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General Grant's heirs made mark on San Diego

Best high schools, Peter Navarro spills beans, singular Porsche owners, local Okies, primitive rock art in Baja, Betty Broderick 9 years later, lawn answers, Alan Bersin, San Diego's orphanage

Grant King grew up in La Jolla and attended La Jolla High School. He served in the Army during World War II. Afterward, he completed his architecture training. “Then I got my own little office here." - Image by Sandy Huffaker, Jr.
Grant King grew up in La Jolla and attended La Jolla High School. He served in the Army during World War II. Afterward, he completed his architecture training. “Then I got my own little office here."
  • San Diego's least-remembered great man – U.S. Grant Jr.

  • On a Sunday in September of 1929, 15 members of San Diego’s elite gathered to carry the coffin of an old friend. Among the pallbearers were a future mayor, a founder of the city’s oldest bank, the owner of the leading department store, and a state senator of legendary influence. The man they came to bury was Ulysses Simpson Grant Jr., second son and namesake of the warrior president, Ulysses Simpson Grant.
  • By Phyllis Orrick, July 2, 1998
Lunch break, Coronado High School. Students compare The Great Gatsby and A Farewell to Arms.
  • San Diego's top ten high schools

  • Along with Torrey Pines and La Jolla, Poway High ranked in the top ten in all four of the following categories tor the 95-’96 school year SAT average, percentage of students who take the SAT, percentage in college prep courses, and percentage receiving college credit through AP exams.
  • By Ernie Grimm, Matthew Lickona, June 4, 1998
Mike McKinnon, the owner of KUSI, gave some of the best advice I’ve ever gotten. He told me to stick with doing the KUSI commentaries.
  • San Diego confidential

  • (First of four stories)
  • Running for Congress was not something I wanted to contemplate. After all, I had lost three of the closest elections in San Diego history in just the last three years — for mayor in 1992, for city council in 1993, and for county supervisor in 1994. Despite the closeness of my losses, I was gaining a reputation as a perennial loser.
  • By Peter Navarro, April 23, 1998
Roger Roberts: "I’m sure there are some people who would perceive me as elitist."
  • Porsche owners are purposeful people.

  • You have seen them, these Porsches — on highways, on city streets, in parking lots — and you have coveted. You have gazed at them as they passed you, stopped and walked around them when you find them parked, peered through the driver’s side window, curious about the biggest number on the speedometer.
  • By Matthew Lickona, Feb. 12, 1998
Jim Heck - like the other Okies I met in San Diego last summer, Heck not only does not forget, he makes a point of remembering
  • Smoking Out Okies in San Diego County

  • Jim says he presented himself as a Nebraskan, not an Okie, which he kept secret. He took journalism, wrote on the school paper, became a ’50s-era surfer and hot-rodder, driving a supercharged dragster. He even dated classmate Raquel Welch. “In essence,” he muses now, “I became a California Okie.”
  • By Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, Jan. 15, 1998
Artist's representation of paintings at El Batequi
  • “The most beautiful rock art I had seen since Lascaux”

  • He hired a local guide in the Sierra de San Francisco, the mountain range north of the oasis town of San Ignacio, and for two weeks the party rode on mules over precipitous trails, visiting a dozen ranches and collecting legends, oral history, and anecdotes. On the last morning of the trip, over breakfast, the guide suggested a short detour to visit some nearby paintings. “Nothing about his manner implied anything out of the ordinary.”
  • By Jeannette DeWyze, Nov. 19, 1998
Murder arraignment, November 6, 1989

Three Bullets and Nine Years Later

If a reporter wants to know what Betty Broderick’s life as a convict is like, he or she has to visit her posing as a friend. The reporter has to listen hard, trying to memorize Betty’s words and how she looks. Only after leaving the prison walls can notes be tape-recorded or scribbled down in an attempt to reconstruct the information. I’ve done this three times in the past few months.

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By Jeannette DeWyze, Nov. 5, 1998

Randy Newhard was part of a group that during the long drought of the 1980s—when average rainfall dropped from 9 inches to 3 or 4 inches a year — were told to let the grass die.
  • How to grow perfect grass for San Diego

  • When they were releasing water from the Rodriguez Dam in Mexico it was flooding the Tijuana River Valley. In 1979 there was a flood in December that went into January 1980. The sod farm in South Bay was flooded out. The flood in 1979 took the whole farm out of production. Floods in 1982 and 1983 took half the farm. In 1986, a flood took a third of the farm, and in 1990 another flood wiped out a third."
  • By Douglas Whynott, Oct. 8, 1998
Alan Bersin
  • Alan Bersin, border fixer, and his Clinton ties

