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Mysterious Spanish Village stabbing

Mayor Golding vs. Bruce Henderson, Children's Hospital and hemophiliacs, American Fashion dark side, most polluted river in California, the tough hotel-restaurant union,

Keith Hill: “I’ve got nothing to say. I was stabbed seven times." - Image by Sandy Huffaker, Jr.
Keith Hill: “I’ve got nothing to say. I was stabbed seven times."

Idyllic Spanish Village shaken by mystery stabbing

“Then I heard male voices outside on the patio. I didn’t look up because I didn’t want to be noticed. The voices moved left to right. I never looked up. The sounds went back around the right side of the Potters’ Guild. A few minutes later I heard a fight starting up. So at that point I really became scared. I turned the lights out, ducked low under the counter, then crawled to the back door of the Potters’ Guild. I could hear the fighting going on."

By Bill Manson Aug. 4, 1994 Read full article

“San Diego and its taxpayers are virgins ripe for picking.”

Mayor Golding and friends conspire to hide truth on stadium, convention center, library, sewer

“They will begin raising the hotel room tax on tourists first. But that won’t be enough. I’ve seen good projections over here, the real stuff, that shows we’ll be cutting the shit out of cops within five years if folks don’t vote to raise property taxes.” Hence, the staffer says, taxpayers are, without their knowledge, being “back-doored” into raising taxes down the road or facing the consequences. “I guess you won’t read about that in the Union-Tribune."

By Matt Potter, March 21, 1996 Read full article

Sponsored
Sponsored
Stadium concession area. The contract is careful not to mention specifically what the Sports Council will be doing.

Charge It to the taxpayers

Bruce Henderson, one of the chief critics of the Chargers’ deal with the City, who warned early on that the ticket guarantee meant trouble. “It clearly demonstrates that the City, as one would expect, doesn’t know what it’s doing. There’s no marketing program there, there isn’t a program of any sort outlined in the agreement, there isn’t even a requirement that they come back with a full-scale program to sell the full 60,000 tickets."

By Matt Potter, June 5, 1997 Read full article

Charger fans, August 9, 1997

The most hated man in San Diego

"And then last Monday, the San Diego Union-Tribune prints this editorial that one thing we know is that it is absolutely guaranteed that the Chargers will be here through 2020, and that’s what really counts. Well, it isn’t guaranteed at all! What’s absolutely guaranteed under this contract is that, unless they’re fools, the Spanos family is going to start shopping this team in 2003!"

By Matt Potter, Sept. 25, 1997 Read full article

"You’d get the Factor intravenously every couple of days. It's like brushing your teeth."

Children's Hospital gave AIDS to hemophiliacs

So even after talking with Hartman, I still cannot get a date for when my sons were first tested. The only thing that I have in concrete, from Steven’s medical records, is they put him through a whole battery of tests in the summer of 1987, just before they transferred him to University Hospital. So Hartman said at the meeting that he knew for sure Steven was positive in '86, and maybe ’85.

By Neal Matthews July 16, 1992 Read full article

Now they are asked to make the suits in batches as small as 10 or 20.

The dark side of Chula Vista's American Fashion

Where before they had made suits in batches of 10- or 20,000, they now were asked to make them in batches as small as 10 or 20. Previously, they had made suits of similar styles but now had to sew constantly changing cuts and designs. Where they had once worked almost exclusively with wool, they now had to cope with a variety of fabrics, including cashmere, Ultrasuede, and hard-to-handle, filmy silks.

By Miriam Davidson, March 25, 1993 Read full article

Tires, broken commodes, and plastic sacks of trash pepper the banks.

The New River — most polluted and lethal river in California

Ammonia, chloroform, and boron show up at high levels in routine water-quality grab samples near the border at Calexico. Testing agencies have detected volatile organic compounds like benzene, acetone, and toluene. Imperial County Public Health employees, who regularly monitor the New River, have detected at least 28 viruses known to cause disease in humans. They’ve encountered typhus, cholera, encephalitis, and all three polio viruses.

By Brian McNeese and Dave Zielinski, Dec. 9, 1993 Read full article

Union Yes rally, November 10, 1993

How San Diego's hotel and restaurant union works

A union woman shouts, “That’s right!” Others begin to chant. “We want Ron! We want Ron! We want Ron! We want Ron!” Three maids look down from a second-floor balcony; two smile, one appears to blush. Hotel security guards move about the throng. One, with a linebacker’s build, confronts Al Abarca, a Local 30 business representative, who is filming the event on a camcorder. The man tells Abarca to stop filming.

By Patrick Daugherty Feb. 3, 1994 Read full article

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Wild Wild Wets, Todo Mundo, Creepy Creeps, Laura Cantrell, Graham Nancarrow

Rock, Latin reggae, and country music in Little Italy, Oceanside, Carlsbad, Harbor Island
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At 4pm, this Farmer's Table restaurant in Chula Vista becomes Acqua e Farina

Brunch restaurant by day, Roman style trattoria by night
Keith Hill: “I’ve got nothing to say. I was stabbed seven times." - Image by Sandy Huffaker, Jr.
Keith Hill: “I’ve got nothing to say. I was stabbed seven times."

