Kaiser permanente south san francisco

South San Francisco, California

2013.10.08 02:01 secaa23 South San Francisco, California

South San Francisco, California
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2020.03.14 16:32 happypath8 CoronavirusSF

Coronavirus / COVID19 news in San Francisco and the surrounding area (Oakland, Marin, SouthSF)
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2011.12.23 06:06 scoobydrew Daly City: Gateway to the Peninsula

Daly City, California on the San Mateo Peninsula in the San Francisco Bay Area
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2023.06.01 14:30 EchoJobs SoFi is hiring Senior Staff Software Engineer, Money [San Francisco, CA] [Machine Learning]

SoFi is hiring Senior Staff Software Engineer, Money [San Francisco, CA] [Machine Learning] submitted by EchoJobs to SanFranciscoTechJobs [link] [comments]


2023.06.01 14:30 EchoJobs Volley is hiring Senior Software Engineer USD 165k-210k [San Francisco, CA] [TypeScript React Kubernetes DynamoDB PostgreSQL Node.js]

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2023.06.01 14:21 EchoJobs Sojern is hiring Staff Software Engineer San Francisco, CA [Spring Machine Learning Python SQL Kubernetes GCP Go Docker Terraform]

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2023.06.01 14:21 EchoJobs Sojern is hiring Staff Software Engineer San Francisco, CA [Spring Machine Learning Python SQL Kubernetes GCP Go Docker Terraform]

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2023.06.01 14:20 EchoJobs Sojern is hiring Staff Software Engineer San Francisco, CA [Spring Machine Learning Python SQL Kubernetes GCP Go Docker Terraform]

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2023.06.01 14:20 EchoJobs Sojern is hiring Staff Software Engineer San Francisco, CA [Spring Machine Learning Python SQL Kubernetes GCP Go Docker Terraform]

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2023.06.01 14:20 EchoJobs Webflow is hiring Senior Backend Engineer, Ecosystem USD 130k-198k San Francisco, CA US Remote Canada [AWS JavaScript API Node.js Express.js GraphQL]

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2023.06.01 14:12 sonofabutch No game today, so let's remember a forgotten Yankee: Jackie Jensen, "The Golden Boy"

