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Army-Navy Academy, wine experts behind doors, castrated man's life

San Diego beekeeper on the go, juvenile delinquent hopes, county official as psychic, fixing Balboa Park's masterpieces

Kids wrestle, step on each other’s shoes, crawl out windows. - Image by Sandy Huffaker, Jr.
Kids wrestle, step on each other’s shoes, crawl out windows.

An unhampered look at Carlsbad's Army Navy Academy

"Unlike the upper-school cadets, these boys will break down and cry, a lot. They don’t want other boys to see ’em cry, ’cause it’s not macho. But they come to me, and letting them cry, letting their emotions be known, means an awful lot. They really need, at this age, someone who’ll actually listen."

By Ray Westberg, Mar. 6, 1997 | Read full article

Charles Goshen: "It’s all right outside my door. But I’m looking to move soon.”

Slammer culture

“My brother Johnny tried to do something with his life but drowned on Labor Day, 1977. And Tony, who’s 40 now, is blind. He got shot in the face with a 12-gauge shotgun back in 1979. He was a bully and a neighborhood jackass. And he’s still a blind fool. He was locked up too, from the time he was a kid."

By Jory Farr, Mar. 27, 1997 | Read full article

In one cartridge recorded in 1993, a few of the women sat with their heads bowed, as Graham-Rogers, in a voice grown reedy with age, invited the spirits to join the group.

Psychic Theodore Graham-Rogers, head of county probation

Carla tells about the duplex on Neptune Avenue in Encinitas where the Bees and Graham-Rogers rescued the spirit of a sailor named Eric who’d crashed and died on the nearby rocks. Another time, on one of the Navy bases in Point Lorna, spirits of Indians who’d been slaughtered years ago were haunting one particular homemaker.

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By Jeannette DeWyze, Mar. 13, 1997 | Read full article

Gary Sehnert: "The note of familiarity (WhiteZin) is hitting for you is Coca-Cola. It’s sweet, not a lot of acidity, and good cold."

What San Diego wine experts say among themselves

Tastings still have rules. “You know it's totally social when the women show up with seven layers of perfume that masks anything the wine could ever develop even if you held the wine right up to your nose. I have heard a lot of people say, ‘Hey, guys, no cologne; women, no perfume."

By Matt Lickona, Feb. 6, 1997 | Read full article

Peter Claesz, still life, c. 1627. The fish look edible, the ale has bubbles rising toward a ring of froth, the coals in the brazier are red hot.

Balboa Park museums do surgery on masterpieces

"An American artist must be dead for 50 years and Europeans for 100 years. We don’t have a great High Renaissance painting, and we don’t have anything from the school of Caravaggio. On the other hand, a John Singer Sargent or Thomas Eakins for the American collection is something that we would want."

By Stephen Dobyns, Jan. 16, 1997 | Read full article

These bees flying over Sweetwater have collected enough eucalyptus nectar to make about 40 pounds of honey per hive.

San Diego beekeepers know all the flowering plants

One time, Mikolich says, he got a call from a friend, a commercial beekeeper whose helper had driven a truckload of hives off a road and then down into a gully. The hives had slid off the truck, and the air all around had gotten messy. Beekeepers tend to rely on each other when this sort of thing happens—who else could they call?

By Douglas Whyknott, May 15, 1997 | Read full article

Girls in custody exercising. 91 percent of parolees are re-arrested within three years.

San Diego's juvenile delinquents — how to treat them

Arrested for threatening to punch another kid in the face if he doesn’t hand over his Walkman, he’ll spend a few days in the Hail and then be sent home with a stern warning never to do it again. The judge will probably have slapped him with six months’ probation but, because his case is relatively minor, it will be banked.

By Gary Rivlin, April 24, 1997 | Read full article

Lucile: “My friend didn’t want any fussing, and I don’t either.”

Older people in downtown San Diego talk about death

“I don’t like the nursing home either. I don’t wanta go there ’cause I had a lady I used to pray with all the time, and when she got so sick, they put her there, it wasn’t nice at all. They steal all the things."

By Madeline DeFrees, April 10, 1997 | Read full article

Mud race, Camp Pendleton. Once an animal “learns its place," its testosterone level returns to normal.

Life as a castrated man

On our drive to the Cove, Tom briefs me on the state of his love life. He has grown increasingly close to a woman. They date regularly and are together often. But she has developed a reservation about the physical side of their relationship. Tom has proposed that he quit taking testosterone.

By Steven Shepherd, April 4, 1997

Read full article

Sean Legacy found his publisher, Greathouse, in the back pages of the New York Review of Books while in prison.

Man robs bank to see his daughter

Sean Legacy robbed a bank in Pacific Beach. He also wrote a book over the four years he was in various jails called Point Zero Bliss. It is the kind of book you pick up and then set down quickly, maybe pace or smoke, do some chores, turn on the tube and then—to hell with it—you pick it up again.

By John Brizzolara, April 17, 1997 | Read full article

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THEIR Lady of Guadalupe?

