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The San Diego Union-Tribune

  • Letters to the editor: City Edition
    Richard W. Halsey (“Why San Diego loses firefighters,” Opinion, April 6) uses the occasion of the resignation of Fire-Rescue Chief Jeff Bowman to scold the taxpayers for “the lack of support San Diegans give for public service jobs.”

  • Letters to the editor: North Edition
    Councilman Jack Feller and the city of Carlsbad continue to push an interchange at state Route 78 and Rancho del Oro. The people of Oceanside and especially those who live in the communities along Rancho del Oro are opposed to this interchange.

  • Letters to the editor: East Edition
    I appreciated the letter (East County Opinion, March 16) from teacher Ralph Hayes regarding professional learning communities (PLCs) and the cost of implementing them in the Grossmont Union High School District.

  • Letters to the editor: South Edition
    I am hurt and saddened by the article that appeared on the front page (“Haul speaks volumes for power of pizza,” April 8). It was a story that turned a positive display of human generosity and concern into an act of greed and embarrassment.

  • DAN WALTERS    THE SACRAMENTO BEE
    Fully funding California's schools
    Public education is the single most important issue on the minds of Californians as they ponder candidates and ballot measures in this election year.

  • U.S. must stop outsourcing torture
    U.S. torture must stop. And if you thought Sen. John McCain's amendment stopped it already, think again. Last year, the Bush administration's support for torture came out into the open.

  • A community tailors its own design
    La Mesa is a compact, connected, close-knit community with a small-town atmosphere. The city's elected officials are easily accessible to their constituents, and they seek their input on community issues.

  • Housing and industry don't mix along National City waterfront
    National City, long known mainly for its “Mile of Cars,” is growing into a desirable, multicultural mecca for redevelopment. The city has aggressively courted new condominiums and houses, a new hotel, a new fire station and public library, an ambitious educational complex and retail giants like WalMart.











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