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Bay Area writers share their best advice for 2021 graduates

Bay Area writers share their best advice for 2021 graduates
sfchronicle.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sfchronicle.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Bay Area Reporter :: LGBTQ leaders get sneak peek of Milk naval ship

LGBTQ leaders are getting a sneak peek this week of the naval ship named after the late gay San Francisco supervisor Harvey Milk. Work on the USNS Harvey Milk, the first Navy vessel to be named after a member of the LGBTQ community, is set to wrap up later this year on schedule. The Navy had announced in 2016 that a fleet replenishment oiler, T-AO 206, would be named in honor of Milk, the first gay person elected to public office in San Francisco and California with his 1977 victory of a seat on the city s Board of Supervisors. Milk would only serve 11 months in office, as he was assassinated along with then-mayor George Moscone the morning of November 27, 1978 by disgruntled former supervisor Dan White.

The Day the Marines Fire-bombed Alcatraz

Share This: On 3 May 1946, the fate of the Marine Corps was determined in a little-known battle fought off the coast of San Fransisco on the infamous Alcatraz Island. To understand the importance of the battle on “The Rock,” we need to set the stage for what life was like for the Marines in post-war America during the mid-1940s. A sign displayed at Alcatraz. (Courtesy of author) Back From the War When the calendar flipped over to 1946, WWII had just concluded and battle-hardened troops were returning stateside to their families and a new normal. These men had been a part of ferocious battles in Africa, Italy, and all over the Pacific on islands like Iwo Jima and Okinawa. The men who returned home had made it through what many consider to be the toughest war in human history. By the time the war ended, the men who had survived these battles were hardened, decorated, and skilled weapons of war.

S F s ambitious plans for free summer programs for 20,000 kids are taking shape But will they help enough?

Skip to main content Currently Reading S.F. s ambitious plans for free summer programs for 20,000 kids are taking shape. But will they help enough? FacebookTwitterEmail 1of3 Maria Pacheco says her fifth-grade daughter Kelly is excited about the Tenderloin Clubhouse’s summer program.Lea Suzuki/The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less 2of3 Desiree Almeida (right), health and fitness coordinator, works with Giselle, 9, at the elementary school learning hub, part of the Tenderloin Clubhouse campus.Lea Suzuki/Lea Suzuki/The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less 3of3 Director Michael Vuong outside the Teen Center, part of the Tenderloin Clubhouse campus in San Francisco.Lea Suzuki / The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less

Take Two | $9 Billion for Homelessness, Contact Tracing Diaries, Shortcomings of California s Cap-and-Trade Program

Gov. Newsom Proposes $9 Billion for Homelessness Governor Newsom proposed $9 billion in state funding to purchase hotels, motels and vacant building and convert them into interim or permanent housing. How successful could that program be Guest: Contact Tracing Diaries Even though many of us might feel like we ve got more of a handle on the coronavirus pandemic, none of us can forget this unbelievable year. Especially folks who ve really been in the trenches. Lisa Fagundes is normally a librarian at the San Francisco Public Library. But starting last April, she and thousands of other city and state workers were redeployed to become contact tracers, calling people who may have been exposed to the virus. KQED health correspondent April Dembosky met Lisa last spring and asked her to keep an audio diary of her experience.

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