  • Alan D. Bersin arrived here in early 1992 to take over the Arkansas governor's San Diego County presidential campaign operation. But in the apparent wilderness of San Diego politics, Bersin seemed to have discovered instant opportunity. In what other major city in America could a Los Angeles lawyer, who had lived for years in the fancy Los Angeles enclave of Marina del Rey, quickly relocate, set up shop as a visiting professor at a prominent law school, and soon insinuate himself so completely into the heart of the local establishment?
  • By Matt Potter, Sept. 24, 1998
Michelle makes appreciative noises after Tom Lux reads. Be quiet, I want to tell her, he’s not paying you.
  • Poet Stephen Dobyns hires escort and takes her to reading at D.G. Wills in La Jolla

  • The woman is sexy but very classy. She is tall, about five feet nine, with tousled brown hair. Her skirt and tight white blouse show off her figure in a way to bring about cardiac arrhythmia in youngsters and oldsters alike. She walks as if she owns the very air around her. She is 26 and her measurements are 34-24-34. She calls herself Michelle. She carries a beeper, a cellular phone, and pepper spray on her key ring,
  • By Stephen Dobyns, Aug. 6, 1998
Rose Bryant Sanders. Mrs. Bryant had custody of Rose, Betty, Bill, and Charlie.... the baby-sitter called the police, who took the children to 16th and Ash.
  • When we had an orphanage – San Diego Children's Home

  • At the turn of the century, they were called orphans, and they lived in a home on five acres in Balboa Park. Those who weren’t orphans were “half-orphans,”“abandoned children,” or “those for whom we temporarily provide.” The San Diego Children’s Home was built in the days when a home was supposed to look like one, and it did: three stories, all wood. White paint, brick chimneys, balconies, and dormers on the corner of 16th and Ash.
  • By Laura McNeal, Sept. 10, 1998
Chanita. short for Prudenciana, was descended from a leatherjacket soldier who may have arrived in San Diego as early as 1769 with Junipero Serra
  • My very beloved Chanita

  • San Francisco, Nov. 4, 1863
  • It has been twelve years since we were married and I have been reminiscing about you and the wedding. Do you remember how chiflada (scatterbrained) you were that day? Do you remember that you danced a great deal? Do you remember the toast that Francisco Rodriguez wrote?... I also remember that it has been two years since you celebrated the first ten years of your marriage in Guadalupe [Baja California].
  • By Therese Adams Muranaka, Dec. 10, 1998

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Grant King grew up in La Jolla and attended La Jolla High School. He served in the Army during World War II. Afterward, he completed his architecture training. “Then I got my own little office here." - Image by Sandy Huffaker, Jr.
Grant King grew up in La Jolla and attended La Jolla High School. He served in the Army during World War II. Afterward, he completed his architecture training. “Then I got my own little office here."
  • San Diego's least-remembered great man – U.S. Grant Jr.

  • On a Sunday in September of 1929, 15 members of San Diego’s elite gathered to carry the coffin of an old friend. Among the pallbearers were a future mayor, a founder of the city’s oldest bank, the owner of the leading department store, and a state senator of legendary influence. The man they came to bury was Ulysses Simpson Grant Jr., second son and namesake of the warrior president, Ulysses Simpson Grant.
  • By Phyllis Orrick, July 2, 1998
Lunch break, Coronado High School. Students compare The Great Gatsby and A Farewell to Arms.
  • San Diego's top ten high schools

  • Along with Torrey Pines and La Jolla, Poway High ranked in the top ten in all four of the following categories tor the 95-’96 school year SAT average, percentage of students who take the SAT, percentage in college prep courses, and percentage receiving college credit through AP exams.
  • By Ernie Grimm, Matthew Lickona, June 4, 1998
Mike McKinnon, the owner of KUSI, gave some of the best advice I’ve ever gotten. He told me to stick with doing the KUSI commentaries.
  • San Diego confidential

  • (First of four stories)
  • Running for Congress was not something I wanted to contemplate. After all, I had lost three of the closest elections in San Diego history in just the last three years — for mayor in 1992, for city council in 1993, and for county supervisor in 1994. Despite the closeness of my losses, I was gaining a reputation as a perennial loser.
  • By Peter Navarro, April 23, 1998
Roger Roberts: "I’m sure there are some people who would perceive me as elitist."
  • Porsche owners are purposeful people.

