Robert Clark Young recalled the day his life changed. He was in the shower when the phone rang with a call from his father about his mother. Something was very wrong; she was confused, agitated, speaking jibberish and barely responsive. Robert’s 80-year old mother suffered a massive stroke and was entering a new world of […]
San Diego led the way in advancement of one of man’s oldest ways of finding food.
Making its way through Congress is a bill that will prevent you from traveling outside the USA if you owe money to the Internal Revenue Service.
Steve Garber's project aims to “encourage healing through dialogue between all those involved in the Iraqi conflict.”
New fees for entertainment permits will have serious effects on coffeehouses and entertainers who depend on café venues for their living.
Posted on 13 July 2013
Jeff Olson is a 40-year old local man facing prosecution for scrawling uncomplimentary messages about the Bank of America on sidewalks with classroom chalk between February and August of last year. Olson has grievances against the Bank of America stemming from Occupy efforts that urged the public to shift money from the Bank of America […] Continue Reading
Posted on 13 July 2013
Rebecca’s Coffeehouse in Golden Hill became the first coffeehouse to sign up for a new plan to target resources to those who need them throughout the world. The brainchild of Karen Cebreros, formerly of Elan Organic Coffees, Track the Impact is a cloud-based software tool that links businesses to the community of non-profits of their […] Continue Reading
Posted on 16 May 2012
Cierra at right, and Kat are two baristi on duty regularly at the new Café Hapa, located at the corner of Sports Arena Blvd. and West Point Loma Blvd. The Vietnamese-themed lounge is staffed by a crowd of well dressed women and they’re gaining business daily. www.cafehapa.com Continue Reading
Posted on 16 May 2012
BY J. A. RIPPO Arizona governor Jan Brewer has signed into law a bill that effectively ends Mexican-American studies classes in Arizona’s public schools (HB 2281). She did this after Tom Horne, a school superintendent and candidate for Attorney General, made noise about his dislike of a Mex-Am culture program in Tucson. Horne and Brewer […] Continue Reading
Posted on 16 May 2012
Fish answer their own logic. Fishermen sometimes say repitition of mundane tasks interferes with catching fish — as though fish need a break in the monotony of the lives of the men after them in order to be caught. The Southern Queen had several successful ways to interrupt the tedium of life at sea in […] Continue Reading
Posted on 16 May 2012
BY J. A. RIPPO Too many Americans believe Cinco de Mayo marks the anniversary of Mexican Independence from Spain, but nothing could be further from the truth, although marketing executives on both sides of the border are happy to let the misconception soar in the popular imagination so long as alcohol and party sales remain […] Continue Reading
Posted on 16 May 2012
BY J. A. RIPPO The beauty of Saint Jacques Chocolat is that it’s smooth. It’s not too rich, sweet, overpowering or the usual run-of-the-mill, over-the-top stuff you might find elsewhere. Enjoyed alone, the chocolates are enticing, with a fine finish and long aftertaste. Paired with Caffe Calabria’s Boulangerie Blend or with a good pinot noir, […] Continue Reading
Posted on 16 May 2012
BY J. A. RIPPO Artist Robert Miles Parker died on April 17, in New York, at the age of 72 from AIDS-related causes. Years ago, when he lived in San Diego, he found a crumbling Victorian house slated for demolition and decided to save it from the wrecking ball. He made a sketch of the […] Continue Reading
Posted on 16 May 2012
BY J. A. RIPPO The remarkable story of a coffee known as “Delicious Peace” begins in the aftermath of the long civil war in Uganda: a war that saw the rise of Joseph Kony and his Lord’s Resistance Army and also the work of J.J. Keki, the Ugandan musician and 9-11 survivor. Keki visited the […] Continue Reading
Posted on 16 May 2012
BY J. A. RIPPO If you’re looking to combine the hip with the historic in your San Diego shopping experience, you should head for South Park. The picturesque neighborhood, just east of Balboa Park, has no big-box stores, malls nor strip centers. The neighborhood shops, cafes and businesses occupy restored historic buildings on tree-lined streets […] Continue Reading
Posted on 28 January 2012
One of the intriguing entries to the San Diego Black Film Festival is Matt Dunnerstick’s The Custom Mary, a story about (re) birth, redemption, life in L.A. and the Second Coming…or more accurately, the First Cloning of Jesus. The story centers around Mary, a young and naive Latina who frequents a church run by some […] Continue Reading
Posted on 29 November 2011
from the politicians, fearmongers, warmongers, hustlers, thieves, swindlers and the rest of the monsters who pillaged this nation, stole its wealth, impoverished, threatened and disrespected its people and blighted their futures. It is time to open our eyes and regard the fraud we’ve put up with for so long with the deep revulsion it deserves. […] Continue Reading
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