San Francisco, CA
Social worker critically hurt in stabbing at San Francisco General Hospital
A social worker was stabbed and severely injured Thursday inside Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, authorities said.
The San Francisco Sheriff’s Office said at about 1:30 p.m., hospital workers requested additional security for a doctor who had received threats from a patient. While providing security for the doctor, a deputy heard a disturbance in a hospital hallway involving a suspect and the social worker from the University of California, San Francisco, the Sheriff’s Office said.
The deputy immediately intervened and restrained the suspect, while medical staff on site tended to the 31-year-old social worker, who was stabbed in the neck and shoulder, the office said. The unidentified social worker was listed in critical condition.
Deputies recovered a five-inch kitchen knife believed to have been used in the attack. The 35-year-old male suspect was at the hospital for a scheduled appointment and had reportedly made previous threats to the doctor, the Sheriff’s Office said.
There was no ongoing threat to the public, the office said.
San Francisco, CA
Paper Son Is a Singular San Francisco Coffee Experience
Alex Pong’s Paper Son Coffee is not just a TikTok typhoon for 20-somethings. He opened his business, now with two outposts, in the end of 2023 as an homage to his family’s history emigrating from China. But it’s the quality and combined with the clear point of view that make Paper Son singular in San Francisco.
Each Paper Son is super different: The first one is still a residence inside Dogpatch bakery Neighbor Bakehouse, effectively a window with outdoor seats. The downtown spot has way more of Pong’s influence on display: Gundam figurines, Yu-Gi-Oh! cards taped to the La Marzoco, and lots of young people eating and drinking seemingly all the time.
Go to the Dogpatch outpost on a weekday if you are craving to try a top-tier pastry and a Paper Son coffee without a line. If you want the full line-inducing experience, drop by the downtown spot Wednesday through Friday when Tano is on-site. Do not try the downtown spot on the weekend; it’s closed.
San Francisco, CA
Cal criminal justice professor talks about Oakland crime data
San Francisco, CA
3 positions the San Francisco 49ers must address in the 2026 offseason
The San Francisco 49ers are at the bye week which is a good time to look back and assess where the roster. What are going to be the biggest needs on the roster as they head into the offseason in a month or two?
Wide Receiver
The 49ers need to figure out what they are going to do at wide receiver. Brandon Aiyuk has reportedly played his last down with the team. Jauan Jennings is a free agent. A few weeks ago, it was clear that the team would wish him the best, but he has played better football in recent weeks. Still, that may just price him out of the 49ers’ range.
Ricky Pearsall has been a disappointment since returning, and his injuries and lack of production through two years are now adding up. All of this is to say that wide receiver is a priority. Clearing the money from Aiyuk is huge, but that is a big hole to fill, and they do not have a player within the organization to do it.
Left Guard
The 49ers fumbled around at left guard this past offseason, and it ended up costing them. They bet on Ben Bartch, a seventh-round rookie, Connor Colby, and Spencer Burford, who spent the summer at left tackle. Of course, it is the guy who played left tackle that they are leaning on.
We have seen Burford before, and he is going to be a free agent after this year as well. Even if he plays well, the team should not be tied to him. They should not just lean on re-signing him, and they cannot assume anything from either Bartch or Colby. They have to actually do something here.
Defensive Line
Alfred Collins is starting to blossom, but he is hardly putting up anything in the stat column. Meanwhile, the rest of the group is extremely lackluster. Kalia Davis, CJ West, and Jordan Elliott are the type of players who compete for the fourth spot in a rotation, not make up the rotation. Elliott and Davis will be free agents, and the only reason they would bring either back is that they are going to return for so cheap because no one else wants them.
San Francisco was at their best with the likes of Javon Hargrave, Arik Armstead, and DeForest Buckner. They need to get back to those days with a real investment at the interior defensive line position.
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