San Diego Community College shadow money

Socialist Tanya Winter takes on the town, rebellious sportscaster Jerry Gross, Coronado bad boy Don Zub, undercover cop gets into trouble, San Diego's real estate guru Sanford Goodkin

Peed's critics Charles Corum and Norman Burchard. "I was so blasted mad about this." (Craig Carlson)

The chancellor's private plans

Burchard had become dismayed with the conduct of Peed and the trustees. “The more I got involved, the more I perused Peed’s documents, it became pretty apparent how he was operating and that this was the root of the problem. He snows the trustees, frankly.” Burchard began to believe the trustees were disinclined to cross Peed because of their high salaries and benefits Peed had won for them.

By Jeannette DeWyze, Feb. 18, 1988 Read full article

Human billboard at Super Bowl event

Local socialist takes on Super Bowl fans

The angrier Winter grows, the more the students seem subtly to turn against her. One girl asks if it’s true that the Sandinistas were teaching children to add and subtract with the use of hand grenades. “Well, I think there was a time when they had children’s readers where they had pictures of some of the military stuff that you mentioned," Winter answers. "But I think you have to understand the context."

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By Jeannette DeWyze, March 3, 1988 Read full article

Jerry Gross with Stan Musial, St. Louis, 1960. By the time he came to San Diego, Gross had been a broadcaster in two World Series.

Jerry Gross bounces back

"I criticized Bob Breitbard for selling the San Diego Rockets to Houston; I questioned Dr. Leonard Bloom, who had the [American Basketball Association] San Diego Conquistadors; I challenged Buzzie Bavasi, who lied to the public about Hank Aaron.... I ripped Harland Svare of the Chargers, and I attacked Neil Morgan for his yellow journalism."

By Neal Matthews, Oct. 15, 1987 Read full article

“Even when he gets arrested, the cops are laughing,” observes R.T. Duryea, Du-Ray, the owner of the surf shop. (Paul Stachelek)

No man is an island (with the possible exception of Don Zub)

Most of the main drinking establishments in town have declared themselves off-limits to Zub over the years since he left the Navy. McP’s Irish Pub booted him, and the bouncer broke Zub’s collarbone several years ago, after he got into a fight. He awoke the next morning and proceeded to get a 502 on his bicycle. He’s also been banished from Goodies deli, the Brigantine, and Mexican Village,

By Neal Matthews, May 25, 1989 Read full article

Hannibal, 1977. He started sympathizing with drug dealers and heroin addicts.

Bob Hannibal was one of the good guys. Or so he thought.

With all the phony identities, the game playing, and the sympathy for crooks, it seems inevitable that officers such as Hannibal would end up cutting technically illicit deals with informants. He says information about where a police operation was taking place would be given as warning to an informant in exchange for the informant’s giving the name of a person who was pulling off a string of burglaries.

By Neal Matthews, Sept. 22, 1988 Read full article

In 1971, the Goodkins moved to a rented beach house in Del Mar; Goodkin maintained scaled-down offices for a year or so near the Los Angeles airport. (Robert Burroughs)

Sanford Goodkin does not mind San Diego sprawl

"I’ve worked for Aristotle Onassis. I’ve worked for Paul Getty," he boasts. "I’ve worked for Texans with horse manure on their boots who owned the world. I know Trammell Crow personally” In Southern California, Goodkin has worked with the men who reshaped such well-known pieces of earth as La Costa. Mission Viejo, Lake Forest, and Rancho Bernardo.

By Jeannette DeWyze, May 5, 1988 Read full article

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