So I get back after taking a week off and find my office e-mail basket spilling over with more than 700 messages. Several dozen were legitimate missives from readers and whatnot, and the rest . . . well, you know where I'm going with this.
Could California lead the nation into a spam-free future? Or at least one where appreciably fewer unwanted pitches for porn, anatomical enhancements and cheapo printer cartridges flood our electronic inboxes? 2003.02.24
Nearly 9 out of 10 Americans who use e-mail at work support legislation that would require warning labels on sexually explicit or pornographic spam and establish criminal penalties for spam that contains misleading information about the identity of th...
A man suspected of drunken driving, whose license has been suspended six times, struck and killed Ted Resnick on a Berkeley city street early yesterday while fleeing California Highway Patrol officers, authorities said.
San Francisco Chronicle's initial article about Ted's death. A high-speed chase of a suspected drunk driver claimed Ted as a fatality when the suspect hit Ted's car.
A Suisun City man was charged with murder yesterday in the death of Theodore Resnick at the end of a high-speed chase in Berkeley involving the California Highway Patrol.
Risk to bystanders is part of decision. The death of Theodore Abraham Resnick, 33, of San Francisco has rekindled a long-standing debate over whether car chases on city streets pose too many risks.