San Diego, CA
Ohio State Buckeyes Land Commitment From San Diego State Transfer Micah Parrish
Jake Diebler is turning his offseason around.
After losing four players to the transfer portal, the Ohio State Buckeyes head coach has now landed his third player in the portal — this time, San Diego State guard Micah Parrish, he announced on his Instagram Saturday.
Parrish, who played two years at Oakland before leaving for San Diego, has averaged more than nine points and four rebounds on 43 percent shooting from the field and 33 percent from downtown in his career.
Mar 27, 2024; Boston, MA, USA; San Diego State Aztecs guard Micah Parrish (3).
Brian Fluharty-USA TODAY Sports
The Detroit native was a member of the Aztecs’ national runner-up team a year ago, where he provided solid defense and shooting in just 21.5 minutes per game. This season, Parrish’s shooting efficiency decreased but continued to propel Brian Dutcher’s squad in perimeter defense — the Aztecs finished with a top 40 scoring defense this season.
Ironically, Parrish played both seasons in San Diego with Jaedon LeDee, who transferred from Ohio State after just one season with the program in 2019.
The transfer joins a backcourt of sophomore Bruce Thornton, freshman Taison Chatman, incoming freshman Juni Mobley and transfer Meechie Johnson Jr.
However, the Buckeyes lost freshman Scotty Middleton Jr., as well as sophomore guards Roddy Gayle Jr. and Bowen Hardman to the portal.
With Gayle on his way out, the Buckeyes are losing perhaps their best perimeter-defending guard. Parrish, standing at 6-6, can now pair with sophomore forward Evan Mahaffey to lock down the top two, 1-4 players on opposing teams.
Along with Johnson and Parrish, Diebler has also landed Kentucky big Aaron Bradshaw, who announced his commitment to Ohio State Monday.
Parrish attempted to recruit Horizon League Player of the Year and former Oakland teammate Trey Townsend to the Buckeyes on his Instagram story Saturday.
The Buckeyes are seemingly rounding out their roster well in portal season.
San Diego, CA
Where to watch TCU vs. UC San Diego in March Madness First Round: Time, TV Channel
March Madness is underway and college basketball’s big dance continues with No. 3 seed TCU taking on No. 14 seed UC San Diego in a First Round matchup on Friday, March 20. Here’s everything you need to know to tune in for the clash between the Tritons and Horned Frogs.
USA TODAY Sports has a team of journalists covering women’s March Madness to keep you up to date with every point scored, rebound grabbed and game won in the 68-team tournament.
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What time is UC San Diego vs TCU First Round game?
No. 3 TCU vs No. 14 UC San Diego tips off at 12:00 PM (EST) on Friday, March 20 from Ed & Rae Schollmaier Arena (Fort Worth, Texas).
What channel is UC San Diego vs TCU First Round game?
No. 3 TCU vs No. 14 UC San Diego is airing live on ESPN.
How to stream UC San Diego vs TCU First Round game
No. 3 TCU vs No. 14 UC San Diego is available to stream on Fubo.
Watch the NCAA Tournament all March long with Fubo
Women’s March Madness schedule today
See the schedule, live scores and resultsfor all of Friday’s NCAA Tournament action here.
2026 Women’s NCAA Tournament full schedule
- March 18-19: First Four
- March 20-21: First Round
- March 22-23: Second Round
- March 27-28: Sweet 16
- March 29-30: Elite 8
- April 3: Final Four
- April 5: National Championship
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San Diego, CA
San Diego hospital pulls plug on child trans treatments — families cry ‘discrimination’
A major California children’s hospital is facing a legal firestorm after pulling the plug on transgender care for minors, leaving families scrambling and triggering dueling lawsuits.
Four families are suing San Diego-based Rady Children’s Health, accusing the hospital of abruptly cutting off gender-affirming treatments and throwing nearly 2,000 young patients into limbo.
The fallout was immediate: canceled appointments, disrupted care and panicked parents racing to find new doctors.
And the families aren’t alone in taking legal action.
They join California Attorney General Rob Bonta, who already filed his own lawsuit, alleging the hospital’s move isn’t just harmful, it’s illegal.
At the center of the fight is a binding merger agreement requiring Rady to keep offering gender-affirming care through 2034, a promise the state says the hospital broke when it shut down services for patients under 19.
Hospital officials insist their hands were tied, pointing to mounting federal pressure, funding threats and even a federal investigation into transgender care programs.
But critics aren’t buying it.
They argue California law clearly bans discrimination based on gender identity, and treats gender-affirming care as medically necessary, meaning the hospital can’t just walk away.
The controversy is part of a wider national battle, as federal officials ramp up scrutiny of transgender care for minors, putting hospitals across the country in the crosshairs.
For now, a judge has stepped in to temporarily block a full shutdown of services, but the broader fight is just getting started.
And with kids’ healthcare caught in the middle, the outcome could ripple far beyond one hospital.
San Diego, CA
Karen Harris – San Diego Union-Tribune
Karen Harris
OBITUARY
Karen Harris, longtime La Jolla resident and former staff member of the “La Jolla Light”, passed away on February 26, 2026, at the age of 82.
Born Karen Christine Arp on March 19, 1943, in Los Angeles, California, she was the daughter of Francys Raia Arp and Christian Peter Arp. She grew up in Eagle Rock, and the family moved to Escondido in the 1950s. As a young adult, she moved to Mission Beach, where she met her future husband, Philip Harris, in 1964. They married in 1965 and had a daughter, Krista.
Karen began her career as a technical illustrator for companies including General Dynamics and Control Data. In 1977, she joined the La Jolla Light in the graphics department but soon discovered her true strengths were in sales. She went on to run the classified sales department for many years and was later promoted to advertising sales manager.
After leaving the “La Jolla Light”, she continued her career in sales, including work with the San Diego edition of the “Los Angeles Times” and later with the pre-press software company DK&A. At a time when that was not always the expected path for women, she built a successful career while remaining equally committed to her family.
Karen was a vibrant conversationalist — elegant, polished, charming and genuinely interested in people. She loved clothes, style and beauty, and did some modeling in the mid-1960s. She lived unapologetically on her own terms. She disliked cooking and never pretended otherwise, yet she loved good food and enjoyed her husband’s and daughter’s home-cooked meals.
Throughout her life, Karen pursued a wide range of interests, including sewing, jewelry making, folded book art, succulent arrangements, belly dancing, Zumba and ballroom dancing with her husband. She was also an enthusiastic do-it-yourselfer who took great pleasure in painting and redecorating their Bird Rock home of 46 years.
Gardening was one of Karen’s great passions. Inspired by the Getty’s Central Garden, she sought out unusual plants and designed a contemporary, layered landscape in which rock, wood, water and foliage were balanced with an artist’s eye.
In 2021, she and her husband moved to Santa Barbara to be closer to their daughter.
Karen is survived by her husband of over 60 years, Philip Harris, and her daughter, Krista Harris. She will be deeply missed by her family and remembered by many friends and former colleagues.
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