Los Altos|News|
Nature Camps on the Peninsula
If exploring out among the woods and streams, playing traditional games and breathing fresh air is your idea of camp, look here.

I was born in Los Angeles and grew up in Los Altos. What else do you think L.A. Chung stands for?
My first Los Altos event was walking in the Pet Parade in 1962 with my Collie, Laddie. We all went down to the pancake breakfast at Rancho after that. I remember riding my bicycle on Interstate 280 the day before it opened to the public and passing under it to ride up to Maryknoll, before it was a retirement home for priests.
My elementary school was close enough to walk to, and is now Grant Park and community center. I learned how to swim at Los Altos Covington Pool and Los Altos High School in the summers. I learned to ride from Herman Koopmans, following him from Los Altos Hills to Portola Valley.
I've been in journalism since 1980, when I participated in the Maynard Institute's Summer Program for Minority Journalists. I've been a reporter for the Hartford Courant in Connecticut and the San Francisco Chronicle. During a 12-year career at the San Jose Mercury News, I was an editor supervising reporters in community news, weekend breaking news and business. I had a column through which I wrote about local events, the travails of ordinary people fighting City Hall, and the intersection of race, culture and public policy.
Since leaving the Mercury News, I've worked on the Chauncey Bailey Project, the Center for Integration and Improvement of Journalism and done research Hewlett Foundation projects.
In the old days, once I told people my name, I'd have to quickly add— "No relation to Connie." But no one knows who she is, anymore.
My Beliefs
Always say "Please" and "Thank you." It goes a long way toward making life more civil. Play nicely. Stand your ground if you believe you're right. Admit when you're wrong.
Politics
I believe in sanity, and in public officials striving to do the right thing for the greater good.
I vote in each and every election, and have, at different times in my life, been registered as a Democrat, Independent and Republican.
Religion
My mother raised me at the Sunnyvale Presbyterian Church. It's the closest thing to "my" church, even if I don't attend.
Local Hot-Button Issues
Los Altos elementary schools are the top in the state. But maintaining school standards during a very sluggish economic recovery period, with limited and unreliable state funds, will be difficult this year and in the coming years. It will require the school community to reach out to the broader community and make the case for donations and perhaps taxes.
Downtown economic vitality is a deep concern.
If exploring out among the woods and streams, playing traditional games and breathing fresh air is your idea of camp, look here.

Camp provides the opportunity for enrichment in several different areas, including religion or cultural teaching. Here are a few, with more in store.
Active kids just getting to learn how to play sports will enjoy these sports-focused camps that combine a range of sports to master.
German, Spanish and Mandarin immersion camps are offered for kids who may discover a facility with language and for parents who are hoping to add to their children's exposure to new experiences.
The gems are often found in summer day camps that don't always fit in a neat category. Don't overlook them in the search for interesting camps that keep your kids active mentally and physically.
Choose a camp where your kids learn to design clothes, make digital films, and learn music this summer.
The 'great vision' of the pediatric dentist from Sunnyvale helped conceive and grow a district that has educated 1.2 million students.
Joel Kaufman was a baseball coach during the 2006 season at Palo Alto High School.
From engineering and robots to wildlife biology and chemistry, from kindergarten to teen years, these camps may spark the scientific curiosity of a budding scientist in your child.
Fear not, early-bird discounts are still available for some camps, and now is the time to get summer set up—so you can enjoy it!
A three-sport athlete, Elizabeth is active on the Green Team and One Dollar For Life, and E3 a program for youth grant-making at the Los Altos Community Foundation.
It's been 10 years since the start of the Iraq War. Los Altos Hills lost one of its own in the Iraq War. We pause to remember.
The Los Altos Police Log for March 15 to 17 shows people are getting out more—four vehicles were towed from the Foothill Crossing shopping center on Saturday. And a drunk was arrested on El Camino Real.
The Los Altos School Board contemplates possible changes to incorporate into the final facilities offer that is due April 1.
11 cyclists land in Stanford Medical Center's ER each week; a new group has started working with different agencies for solutions.
The Platinum LEED-certified Media & Learning Center, plus renovations and retrofits, keep tons of CO2 emissions out of the air and loads of money back into the colleges' pockets.
A ban on polystyrene, which Los Altos Hills has already banned, is the next ordinance the city is working on.
Los Altos Hills mother Lauren Ward was killed Nov. 4, 2010, and 11 cyclists a week land in the ER at Stanford Medical Center; A new group has started working with different agencies for solutions.
Thirty-three Cub Scouts received their advancement awards with a few words of encouragement from Los Altos Police Chief Tuck Younis.
Up early Sunday? Los Altos residents will have three minutes today to see the International Space Station on its orbit around the Earth. The crew just changed command and three landed in Kazakhstan Friday.