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Jeannette DeWyze – reporter of so many San Diego beats

Two outrageous subjects for Midweek and Weekend Reads

The big, drunk Chicano in Horton Plaza who tried to rip off my Hare Krishna gown got to me so quickly I never even saw him coming.
The big, drunk Chicano in Horton Plaza who tried to rip off my Hare Krishna gown got to me so quickly I never even saw him coming.

The author of this week's Midweek and Weekend Reads is Jeannette De Wyze. Her own words:

How DeWyze came to the Reader:

In the early ‘70s, my best friend at Northwestern University, Randy Barnett, got a job selling ads for the fledgling Chicago Reader. I was involved in campus life (including journalism studies) so never sought to write for that Reader. But after graduation, when Randy visited San Diego in the summer of 1974, he and I stopped in at the offices of the distantly related San Diego Reader. Editor and publisher Jim Holman invited me to submit freelance cover articles. I wrote a few for him before getting a job at the Californian in El Cajon. In late 1976, Jim was ready to hire his first staff writer, and he called me. It felt a little scary to leave a traditional daily newspaper for an alternative weekly, but I took the plunge and never regretted it.

DeWyze's favorite stories she wrote (excerpts by editors):

  • Krishna, Krishna

  • The big, drunk Chicano in Horton Plaza who tried to rip off my Hare Krishna gown got to me so quickly I never even saw him coming. By the time I realized what was happening, he had unwrapped the orange and maroon sari from my head. As he tore at it, his glazed, bloodshot eyes mocked me. I remember futilely saying that he should let go. I recall thinking bitterly. "What do I do if this guy tries to hurt me? I could run into Third Avenue, pull off the sari, and scream, Help, help! Look, I'm not really one of them!" (July 12, 1979)
  • Lean days on the gem ledge

  • Ramona has a few other mines besides the Little Three: the ABC, the Hercules, the Surprise. All of them actually lie off an invisible line that slices through San Diego County, along which gleam most of the local deposits of gems and minerals. That line runs straight as a scepter along the Elsinore fault. (Feb. 14, 1980)
  • You are looking at a free man

  • It’s been a year and a half since Yurii Aleksandrovich Vetokhin leapt off a Russian cruise ship in the middle of the night and swam for twenty hours through the shark-filled Moluccan Sea. It’s been just about a year since he arrived in San Diego, penniless. Somehow the La Mesa Rotarians’ program chairman recently heard Yurii’s story — heard how his marathon swim washed him up on an Indonesian jungle island; heard, furthermore, how it was Yurii’s third attempt to escape from the Soviet Union. (July 23, 1981)
  • Sister of Poverty

  • We drove past automobile corpses turned upside-down and stripped of everything but rust, past one canyonside home where the resident has created a fence made of dozens of car body panels and old refrigerator doors. We passed two milk cows tethered to a Mercury Cougar. Yee pointed out the carcass of a duck strung up from a tree next to Gabriel the leper. Yee had asked Gabriel about the duck and he explained there had been robbers in the neighborhood. The duck was a message to the robbers. (May 31, 1984)
  • The faith and the fortune

  • Bishop Maher inherited a $15 million debt. Much of that was carried on the university’s ledgers, and in 1972, when the diocese and the university separated their formal ties, the diocese’s debt was reduced to about five million dollars. That same year Maher made what he said was a complete financial disclosure by going before diocesan priests with the chief bookkeeper and explaining the monetary situation. Priests had received no such information from either Buddy or Furey. (Aug. 23, 1984)
  • Snakebite

  • “I was pretty excited,” Bob recalls. He tried to run, but his hiking boots kept hitting the rocks and brush that armor the Baja mountains, and finally he settled into a fast, steady march. His emotions were mixed. Though he felt a real sense of urgency, the accident also seemed more than anything an inconvenience. Bob was virtually certain rattlesnake venom invariably causes intense pain, so Ray’s bite had to be dry, he told himself. (Nov. 6, 1986)
  • Till death do us part

  • Since Dan’s murder, some of his friends have suggested he should have had Betty punished even more forcefully by the courts, that had he done so, he might still be alive today. But other close observers of the Brodericks feel that Dan was unusually harsh and vindictive in pursuing criminal sanctions against the mother of his children. He hardly played the pacifist. He could have chosen to ignore his wife’s outbursts and avoid the trauma of criminal proceedings. (Nov. 16, 1989)
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One more of note

One story unmentioned on DeWyze's list was her pursuit of the petroglyphs in Baja California discovered by intrepid Harry Crosby. DeWyze joined an expedition by mule deep into Baja for her 1998  story.

At the Arroyo del Batequi Crosby found a 70-foot-long painted ceiling covered with “the most beautiful rock art I had seen since Lascaux.”