Idyllic Spanish Village shaken by mystery stabbing

“Then I heard male voices outside on the patio. I didn’t look up because I didn’t want to be noticed. The voices moved left to right. I never looked up. The sounds went back around the right side of the Potters’ Guild. A few minutes later I heard a fight starting up. So at that point I really became scared. I turned the lights out, ducked low under the counter, then crawled to the back door of the Potters’ Guild. I could hear the fighting going on."

By Bill Manson Aug. 4, 1994 Read full article

“San Diego and its taxpayers are virgins ripe for picking.”

Mayor Golding and friends conspire to hide truth on stadium, convention center, library, sewer

“They will begin raising the hotel room tax on tourists first. But that won’t be enough. I’ve seen good projections over here, the real stuff, that shows we’ll be cutting the shit out of cops within five years if folks don’t vote to raise property taxes.” Hence, the staffer says, taxpayers are, without their knowledge, being “back-doored” into raising taxes down the road or facing the consequences. “I guess you won’t read about that in the Union-Tribune."

By Matt Potter, March 21, 1996 Read full article

Sponsored
Sponsored
Stadium concession area. The contract is careful not to mention specifically what the Sports Council will be doing.

Charge It to the taxpayers

Bruce Henderson, one of the chief critics of the Chargers’ deal with the City, who warned early on that the ticket guarantee meant trouble. “It clearly demonstrates that the City, as one would expect, doesn’t know what it’s doing. There’s no marketing program there, there isn’t a program of any sort outlined in the agreement, there isn’t even a requirement that they come back with a full-scale program to sell the full 60,000 tickets."

By Matt Potter, June 5, 1997 Read full article

Charger fans, August 9, 1997

The most hated man in San Diego

"And then last Monday, the San Diego Union-Tribune prints this editorial that one thing we know is that it is absolutely guaranteed that the Chargers will be here through 2020, and that’s what really counts. Well, it isn’t guaranteed at all! What’s absolutely guaranteed under this contract is that, unless they’re fools, the Spanos family is going to start shopping this team in 2003!"

By Matt Potter, Sept. 25, 1997 Read full article

"You’d get the Factor intravenously every couple of days. It's like brushing your teeth."

Children's Hospital gave AIDS to hemophiliacs

So even after talking with Hartman, I still cannot get a date for when my sons were first tested. The only thing that I have in concrete, from Steven’s medical records, is they put him through a whole battery of tests in the summer of 1987, just before they transferred him to University Hospital. So Hartman said at the meeting that he knew for sure Steven was positive in '86, and maybe ’85.

By Neal Matthews July 16, 1992 Read full article

Now they are asked to make the suits in batches as small as 10 or 20.

The dark side of Chula Vista's American Fashion

Where before they had made suits in batches of 10- or 20,000, they now were asked to make them in batches as small as 10 or 20. Previously, they had made suits of similar styles but now had to sew constantly changing cuts and designs. Where they had once worked almost exclusively with wool, they now had to cope with a variety of fabrics, including cashmere, Ultrasuede, and hard-to-handle, filmy silks.

By Miriam Davidson, March 25, 1993 Read full article

Tires, broken commodes, and plastic sacks of trash pepper the banks.

The New River — most polluted and lethal river in California

Ammonia, chloroform, and boron show up at high levels in routine water-quality grab samples near the border at Calexico. Testing agencies have detected volatile organic compounds like benzene, acetone, and toluene. Imperial County Public Health employees, who regularly monitor the New River, have detected at least 28 viruses known to cause disease in humans. They’ve encountered typhus, cholera, encephalitis, and all three polio viruses.

By Brian McNeese and Dave Zielinski, Dec. 9, 1993 Read full article

Union Yes rally, November 10, 1993

How San Diego's hotel and restaurant union works

A union woman shouts, “That’s right!” Others begin to chant. “We want Ron! We want Ron! We want Ron! We want Ron!” Three maids look down from a second-floor balcony; two smile, one appears to blush. Hotel security guards move about the throng. One, with a linebacker’s build, confronts Al Abarca, a Local 30 business representative, who is filming the event on a camcorder. The man tells Abarca to stop filming.

By Patrick Daugherty Feb. 3, 1994 Read full article

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Sponsored

The latest copy of the Reader

Please enjoy this clickable Reader flipbook. Linked text and ads are flash-highlighted in blue for your convenience. To enhance your viewing, please open full screen mode by clicking the icon on the far right of the black flipbook toolbar.

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Submit a free classified
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Previous article

The White-crowned sparrow visits, Liquidambars show their colors

Bat populations migrate westward
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Domestic disturbance at the home of Mayor Gloria and partner

Home Sweet Homeless?
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