Deathly bike routes: Friars, Nimitz, Pershing

Fallbrook Locos gang, Torrey Pines Gliderport confrontation, lobster season all-consuming, Vietnamese looks closely at English, Otay Mesa tunnels, he teaches war lit, Bill Kolender

Why does Friars Road even have a bike lane? (Andy Boyd)
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  • Dangerous bike spots

  • Friars Road, Nimitz Blvd, University Ave., Pershing Dr., Genesee, Pacific Hwy at Barnett Ave.
  • Safer routes: SD River Trail, West Point Loma, Robinson, Governor
  • By Dryw Keltz, Sept. 23, 2015
  • The curvy road from Fallbrook to De Luz is posted at 20mph.
  • Dishonor among Varrio Fallbrook Locos

  • Nico said that after some years he went through the ritual of being jumped into the gang. “It’s basically when your inner circle of friends just jump you, beat you up.” He thinks he was 17 years old when five or six men pounded on him for some minutes. “It’s basically initiation from all of them.” His best pal Torito, who is two years older, was present but did not participate in the beating.
  • By Eva Knott, June 24, 2015
  • Attorney arrested at Torrey Pines glider port

    Keep out!

  • “It was a beautiful Sunday morning,” Kuczewski, 57, recalls the moments before the second arrest of his life. His first arrest had taken place in the same spot just a few months earlier. Both the March 8 arrest and the one in November 2014 happened at the Torrey Pines Gliderport. The first was for trespassing, the second for malicious mischief.
  • By Thom Senzee, June 17, 2015
  • Paul Hartman, deckhand

    Accept the craziness of San Diego lobster fisherman

  • Just after 7 a.m., when most of San Diego is getting ready to start their day, Medak pulls his first trap. He swiftly slides it down the gunwale to Hartman. Three California brown pelicans take up residency on the rear of the boat. One slyly moves closer at the scent of lobster. It eyeballs Hartman as he handles the lobsters and measures them from the end of their shell to their eye sockets using a metal ruler. One by one he throws each lobster back in.
  • By Siobhan Braun, April 8, 2015
  • Release papers for Tam’s father. My dad spent five and a half years in the “re-education camps” of post-war Vietnam, and that is why we were able to be here.

    That feeling of being the servile colonial subject eager to impress

  • If you grew up speaking Vietnamese, like I did, there was probably a moment in your life when you realized the limitations of your vocabulary. So, a conversation with your mom went something like this: “Vietnamese Vietnamese registration Vietnamese units Vietnamese Vietnamese credentialing.”
  • The word that comes to mind is “static.” Or maybe even “arrested.”
  • By Tam Hoang, March 11, 2015
  • 2011 Otay Mesa drug tunnel

    Cartel tunnels to Otay Mesa are infrastructural marvels

  • The amount of warehouse space in Otay Mesa has nearly quadrupled since the mid-’90s, and the expansion has been almost as frenetic in Garita de Otay. Forklifts, jackhammers, and heavy vehicles attract little attention. Cartel trucks back into loading bays, pallets are loaded in, and the drugs are delivered north to distribution hubs. There are three official border crossings near Otay Mesa; one, for commercial vehicles, is inside the industrial zone. “All of this has created a candy store for smugglers,” a U.S. agent told me.
  • By Monte Reel, Dec. 16, 2015
  • Tam Hoang

    The stories not told

  • Currently, I teach tenth and eleventh grade English at Coronado High School. When I came to Coronado, one of the books on the reading list was Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried, a novel about the Vietnam War told through vignettes. Cool deal, I thought. It’s about Vietnam. I’m Vietnamese. Mission accomplished.
  • By Tam Hoang, Nov. 11, 2015
  • Bill Kolender

    Bill Kolender – the Union-Tribune's favorite cop

  • It was a last hurrah of sorts for two San Diego institutions, the late Bill Kolender and his onetime employer, the San Diego Union-Tribune. “Almost nobody didn’t love Bill Kolender,” said the U-T’s October 6 editorial of farewell. “Unless, perhaps, you were a crook or a political opponent who got creamed by him in an election.” Though unacknowledged, the paper’s tribute to Kolender was also an homage to its once-powerful self.
  • By Matt Potter, Oct. 21, 2015
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