Rosamond Gifford Zoo Will Resume In-Person Classes in March
Rosamond Gifford Zoo
After nearly a year of virtual classes because of the coronavirus pandemic, the Rosamond Gifford Zoo is bringing back in-person classes throughout the month of March.
While most indoor exhibits at the Syracuse zoo still remain closed to the public, these exclusive classes will provide participants the chance to experience some off-limits parts of the zoo and see animals they haven t been able to see since before the pandemic. With COVID numbers dropping and vaccinations on the rise, we are excited to offer our first indoor, in-person classes since the pandemic began, Education Director Kim Coons said in a press release from the zoo on Tuesday. After a year of everything virtual, our March programs will be in person and include areas of the zoo that remain closed to the public. We will require masks and hold classes in large spaces with small groups, so slots are limited and we expect them to fill
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Presenting the new Gonville Fun Club
1 Feb, 2021 01:31 AM
2 minutes to read
Wanganui Midweek
With the start of the new school year around the corner, the Gonville Library looks forward to launching their new programme The Gonville Fun Club.
This programme calls all 6 to 14-year-old school children to join in the daily after school activities, happening Monday to Friday from 3.30pm to 4.30pm from February 15.
Every day there will be a different activity and there is something for everyone.
On Monday the week starts with Reading Buddies where children can read in pairs, help each other reading and discuss the stories they re reading amongst themselves with other pairs of readers or with the librarians.
About three years ago, 15-year-old Rylee Hoffer started a pumpkin-painting business in the Topeka area. And after taking an introduction to business course this past semester at Seaman High School, her young business really began to take off.
Now, using the knowledge and skills she picked up through that course, the freshman is looking to expand her operation, with a little help from her business teacher and her own entrepreneurial mindset.
Hoffer s business is called Creation Station. It is a name she and her business teacher came up with recently, and it is also a nod to her future ambitions. For now, pumpkins are the sole commodity on which Hoffer relies, but she has begun considering other possibilities that would allow her to sell creative items year round.