City Lights
Ghazal Mansury could lift 100 pounds, or about the weight of her mom.
Yapping pooches, non-complying porches, and that fowl odor. Did your neighbor rat you out or not?
Qualcomm’s stated motivation behind the push for H-1B workers is H-1BS.
Screaming the loudest for road repair is a waste of time.
The unfinished movie about Barry Minkow characterizes him as an ex-crook turned angel. The script must be completely rewritten.
“It’s not like we’re going to camp out in the parking lot of an establishment.” Lt. Eric Skaja, spokesman for the Escondido Police Department, maintains that the “Avoid the Eight on the 78” campaign isn’t …
Travelers turn down rental car insurance but still get charged.
“In our city parks, the law says you’re not allowed to solicit funds,” says La Jolla resident Marc Kuritz. “You can’t sell merchandise. You can’t pass out advertising flyers. You’re not even allowed to pick flowers. But our mayor and city council hand over chunks of our park land to private corporations for cell phone towers. It’s not legal, it’s not right, and it makes no sense, unless you are the politician getting the revenue or the telecommunications giant making the profit.”
Frederic Luddy rapidly unloaded shares of company he founded, ServiceNow. So did John Moores. Peregrine Redux?
In April 2013, Ryan Grainger and Bobby Sullivan found themselves faced with a particular First World problem at Coachella. The then-20- and 19-year-old University of San Diego students could not see all 190 performances. Although …
All recognize the infrastructure is ailing. Still, a subsidized stadium for a billionaire family may well prevail.
Even chair people say frivolous lawsuits don’t help their cause.
This was to be the year for fat pills. It wasn't. Sex enhancement biotechs didn't set the world on fire, either.
In 2006, when he was 17, Arturo Salazar came north from Oaxaca, Mexico. He attended El Camino High School in Oceanside where he met 15-year-old Edith Garcia. “She was the woman that I loved from …
All those troubles in the world could help San Diego's economy. So could even more easy money.