  • You have seen them, these Porsches — on highways, on city streets, in parking lots — and you have coveted. You have gazed at them as they passed you, stopped and walked around them when you find them parked, peered through the driver’s side window, curious about the biggest number on the speedometer.
  • By Matthew Lickona, Feb. 12, 1998
Jim Heck - like the other Okies I met in San Diego last summer, Heck not only does not forget, he makes a point of remembering
  • Smoking Out Okies in San Diego County

  • Jim says he presented himself as a Nebraskan, not an Okie, which he kept secret. He took journalism, wrote on the school paper, became a ’50s-era surfer and hot-rodder, driving a supercharged dragster. He even dated classmate Raquel Welch. “In essence,” he muses now, “I became a California Okie.”
  • By Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, Jan. 15, 1998
Artist's representation of paintings at El Batequi
  • “The most beautiful rock art I had seen since Lascaux”

  • He hired a local guide in the Sierra de San Francisco, the mountain range north of the oasis town of San Ignacio, and for two weeks the party rode on mules over precipitous trails, visiting a dozen ranches and collecting legends, oral history, and anecdotes. On the last morning of the trip, over breakfast, the guide suggested a short detour to visit some nearby paintings. “Nothing about his manner implied anything out of the ordinary.”
  • By Jeannette DeWyze, Nov. 19, 1998
Murder arraignment, November 6, 1989

Three Bullets and Nine Years Later

If a reporter wants to know what Betty Broderick’s life as a convict is like, he or she has to visit her posing as a friend. The reporter has to listen hard, trying to memorize Betty’s words and how she looks. Only after leaving the prison walls can notes be tape-recorded or scribbled down in an attempt to reconstruct the information. I’ve done this three times in the past few months.

Sponsored
Sponsored

By Jeannette DeWyze, Nov. 5, 1998

Randy Newhard was part of a group that during the long drought of the 1980s—when average rainfall dropped from 9 inches to 3 or 4 inches a year — were told to let the grass die.
  • How to grow perfect grass for San Diego

  • When they were releasing water from the Rodriguez Dam in Mexico it was flooding the Tijuana River Valley. In 1979 there was a flood in December that went into January 1980. The sod farm in South Bay was flooded out. The flood in 1979 took the whole farm out of production. Floods in 1982 and 1983 took half the farm. In 1986, a flood took a third of the farm, and in 1990 another flood wiped out a third."
  • By Douglas Whynott, Oct. 8, 1998
Alan Bersin
  • Alan Bersin, border fixer, and his Clinton ties

  • Alan D. Bersin arrived here in early 1992 to take over the Arkansas governor's San Diego County presidential campaign operation. But in the apparent wilderness of San Diego politics, Bersin seemed to have discovered instant opportunity. In what other major city in America could a Los Angeles lawyer, who had lived for years in the fancy Los Angeles enclave of Marina del Rey, quickly relocate, set up shop as a visiting professor at a prominent law school, and soon insinuate himself so completely into the heart of the local establishment?
  • By Matt Potter, Sept. 24, 1998
Michelle makes appreciative noises after Tom Lux reads. Be quiet, I want to tell her, he’s not paying you.
  • Poet Stephen Dobyns hires escort and takes her to reading at D.G. Wills in La Jolla

  • The woman is sexy but very classy. She is tall, about five feet nine, with tousled brown hair. Her skirt and tight white blouse show off her figure in a way to bring about cardiac arrhythmia in youngsters and oldsters alike. She walks as if she owns the very air around her. She is 26 and her measurements are 34-24-34. She calls herself Michelle. She carries a beeper, a cellular phone, and pepper spray on her key ring,
  • By Stephen Dobyns, Aug. 6, 1998
Rose Bryant Sanders. Mrs. Bryant had custody of Rose, Betty, Bill, and Charlie.... the baby-sitter called the police, who took the children to 16th and Ash.
  • When we had an orphanage – San Diego Children's Home

  • At the turn of the century, they were called orphans, and they lived in a home on five acres in Balboa Park. Those who weren’t orphans were “half-orphans,”“abandoned children,” or “those for whom we temporarily provide.” The San Diego Children’s Home was built in the days when a home was supposed to look like one, and it did: three stories, all wood. White paint, brick chimneys, balconies, and dormers on the corner of 16th and Ash.
  • By Laura McNeal, Sept. 10, 1998
Chanita. short for Prudenciana, was descended from a leatherjacket soldier who may have arrived in San Diego as early as 1769 with Junipero Serra
  • My very beloved Chanita

  • San Francisco, Nov. 4, 1863
  • It has been twelve years since we were married and I have been reminiscing about you and the wedding. Do you remember how chiflada (scatterbrained) you were that day? Do you remember that you danced a great deal? Do you remember the toast that Francisco Rodriguez wrote?... I also remember that it has been two years since you celebrated the first ten years of your marriage in Guadalupe [Baja California].
  • By Therese Adams Muranaka, Dec. 10, 1998
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Hike off those holiday calories, Poinsettias are peaking

Winter Solstice is here and what is winter?
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Mary Catherine Swanson wants every San Diego student going to college

Where busing from Southeast San Diego to University City has led
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