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The big, drunk Chicano in Horton Plaza who tried to rip off my Hare Krishna gown got to me so quickly I never even saw him coming.
The big, drunk Chicano in Horton Plaza who tried to rip off my Hare Krishna gown got to me so quickly I never even saw him coming.

The author of this week's Midweek and Weekend Reads is Jeannette De Wyze. Her own words:

How DeWyze came to the Reader:

In the early ‘70s, my best friend at Northwestern University, Randy Barnett, got a job selling ads for the fledgling Chicago Reader. I was involved in campus life (including journalism studies) so never sought to write for that Reader. But after graduation, when Randy visited San Diego in the summer of 1974, he and I stopped in at the offices of the distantly related San Diego Reader. Editor and publisher Jim Holman invited me to submit freelance cover articles. I wrote a few for him before getting a job at the Californian in El Cajon. In late 1976, Jim was ready to hire his first staff writer, and he called me. It felt a little scary to leave a traditional daily newspaper for an alternative weekly, but I took the plunge and never regretted it.

DeWyze's favorite stories she wrote (excerpts by editors):

  • Krishna, Krishna

  • The big, drunk Chicano in Horton Plaza who tried to rip off my Hare Krishna gown got to me so quickly I never even saw him coming. By the time I realized what was happening, he had unwrapped the orange and maroon sari from my head. As he tore at it, his glazed, bloodshot eyes mocked me. I remember futilely saying that he should let go. I recall thinking bitterly. "What do I do if this guy tries to hurt me? I could run into Third Avenue, pull off the sari, and scream, Help, help! Look, I'm not really one of them!" (July 12, 1979)
  • Lean days on the gem ledge

  • Ramona has a few other mines besides the Little Three: the ABC, the Hercules, the Surprise. All of them actually lie off an invisible line that slices through San Diego County, along which gleam most of the local deposits of gems and minerals. That line runs straight as a scepter along the Elsinore fault. (Feb. 14, 1980)
  • You are looking at a free man

  • It’s been a year and a half since Yurii Aleksandrovich Vetokhin leapt off a Russian cruise ship in the middle of the night and swam for twenty hours through the shark-filled Moluccan Sea. It’s been just about a year since he arrived in San Diego, penniless. Somehow the La Mesa Rotarians’ program chairman recently heard Yurii’s story — heard how his marathon swim washed him up on an Indonesian jungle island; heard, furthermore, how it was Yurii’s third attempt to escape from the Soviet Union. (July 23, 1981)
  • Sister of Poverty

  • We drove past automobile corpses turned upside-down and stripped of everything but rust, past one canyonside home where the resident has created a fence made of dozens of car body panels and old refrigerator doors. We passed two milk cows tethered to a Mercury Cougar. Yee pointed out the carcass of a duck strung up from a tree next to Gabriel the leper. Yee had asked Gabriel about the duck and he explained there had been robbers in the neighborhood. The duck was a message to the robbers. (May 31, 1984)
  • The faith and the fortune

  • Bishop Maher inherited a $15 million debt. Much of that was carried on the university’s ledgers, and in 1972, when the diocese and the university separated their formal ties, the diocese’s debt was reduced to about five million dollars. That same year Maher made what he said was a complete financial disclosure by going before diocesan priests with the chief bookkeeper and explaining the monetary situation. Priests had received no such information from either Buddy or Furey. (Aug. 23, 1984)
  • Snakebite

  • “I was pretty excited,” Bob recalls. He tried to run, but his hiking boots kept hitting the rocks and brush that armor the Baja mountains, and finally he settled into a fast, steady march. His emotions were mixed. Though he felt a real sense of urgency, the accident also seemed more than anything an inconvenience. Bob was virtually certain rattlesnake venom invariably causes intense pain, so Ray’s bite had to be dry, he told himself. (Nov. 6, 1986)
  • Till death do us part

  • Since Dan’s murder, some of his friends have suggested he should have had Betty punished even more forcefully by the courts, that had he done so, he might still be alive today. But other close observers of the Brodericks feel that Dan was unusually harsh and vindictive in pursuing criminal sanctions against the mother of his children. He hardly played the pacifist. He could have chosen to ignore his wife’s outbursts and avoid the trauma of criminal proceedings. (Nov. 16, 1989)
Sponsored
Sponsored


One more of note

One story unmentioned on DeWyze's list was her pursuit of the petroglyphs in Baja California discovered by intrepid Harry Crosby. DeWyze joined an expedition by mule deep into Baja for her 1998  story.

At the Arroyo del Batequi Crosby found a 70-foot-long painted ceiling covered with “the most beautiful rock art I had seen since Lascaux.”


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Jeannette DeWyze – reporter of so many San Diego beats

Two outrageous subjects for Midweek and Weekend Reads
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