Point Loman Patti McGee Was World’s First Professional Female Skateboarder — May She Rest in Peace
It was 1965 and I remember very well staring at the cover of Life magazine. It had a young woman, a local Point Loman, on the cover doing a handstand on a skateboard. It was an amazing picture and even more of an amazing stunt. The young blond on the cover was Patti McGee.
Skateboards were brand new back in the mid-sixties and most kids who had them had made them themselves. Take the metal skates available and attach them to a wood board covered by a piece of carpeting. Voila! A skateboard.
Patti McGee has just passed; she was 79. She broke so many records, it’s difficult now to imagine a world without her. Fortunately for us, U-T writer Maura Fox has just laid out McGee’s history and significance, and to let the rest of us know that a nonprofit named Exposure Skate will hold a ceremony for McGee at its annual skate event for women and nonbinary skaters in Encinitas this Saturday, November 2 at 5 p.m.

As many know, one of the most contentious contests in this election cycle is between incumbent County Supervisor Terra Lawson-Remer and former Republican mayor Kevin Faulconer. They’re both running in District 3, which includes much of the coast and has much of a liberal bent.
By Geoff Page
By Tony Barboza /
By Julie Meier Wright /
By Lynne Miller
by Ernie McCray
By Thelma Sawyer
There’s one week until Election Day, November 5th, and law enforcement officials across the country are having to deal with a rising wave of threats to election workers and political activists, plus having now to contend with fires in mailboxes — all foreshadow a presidential contest hurtling toward an aftermath that could include unprecedented violence and disturbances.
The news that neither the Washington Post nor the Los Angeles Times will endorse Kamala Harris for president has shaken the media world and shows clearly the risks of billionaires owning major newspapers — especially during this crucial, nation-defining moment.
“No dog whistles, no plausible deniability,” wrote one historian. “It’s a show of power and an another attempt to make this look and feel normal.”




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