Hogshead Brewery changes owners, makes plans for second location

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:39:51 GMT

Hogshead Brewery changes owners, makes plans for second location Walk into Hogshead Brewery and you’ll see its English-style cask ales listed above the bar on a menu on the left. Let your eyes drift to the right, however, and you’ll see an even larger menu of more familiar, carbonated beer styles, like a pilsner, a Mexican-style lager and an IPA.The line between the two is one that the new owners of this 11-year-old neighborhood brewery, at 4460 W. 29th Ave., plan to cross every day with confidence.“We’ve neglected the keg side a little bit, and I’d love to grow the business that way,” said head brewer and co-owner Robert Bell about those familiar lager and ale styles. “But I don’t want to do it at the expense of what we have built and who we are. I’m a diehard true believer when it comes to the cask side. That’s what makes us different than everyone else.”In May, Bell — along with longtime brewery general manager David Liechty and original investor and building owner John Cianci — bought Hogshead from a group led by founding brewer S...

Toddler last seen in Lancaster sought in 'critical missing' case

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:39:51 GMT

Toddler last seen in Lancaster sought in 'critical missing' case Detectives asked for the public's help Thursday in their search for a missing toddler who disappeared from the city of Palmdale. King Josiah Johnson was last seen around 6 p.m. Wednesday in the 39000 block of 180th St. E, according to a bulletin posted by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department.Investigators expressed concern for Johnson's well-being and described the search as a "critical missing" situation. Johnson is 2 years old, stands 3 feet tall, and weighs 27 pounds with brown curly hair, brown eyes, and a scar near his belly button. King Josiah Johnson (left) and Stacy Deral Seymore are seen in images provided by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department.He was last seen wearing a black shirt and black sweatpants. Investigators said Johnson could be with his father Stacy Deral Seymore.Seymore was described as a Black man standing 6 feet tall and weighing 170 pounds. He was possibly driving a dark blue Dodge Ram truck with work gear in the back and a broken window. Anyo...

Explosion at BBQ restaurant in China kills 31 people

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:39:51 GMT

Explosion at BBQ restaurant in China kills 31 people HONG KONG (AP) — China's president ordered a national safety campaign on Thursday after a massive cooking gas explosion at a barbecue restaurant in the northwest killed 31 people and injured seven others on the eve of a long holiday weekend.The blast tore through the restaurant at around 8:40 p.m. Wednesday on a busy street in Yinchuan, the capital of the traditionally Muslim Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, as people gathered ahead of the Dragon Boat Festival, the official Xinhua News Agency said.The explosion left many people unconscious and they needed to be carried out of the shop, according to the online news site The Paper, which quoted a member of the search and rescue team. Victims included elderly people and high school students, it said.An hour before the explosion, employees noticed the smell of cooking gas and discovered that a gas tank valve was broken, according to Xinhua. The blast occurred while an employee was replacing the valve. Is your gas stove hurting your...

These Bay Area cities and counties getting $46 million to clear homeless camps, add shelters

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:39:51 GMT

These Bay Area cities and counties getting $46 million to clear homeless camps, add shelters As frustration mounts over sprawling homeless camps in nearly every corner of the Bay Area, the state is stepping in with millions in cash to help house people living on city sidewalks, parks and floodplains, and add more shelter beds across the region.Eight local cities and counties are set to receive a share of more than $46 million to move potentially a thousand people out of encampments and into shelter or housing. The awards are part of a $350 million statewide effort Gov. Gavin Newsom launched last year to get more homeless people indoors.“We’re doubling down on our investment to ensure that thousands of individuals in communities up and down the state move out of encampments and into housing where they can get the services and help they need,” Newsom said in a statement.Much of the funding will go toward creating private-room shelters and supportive housing, which is a critical step toward putting a dent in the Bay Area’s homeless population of roughly...

How will the Warriors approach the 2023 NBA Draft and free agency beyond that?

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:39:51 GMT

How will the Warriors approach the 2023 NBA Draft and free agency beyond that? SAN FRANCISCO — In November 2020, the Warriors drafted James Wiseman with the No. 2 overall draft pick, their highest pick since they took Mike Dunleavy Jr. third overall out of Duke in 2002.Three years later, though, Wiseman is no longer with the team, and Dunleavy, despite once being made scapegoat for Warriors fans’ frustrations after years of futility, is the team’s new general manager.The Warriors have gambled in the last three drafts, taking some high-upside teenage players with the hopes to groom them to one day take the baton from the dynastic trio as it ages out.But with Stephen Curry still a top-five NBA star at the age of 35, the Warriors should be looking to maximize the here and now. And the process of retooling their roster to be a championship contender once again starts with the No. 19 pick in Thursday’s draft.Last season, Jonathan Kuminga and Moses Moody were expected to step into larger roles having been two lottery picks who had a champions...

