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SAN DIEGO COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER GROUP
LJTODAY.COM | VOLUME 18, NUMBER 16
THE BIG PICTURE
As far as San Diego Superior Court is concerned, the time for talk on UCSD's Ché Café may be past. COURTESY PHOTO
TEACHABLE MOMENT By MARTIN JONES WESTLIN GETTING THE DROP Those crazies at UCSD will use any excuse to party – especially when it involves a Halloween tradition, like the annual Pumpkin Drop, set to take place this afternoon at the school's Muir College. The ritual (shown here in a photo from the past) involves dropping a humongous pumpkin from the college's upper floors; inside is an assortment of individually wrapped candy that students scurry to claim. This year's colossus, donated by grower Jon Berndes, weighed 500 pounds. The pumpkin's splat is measured for posterity each year; the largest occurred in 1995, when a 398-pounder exploded over 100 feet. The drop is the focus of Muir College's Halloween Carnival. COURTESY PHOTO
SD Jewish Book Fair 2014 is not your father's By MARTIN JONES WESTLIN If there's such as thing as a Golden Age of Jewish literature, it probably had its start 60 years ago, when authors like Isaac Bashevis Singer and Saul Bellow unstintingly declared the Jewish presence in American society. Nobel prizes would eventually follow for both men, and soon, works reflecting the uniquely Jewish experience were part of the mainstream book trade. That was then, and this is now. To say that Jewish literature has kept pace with today's 24-hour news cycle is to understate the burgeoning presence of Jewish book fairs, seminars and websites. Recently, the San Diego Jewish
Book Fair has become a major factor atop this landscape — and if you set aside some time on Nov. 8 to 10 and Nov. 13 to 16 for points in Cardiff-by-the-Sea and University City, you'll have fun in your trek through a genre that's singularly impressive in its own right. Events take place at Cardiff's Temple Solel the 8th and 10th and UC's Lawrence Family Jewish Community Center for the second installment — and Marcia Wollner, director of literary arts and education at the community center's Center for Jewish Culture, said the Cardiff venue reflects one growth phase as
SEE BOOKS >> PG. 23
By the time you read this, a San Diego Superior Court judge may have issued a written notice of her Oct. 21 finding – that UCSD owns the property on which its Ché Café sits and that the eviction notice the school issued the vegan eatery and music venue last summer was sufficient. Bryan Pease, attorney for the Ché, said on Oct. 20 that he thought Judge Katherine Bacal would the following day sign the university's written notice of her decision, after which the Ché would have five days to vacate its premises at 1000 Scholars Drive, just east of La Jolla Playhouse's Mandell Weiss Forum Studio. At the moment, Bacal hasn't signed whatever notice the university may issue, and at least one representative of the student-run
Ché said that Bacal's decision was not the end of the café's road. A recent note on the venue's website (checafe.ucsd.edu) demanded that the university roll back the eviction procedure in the interest of the democratic process; the venue's blog announced an Oct. 28 rally in the venue's support and that the collective allegedly has 14,000 favorable petition signatures it intended to present to university Chancellor Pradeep Khosla. Khosla wasn't available to receive the supporters, but the latter have said they will seek an audience with him again next week. About 100 demonstrators attended the Oct. 28 event.
SEE CHE >> PG. 16
TIMELY REMINDER Daylight Saving Time ends at 2 a.m. on Theater journalist Eddie Shapiro will have J*Company to watch his back at the 20th annual San Diego Jewish Book Fair. COURTESY PHOTO
Sunday, Nov. 2. Be sure to change your clocks back when you go to bed Saturday.