Ocean Beach news roundup June 3
This week in the Ocean Beach news roundup: N-Judah on track, goodbye Doc Watson, Golden Gate Park coyote pup photos
We can’t link to every story out there, but if you think we missed something, leave a comment here, or tell us on Twitter or Facebook.
- Muni’s N-Judah streetcar line is on track to be back in service on schedule Monday morning, June 4 after extensive rail work. – CBS Local
- Doc Watson, an influential bluegrass musician who often performed at San Francisco’s Hardly Strictly Bluegrass festival in Golden Gate Park, died last week. KQED’s News Fix blog has a video of him playing there. – KQED
- Chronicle columnist John King is bringing his Sunday feature Cityscape to the Sunset District for the month of June (and he’s looking for ideas). First stop: the Sunset Co-Op Nursery School building. – SF Chronicle
- It’s pupping season for Golden Gate Park’s coyotes, and the Richmond District Blog has some cute photos of the little tricksters. – Richmond SF Blog
- SFSU’s President Robert Corrigan departs in July after a quarter-century guiding the university. – SF Chronicle (story not online until June 4), SF Gate City Brights blog
- The Chronicle’s 49 Square Miles project visits the Stonestown Farmers Market, where the offerings bear little resemblance to the mall’s food-court fare. – SF Chronicle






Aww love those coyotes! I can’t believe they’re right in our back yard, near a big bison herd. Wait, do we really live in a city?!