Editorial: CSU four-year graduation rates improve, but not enough

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:39:51 GMT

Editorial: CSU four-year graduation rates improve, but not enough Amidst all the troubling data about the effect of the pandemic on education, there is some good news.The California State University system continues to increase the portion of students graduating after four years. The rate is still unacceptable, but at least the numbers are trending in the right direction.Shockingly, of the students who entered CSU as freshmen in 2010, only 19% had graduated by 2014. The good news is that, eight years later, 35% of the class that started in 2018 graduated by 2022.The biggest improvement among the system’s 23 campuses was seen at San Jose State, while the rates at Cal State East Bay and San Francisco State lag the average.The steady improvement is positive, but it’s not enough. CSU — which has about 460,000 students and is the largest university system in the nation — trails far behind the national average for graduation within four years, estimated at 44% in 2019, according to the Public Policy Institute of California.CSU must do a much...

Meet Wes Anderson’s scene-stealing ‘Asteroid City’ triplets, Ella, Gracie and Willan Faris

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:39:51 GMT

Meet Wes Anderson’s scene-stealing ‘Asteroid City’ triplets, Ella, Gracie and Willan Faris Ella, Gracie and Willan Faris landed in Spain two years ago to make their feature film debuts in Wes Anderson‘s “Asteroid City,” and like any first-timers, they were excited to meet their costars.Woody from the “Toy Story” franchise. Gru in the “Despicable Me” movies. And Marvel’s Black Widow, even though the triplets haven’t seen any of her superhero flicks yet.“Dad doesn’t let us,” explained Ella, who, like her sisters, turned 8 this month.Faris triplets: Willan, from left, Ella, and Gracie, at home n Orange County on Monday, June 19, 2023, star in Wes Anderson’s new film, “Asteroid City,” which was shot in Spain in the summer of 2021 and opens on Friday, June 23. (Photo by Mindy Schauer, Orange County Register/SCNG)Orange County triplets Gracie, Willan and Ella Faris, second from left to right, were 6 years old and just out of kindergarten in 2021 when they spent two months in Spain on director Wes Anderson’s new film, “Asteroid City,” which opens Fr...

Over 1,000 sea lions, dolphins are getting sick and dying as toxic bloom off California coast expands

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:39:51 GMT

Over 1,000 sea lions, dolphins are getting sick and dying as toxic bloom off California coast expands A toxic algae bloom that has crept down the coast of California from San Luis Obispo County has been sickening and killing hundreds of sea lions and dolphins. Animals began washing up along the coastline earlier this month in alarming numbers.The massive bloom produced by a species of marine plankton fueled with a toxin called domoic acid has struck the hardest off Santa Barbara and Ventura counties – staff at the Channel Islands Marine & Wildlife Institute have struggled to keep up, officials said Monday – but affected animals have been seen as far south as Los Angeles and Orange County.The impacted animals – mostly sea lions and dolphins, but also whales and other marine mammals – are feeding on smaller fish, such as squid, sardines and anchovies, that have eat the poisonous plankton. The toxins can cause seizures and severe brain inflammation and often leads to death by causing irreversible brain damage.Ruth Dover, co-founder and managing director of the Channel Islands cente...

‘One of the most violent’: California man who shocked officer during Capitol riot gets more than 12 years

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:39:51 GMT

‘One of the most violent’: California man who shocked officer during Capitol riot gets more than 12 years A Panorama City man who advocating violence before the Capitol insurrection and used an electroshock weapon on a police officer in the midst of the Jan. 6 breach of the U.S. Capitol was sentenced on Wednesday, June 21, to 12 years and seven months in federal prison.Daniel Joseph Rodriguez, 40, was sentenced after U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson described him as a “one-man army of hate, attacking police and destroying property (and showing) up in D.C. spoiling for a fight.”It was the harshest sentence yet for a Jan. 6 defendant with a strong Southern California tie.Rodriguez had accepted a plea deal and admitted to felony conspiracy, obstruction of an official proceeding, tampering with documents or an official proceeding, and inflicting bodily injury on officers using a dangerous weapon.A day before the 2021 Capitol riot, he told his followers: “There will be blood. Welcome to the revolution.” Prosecutors described him as “one of the most violent” of the hundreds of insurrect...

The U.S. Open returns to Riviera in Los Angeles in 2031 after an 83-year absence

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:39:51 GMT

The U.S. Open returns to Riviera in Los Angeles in 2031 after an 83-year absence By DOUG FERGUSON | AP Golf WriterLOS ANGELES — Los Angeles had to wait 75 years to get another U.S. Open and now it’s becoming a regular stop. The USGA is bringing the U.S. Open to Riviera Country Club in 2031.The announcement Wednesday comes three days after Wyndham Clark won the U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club, just over 5 miles away and across the 405 freeway from Riviera.The fabled course off Sunset Boulevard is the longtime host of what now is the Genesis Invitational, long considered a favorite by top PGA Tour players. Riviera held the first U.S. Open in California in 1948 when Ben Hogan won with a record score of 276.Hogan also won the Los Angeles Open in 1947 and 1948, and Riviera soon became known as “Hogan’s Alley.”The club now takes on a greater profile. It will host the U.S. Women’s Open in 2026 on the centennial anniversary of Riviera, and then it has the golf competition in the 2028 Olympics.And then, 83 years later, it finally gets another U.S. Open.“We are so g...