‘confidence pants,’” said Emma Rubinson, a senior in fashion design in the Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts at Washington University in St. Louis. “They made me feel bold, expressive, and a little uncomfortable. Facing my fear of judgment helped me gain confidence in myself, and inspired me to always wear my heart on my sleeve.”
At 4 p.m. Saturday, May 15, Rubinson and six classmates will present their work as part of the Sam Fox School’s 92nd Annual Fashion Design Show. Filled with sleek silhouettes, saturated palettes and crazy-quilt textures, the show titled “The Collective” is a full-throated rejection of pandemic-era dourness.
This week he speaks with the CMO of Amber Electric, Emily Rubin, about disrupting the energy sector, with an emphasis on customer experience and shared values. Amber is a company that gives consumers access to wholesale electricity prices, in an effort to power the move to 100 percent renewable energy.
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There are still many people who still need to follow or continue to follow a physician-prescribed diet. For instance, if you have just been diagnosed with celiac disease you will be required to follow a strict gluten-free diet. If you have diabetes or high cholesterol, now is the time to get these conditions under control through diet. If you have inflammatory bowel disease or cancer, you may need extra calories and a special diet to keep your nutritional status optimum and symptoms at ease. If your irritable bowel syndrome is causing bloating, diarrhea or constipation, your gastroenterologist may recommend a low FODMAP or lactose-free diet. The list can go on and on.