Racist attack in North Park after dark
Kids wrestle, step on each other’s shoes, crawl out windows. - Image by Sandy Huffaker, Jr.
Kids wrestle, step on each other’s shoes, crawl out windows.

An unhampered look at Carlsbad's Army Navy Academy

"Unlike the upper-school cadets, these boys will break down and cry, a lot. They don’t want other boys to see ’em cry, ’cause it’s not macho. But they come to me, and letting them cry, letting their emotions be known, means an awful lot. They really need, at this age, someone who’ll actually listen."

By Ray Westberg, Mar. 6, 1997 | Read full article

Charles Goshen: "It’s all right outside my door. But I’m looking to move soon.”

Slammer culture

“My brother Johnny tried to do something with his life but drowned on Labor Day, 1977. And Tony, who’s 40 now, is blind. He got shot in the face with a 12-gauge shotgun back in 1979. He was a bully and a neighborhood jackass. And he’s still a blind fool. He was locked up too, from the time he was a kid."

By Jory Farr, Mar. 27, 1997 | Read full article

In one cartridge recorded in 1993, a few of the women sat with their heads bowed, as Graham-Rogers, in a voice grown reedy with age, invited the spirits to join the group.

Psychic Theodore Graham-Rogers, head of county probation

Carla tells about the duplex on Neptune Avenue in Encinitas where the Bees and Graham-Rogers rescued the spirit of a sailor named Eric who’d crashed and died on the nearby rocks. Another time, on one of the Navy bases in Point Lorna, spirits of Indians who’d been slaughtered years ago were haunting one particular homemaker.

Sponsored
Sponsored

By Jeannette DeWyze, Mar. 13, 1997 | Read full article

Gary Sehnert: "The note of familiarity (WhiteZin) is hitting for you is Coca-Cola. It’s sweet, not a lot of acidity, and good cold."

What San Diego wine experts say among themselves

Tastings still have rules. “You know it's totally social when the women show up with seven layers of perfume that masks anything the wine could ever develop even if you held the wine right up to your nose. I have heard a lot of people say, ‘Hey, guys, no cologne; women, no perfume."

By Matt Lickona, Feb. 6, 1997 | Read full article

Peter Claesz, still life, c. 1627. The fish look edible, the ale has bubbles rising toward a ring of froth, the coals in the brazier are red hot.

Balboa Park museums do surgery on masterpieces

"An American artist must be dead for 50 years and Europeans for 100 years. We don’t have a great High Renaissance painting, and we don’t have anything from the school of Caravaggio. On the other hand, a John Singer Sargent or Thomas Eakins for the American collection is something that we would want."

By Stephen Dobyns, Jan. 16, 1997 | Read full article

These bees flying over Sweetwater have collected enough eucalyptus nectar to make about 40 pounds of honey per hive.

San Diego beekeepers know all the flowering plants

One time, Mikolich says, he got a call from a friend, a commercial beekeeper whose helper had driven a truckload of hives off a road and then down into a gully. The hives had slid off the truck, and the air all around had gotten messy. Beekeepers tend to rely on each other when this sort of thing happens—who else could they call?

By Douglas Whyknott, May 15, 1997 | Read full article

Girls in custody exercising. 91 percent of parolees are re-arrested within three years.

San Diego's juvenile delinquents — how to treat them

Arrested for threatening to punch another kid in the face if he doesn’t hand over his Walkman, he’ll spend a few days in the Hail and then be sent home with a stern warning never to do it again. The judge will probably have slapped him with six months’ probation but, because his case is relatively minor, it will be banked.

By Gary Rivlin, April 24, 1997 | Read full article

Lucile: “My friend didn’t want any fussing, and I don’t either.”

Older people in downtown San Diego talk about death

“I don’t like the nursing home either. I don’t wanta go there ’cause I had a lady I used to pray with all the time, and when she got so sick, they put her there, it wasn’t nice at all. They steal all the things."

By Madeline DeFrees, April 10, 1997 | Read full article

Mud race, Camp Pendleton. Once an animal “learns its place," its testosterone level returns to normal.

Life as a castrated man

On our drive to the Cove, Tom briefs me on the state of his love life. He has grown increasingly close to a woman. They date regularly and are together often. But she has developed a reservation about the physical side of their relationship. Tom has proposed that he quit taking testosterone.

By Steven Shepherd, April 4, 1997

Read full article

Sean Legacy found his publisher, Greathouse, in the back pages of the New York Review of Books while in prison.

Man robs bank to see his daughter

Sean Legacy robbed a bank in Pacific Beach. He also wrote a book over the four years he was in various jails called Point Zero Bliss. It is the kind of book you pick up and then set down quickly, maybe pace or smoke, do some chores, turn on the tube and then—to hell with it—you pick it up again.

By John Brizzolara, April 17, 1997 | Read full article

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Star of the Nativity and Nativity Poem
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Our lowest temps are typically in January, Tree aloes blooming for the birds

Big surf changes our shorelines
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