Marguerite Henry, another horse-crazy girl

Stories Phyllis Orrick wrote for the Reader

"I had rheumatic fever as a child."
  • Misty of Chincoteague author ends up in Rancho Santa Fe

  • When Marguerite Henry died last month at the age of 95, a relationship that began for me more than 35 years ago came to a premature end. Henry and I met for the first and last time in the fall of 1995 at her home in Rancho Santa Fe. (Dec. 18, 1997)
"What James was saying was the fathers or big brothers or neighbors should take the young males to the library."
  • James Meredith's school lands in San Diego

  • Rosalie Martin knows the vicissitudes of raising black boys, having seen two sons through college and graduate school and into corporate careers and now with a grandson in her care. So when her old friend James Meredith, the man who integrated the University of Mississippi at Oxford in 1962, told Martin about his plans for a school tailored specifically for black boys and men, the Golden Triangle financial seminar coordinator signed on. (Dec. 11, 1997)
Commercial bioprospecting permits will generate cash and corporate support for the park.
  • La Jolla's Diversa gets to mine Yellowstone

  • When Diversa Corporation, a biotech company based in La Jolla, signed the first commercial prospecting agreement in a national park four months ago, Vice President Al Gore applauded it as a landmark alliance between the private and public sectors. (Dec. 4, 1997)
Stan Humphries. "Like no other injury man has experienced, it changes the essence of who you are. You've lived with yourself for 30 years, and that changes in an instant." (Joe Klein)
  • What happened to Stan Humphries' brain?

  • In the days after Chargers quarterback Stan Humphries received his latest concussion, the team reassured the public that Humphries was consulting neurologists and that a CT-scan and an MRI showed no problems. (Nov. 13, 1997)
"There's safety in numbers, and we will meet people we'll see along the way."
  • "El Nino is supposed to diminish the trade winds"

  • It takes a lot of work to drop out of the rat race if the escape route entails crossing 3000-plus miles of Pacific Ocean. Justask Ellie Goolkasian and David Hudson, most recently of Oceanside. Three years ago, Goolkasian, a 44-year-old registered nurse, and Hudson, a 42-year-old aerospace programmer, started to lay their plans. (Oct. 30, 1997)
In 1910, Buck had completed the U.S. Grant Hotel, the most tangible legacy he planned for his father.
"[Jeff's original doctors] got so excited about the abnormality of the EEG."
North Island will have six times its present permitted hazardous-waste capacity.
  • That special glow

  • The Navy's massive nuclear homeport project on North Island has come down to two state hazardous-waste permits that are pending before the California Department of Toxic Substances Control. One permit was set to go into effect two weeks ago but has been appealed. The other should be drafted in a matter of months. (Jan. 15, 1998)

Phyllis Orrick, one of founding members of the Baltimore City Paper, visited San Diego in the latter 1990s to write feature stories.

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