Chris Amico: Journalist

Highlights of my professional work

Archive for the ‘east bay’ tag

Pastor, partner tie knot as Prop. 8 vote nears

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16-year couple marry less than a month before Proposition 8 hits the ballot, as many same-sex couples are now doing (slide show)

HAYWARD — With quiet vows and an eye toward November’s Proposition 8 referendum, Stephanie Sue Spencer and the Rev. Arlene Nehring made their 16-year union a legal California marriage in Hayward’s Eden United Church of Christ, where Nehring presides as pastor.

This “much-awaited day” wasn’t quite the wedding they’d hoped for, but with voters going to the polls in a month in an election that could make their union unconstitutional, the couple felt it was better now than never.

“People are hedging their bets,” said Todd Bove, a member of the church who married his partner of 10 years just a month ago. Read the rest of this entry »

Written by Chris Amico

October 11th, 2008 at 3:44 pm

Alameda County law-enforcement teams train for disasters, attacks

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HAYWARD — This is what the tactical team knows: They are protecting a speaker who is strongly against immigration. The day before she is set to deliver an address to students at Cal State East Bay, someone calls in a death threat to the university. The tactical team’s job: keep her alive.

This is only a drill, but an important one.

Across Alameda County, tactical teams from 25 law enforcement agencies are going through 48 hours of simulated disasters, terrorist attacks, riots and jail breaks, from 6 a.m. Saturday to 6 a.m. Monday. In all, 1,700 people are involved in making look real a long list of answers to the question: What’s the worst that could happen? Read the rest of this entry »

Written by Chris Amico

October 8th, 2008 at 5:32 pm

Posted in Bay Area News Group

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For many, Hayward is home of West Coast blues

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Hayward/Russell City Blues Festival from Chris Amico on Vimeo.
Originally published in the Hayward Daily Review

Terry “Big T” Williams pours his blues out over a swaying crowd, music and sweat rolling off him, green guitar howling.

“I’ll play the blues for you,” he sings, and he delivers on the promise.

The sound comes from the Mississippi Delta, translated and augmented on its way to the West Coast, to Russell City, where a new blues emerged.

Playing in front of Hayward City Hall on Saturday, Williams captures the endpoints of a musical journey espoused by the annual Hayward/Russell City Blues Festival.

“West Coast music is mutt music,” Ronnie Stewart, founder of the Bay Area Blues Society, explains. “It’s a mixture of everything.” Read the rest of this entry »

Written by Chris Amico

July 13th, 2008 at 4:16 pm

Cal Student Who Twittered to Freedom Tries to Help His Peer

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James Buck secured freedom from an Egyptian jail, but wants the world to remember the plight of his translator.

Read it in the East Bay Express here.

Hear James Buck describe his arrest in EgyptJames Buck is famous on Twitter. The photojournalist and UC Berkeley graduate student used the messaging service to text “Arrested” as Egyptian police took him into custody on April 10, and after a flood of media coverage, he was released the next day. But Buck would like a different name remembered: Mohammed Salah Ahmed Maree, his 23-year-old interpreter, who was taken at the same time.

Maree may still be in prison. The veterinary student has been held in a high-security facility called Borg al Arab outside Alexandria since his arrest two months ago, and while local news reports say he may be freed soon, neither Buck nor aid workers in his case could be certain. Maree has been tortured, Buck and others allege. According to his family and Human Rights Watch, he has gone on a hunger strike and been put in solitary confinement. Agents of the interior ministry have allegedly threatened the family, saying that Maree will never be released, even though no charges have officially been filed. Other organizers of the April protests have gotten out, but Maree, for a time, was simply lost in the system. Read the rest of this entry »

Written by Chris Amico

July 9th, 2008 at 2:35 pm

Relay for Life

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IMG_3231

(click the image to see a three-part slide show)

Alameda hosted its 14th Relay for Life on Saturday and Sunday, with 400 people on 26 teams walking the track at Encinal High School for 24 hours.

The Alameda Relay’s goal was to raise $130,000 in the event to go toward research, education and support of local services, such as driving cancer patients to therapy.

The relay included the first lap dedicated to survivors, and a luminaria ceremony, with candles in sand lining the track to light the way for walkers through the night to dedicated to loved ones who have had cancer.

This year’s theme was “Celebrate, Remember, Fight back.”

“Survivors celebrate that they made it through the treatment. And of course they remember the friends they’ve lost. And we encourage everyone to fight back,” said Emilia Stephens, the Relay’s team captain coordinator. Read the rest of this entry »

Written by Chris Amico

June 24th, 2008 at 3:18 am

Holding on to history

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Parma’s jeep
Click the photo for a slide show

Biaggio Parma is “trying to hold a little bit of history that’s fast sliding away.” This jeep was a reconnaissance vehicle in Europe during the Second World War.

Parma served in the US Navy from 1957 to ’61, working as an electrician aboard an aircraft carrier. Read the rest of this entry »

Written by Chris Amico

May 20th, 2008 at 4:08 pm