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The emergence of Tiger Woods on the international golf scene has brought the world s attention to the African American experience in golf. But before Tiger, names like Ted Rhodes, Bill Spiller, Ann Gregory, and so many others remained in relative obscurity without being given the chance to compete. Forbidden Fairways is not just a history of the African Americans who have been playing golf for over 200 years but a tribute to them as well. From the unnamed South Carolina enslaved young man who first dared to hit a golf ball when his master wasn t looking . . . to another young man named Tiger who dared to win the Masters while the whole world watched. It s a sad story in places, uplifting in others. It s about cruelty, but it s also about courage. It s about pettiness, but it s also about perseverance. It s about golf, but it s about life, too. Descriptive and intuitive, Forbidden Fairways lets you in on the real story.
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A Chula Vista couple is accused of running a real estate fraud scheme in which authorities say they sold properties they did not own sales that came as a surprise to both the actual property owners and the unsuspecting buyers.
The scheme came to light when the owner of a Norco home learned that someone had surreptitiously transferred the deed to his property, according to the Riverside County District Attorney’s office, which is prosecuting the case. Investigators linked the case to similar apparent fraud in Arizona and Texas.
Brenda Ann Gregory, 54, and Angel Alfonso Gutierrez, 55, were arrested in March and have been charged with five felonies, including grand theft, identity theft and money laundering. They also face an allegation of aggravated white collar crime, accused of taking upward of $100,000.
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A woman killed over the weekend in a fiery desert crash has been identified as a much-loved Oceanside native who worked 13 years in the city’s Police Department.
Brett Ann Gregory, 53, worked 10 years as a community service officer in the department’s front office, where she helped people with police reports, fingerprints and other walk-in services. She became a 911 emergency dispatcher in 2015.
“She dealt with the public with grace and dignity,” said Bonnie Stauffer, communications supervisor for the Police Department. “She was loved by all. There’s not a better person that I know.”
Gregory was on her way to meet her family for a weekend campout when the collision occurred, Stauffer said.
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You won’t find this setup often - or possibly ever: A small-cap explorer sitting on a massive Permian basin that has potential for a major onshore conventional oil discovery.
And the drill bit just hit the ground in a three-well campaign…
Because it’s a small-cap sitting on such a huge basin (8.5 million acres), its stocks are already soaring in anticipation of the first results, which are soon to be released.
Drilling started just over a week ago, and already the stock is supercharged, gaining over 100% since January 1st.
Onshore, there is almost no oil or gas regions left unexplored on land, except in Africa, which remains underexplored.