La Jolla, CA|News|
Contest: Win a Family Four-Pack to San Diego International Boat Show
Learn to SCUBA, try paddle sports and tour historic steam ship and superyachts at Harbor Island June 20-23.

Email: ken.stone@patch.com
Phone: 619-990-9894
Hometowns: Born in Detroit; moved to Buena Park, Calif., at age 8; spent three years of high school in Yorba Linda, Calif.; moved with family to Omaha in 1971; later lived in Lawrence, Kan.; Lamar, Mo.; Vista, San Marcos and Fremont, Calif.; San Diego; and finally La Mesa for life!
Birthday: June 18
Ken has been a working journalist since 1976, when he graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Kansas. From roots in community journalism (sports editor at the Lamar Democrat in Missouri and editor of two weeklies in San Marcos, Calif.), Ken grew into a seasoned copy editor at several dailies, culminating in a 24-year career at The San Diego Union-Tribune.
The last seven years were spent moving the print edition online at SignOnSanDiego.com, the U-T’s website. He joined Patch in July 2010 and launched La Mesa Patch on Sept. 29, 2010.
He became associate regional editor for south San Diego County in March 2012, and oversees six Patch sites, including the combined La Mesa-Mount Helix Patch edited by Eric Yates.
Pre-Patch resume: kenresume.html
In his hobby life, Ken is a daily blogger at masterstrack.com, a site devoted to adult age-group track and field. Its predecessor site was founded in February 1996. In 2009, he was named the inaugural winner of the Adam Jacobs Memorial Award for Excellence in Blogging by TAFWA — the Track and Field Writers of America.
Ken also competes in track in his late 50s, and ran in three world and 13 national masters championships. He’s lived in La Mesa with his ESL teacher wife, Chris, since early 1999. Their son, Robert, attended Murray Manor Elementary, Parkway Middle School and Grossmont High School, where he was a four-year member of the Royal Blue Regiment Marching Band.
BELIEFS
At Patch, we promise always to report the facts as objectively as possible and otherwise adhere to the principles of good journalism. However, we also acknowledge that true impartiality is impossible and human beings have beliefs. So in the spirit of simple honesty, our policy is to encourage our editors to reveal certain key beliefs to the extent they feel comfortable.
This disclosure is not a license for our editors to inject these beliefs into stories or to dictate coverage according to them. In fact, the intent is the opposite: we hope that the knowledge that our beliefs are on the record will force us to be ever mindful to write, report, and edit in a fair, balanced way. And if you, the user, ever think you see evidence that we failed in this mission, we wholeheartedly invite you to let us know.
How would you describe your political beliefs?
I am a liberal. Period. I want to see good government deliver high-quality services. I support candidates who defend citizens against corporate interests. I prefer high taxes to high social misery. Progressives are wimps.
Are you registered with a certain party?
My debut vote was cast for George McGovern in 1972, when I was part of the first wave of 18-year-olds allowed to take part in federal elections under the 26th amendment. I’ve since voted for a few Republicans and Independents but generally support Democrats, my party of record.
RELIGION
How religious would you consider yourself?
I’m spiritual but non-religious. God gave me a wonderful wife, amazing son and pretty good health (if not footspeed).
Do you identify with a certain religion? If so, which one?
I’m a proud but non-observant Jew — married to a thoughtful and practicing Catholic. I was confirmed in the Reform movement of Judaism as a high school sophomore in 1970.
Learn to SCUBA, try paddle sports and tour historic steam ship and superyachts at Harbor Island June 20-23.

As many as 600 people, including some from the Fine Arts reception downstairs, visited the photo exhibit.
Bay Ho resident near La Jolla celebrated “great, great lucky moment” at San Diego Zoo.
Robert Bjorkquist said he took about 100 shots of the inquisitive birds with a Canon G12 digital camera.
Titled "Mom, the Big Monster Ate My Sandcastle," the image was one of three of his accepted for display.
“I would say sorry for any small inconvenience they may have suffered,” said Roger Ogden, a Tea Party activist.
Garrie Lynn Rhodes was one of perhaps 600 to view the photo display at the annual artists reception.
Runners of the 10K went off in waves, with the first being elites going for time. Others followed at intervals between 7 and 10 minutes.
Camp Pendleton’s base commander returns for another 10K slog at the 20th annual World Famous Mud Run.
Sarah Banks: “Class of 2013, you do not have to be perfect to be successful, just be the best ‘you’ that you can possibly be, and you will be unstoppable.”
Ryan Chau: “There is no high school experience without everyone being there.”
“Aren’t the lives of Monse (Monserrat Mendez) and my son worth more than this?” Allison Fomon told the court.
The FPPC’s review followed an audit of advertisements by inewsource and KPBS, which showed different payments for ads.
Palomar operates two hospitals in Escondido and one in Poway. It employs 4,000 people.
The January 2012 shutdown prompted a rise in wholesale power prices that has persisted through 2013.
California Pizza Kitchen Inc. and Nestlé USA Inc. are asking for $200,000 in penalties and fines against lawyer Gregory Weston and his firm.
Kevin Cox, Tyrone Miller and Emrys John reportedly shot the newly married couple in the head execution-style after raping Jenkins-Pietrzak in the Pietrzak family home.