Jackie Jensen, "The Golden Boy", was a superstar athlete in the 1940s who seemed destined for greatness as the heir to Joe DiMaggio... only to be supplanted by a different golden boy, the great Mickey Mantle.
Jensen would eventually live up to the hype, but with the Red Sox -- but his career prematurely because, as baseball expanded to the west coast, his fear of flying made road games unbearable!
The Yankees between 1947 and 1964 were utterly dominant, winning 15 pennants and 10 World Series. And it wasn't just the major league team that was successful. The Yankees of this era were loaded up and down the system, from Rookie ball to their two Triple-A teams!
With such a loaded major league roster, the Yankees had many talented players stuck either on the end of the bench or in the minors who would eventually find an opportunity with other teams, including Bob Cerv, Vic Power, Gus Triandos, Lew Burdette, Jerry Lumpe, Bob Porterfield, and Bob Keegan, who would all be All-Stars with other teams. Clint Courtney would be the 1952 A.L. Rookie of the Year runner-up after the Yankees traded him to the Browns, and Bill Virdon was the 1955 N.L. Rookie of the Year with the Cardinals (and then Yankee manager from 1974 to 1975!).
But the most talented player who just couldn't find the playing time in New York was Jack Eugene Jensen, born March 9, 1927, in San Francisco. His parents divorced when he was 5, and he grew up poor, his mother working six days a week, 12 hours a day. Jensen said the family moved 16 times between kindergarten and eighth grade -- "every time the rent came due."
After serving in the U.S. Navy during World War II, Jensen went to the University of California in 1946 on the G.I. Bill. There he became one of the most famous college players in the country, leading Cal to the Rose Bowl. In 1947, he was the starting fullback as well as the team's top defensive back, and in 1948, he rushed for 1,000 yards and was an All-American.
He also was a tremendous two-way baseball player, pitching and hitting for the Golden Bears in 1947 as the won the very first College World Series, beating a Yale team that had George H.W. Bush playing first base. In 1949, he was an All-American in baseball, too.
His blond hair, good looks, and athletic accomplishments earned him the nickname "The Golden Boy."
Halfway through his junior year, Jensen left Berkeley to turn pro. Jensen would later say he couldn't risk playing a career-ending injury playing for free while teams -- baseball and football -- were trying to sign him to big-money contracts.
"There was a money tree growing in my backyard. Why shouldn't I pluck off the dollars when I wanted to?"
Jensen considered a number of offers, including from the Yankees, before signing a three-year, $75,000 contract with the Oakland Oaks of the Pacific Coast League. Jensen said he thought he'd face better competition in the Pacific Coast League, the top minor league of the era, than he would at the bottom of the Yankee farm system. He was right about it being more of a challenge -- he hit an unimpressive .261/.317/.394 in 510 plate appearances with the Oaks.
At the end of the year, the Oaks sold his contract (and that of Billy Martin, another Northern California kid) to the Yankees.
That same year, Jensen married his high school sweetheart, Zoe Ann Olsen, an Olympic diver. (By age 18, she had won 14 national diving championships and a silver medal in the 1948 Olympics.) "Together they looked like a Nordic god and goddess," Sports Illustrated reported. Nicknamed "the sweethearts of sports," they were the Dansby Swanson and Mallory Pugh of their era. More than 1,000 people attended their wedding.
Jensen would start the 1950 season not in the minors but in the Bronx. He joined the Yankees in a time of flux. They though they'd won the 1949 World Series, the Yankees knew they had to make some changes, with 35-year-old Joe DiMaggio nearing the end of his career. And their heir apparent was not Mickey Mantle -- at the time an 18-year-old shortstop playing in the Class C league, the equivalent of A-ball today -- but the 23-year-old Jensen.
But Jensen disappointed, hitting just .171/.247/.300 in 70 at-bats, and only starting in 13 games. Watching from the bench most of the season, Jensen would later lament the lost year of development, saying he'd have been better off playing every day in the Pacific Coast League.
The Yankees won the pennant for a second straight year, and in the World Series he once again was left on the bench. His only action was as a pinch runner in Game 3 as the Yankees swept the Phillies. That "Moonlight Graham" appearance would be his only taste of the post-season in an 11-year career.
The following year would be DiMaggio's last, and Mantle's first. Jensen began the year as the Yankees' starting left fielder and proved he belonged, hitting .296/.371/.509 through the end of July... and then, shockingly, was demoted to Triple-A and replaced with previously forgotten Yankee Bob Cerv.
I can see why they called up Cerv -- the University of Nebraska stand-out was tearing up Triple-A, leading the American Association in batting average (.349), home runs (26), triples (21), RBIs (101), and total bases (261) -- but why demote Jensen, who had a 140 OPS+ in the majors? Maybe the Yankees felt the brash 23-year-old needed to be taken down a peg. In any event, Cerv hit just .214/.333/.250 in August and was sent back to Triple-A, but Jensen also was left down there. He hit .263/.344/.469 and was recalled after the Triple-A season ended, only getting into three games (he went 3-for-9).
Mantle, too, had started the season with the Yankees, and after hitting .260/.341/.423 through the middle of July, was sent down to Triple-A. But he hit .361/.445/.651 in 166 at-bats, and unlike Jensen was back in the bigs by August 24. He would play pretty much every game the rest of the season, hitting .284/.370/.495 in 95 at-bats.
The torch had clearly been passed -- Jensen was no longer the heir apparent to DiMaggio. In the World Series that year, Mantle was the starting right fielder, and Jensen wasn't even on the post-season roster.
Jensen was so disappointed with how the Yankees had treated him in 1951 that he talked to the San Francisco 49ers about switching to pro football, but ultimately decided to stick with baseball.
Never shy about what he said to reporters, Jensen told The Sporting News on October 24, 1951:
"I felt so badly about the treatment that I received from the Yankees that, although I was in New York at the end of the season, I didn't feel like sticking around to even watch the club play in any of the World's Series games."
"I do not feel the Yankees were justified in sending me to the minor leagues. When I was shipped to Kansas City, I was doing as good a job as any Yankee outfielder and better than some of them. I was hitting .296, which was ten points better than Hank Bauer and 30 points better than Joe DiMaggio, Gene Woodling and Mickey Mantle. Yet Casey Stengel didn't give me the chance I felt I deserved."
Despite blasting his manager in the press, Jensen was still the property of the Yankees. That off-season, teams were circling, hoping to pry away the talented but disgruntled outfielder. There were newspaper reports of offers from the St. Louis Browns, the Detroit Tigers, the Philadelphia Athletics, the Washington Senators, the Cleveland Indians, and the Boston Red Sox -- with one rumor being Ted Williams to the Bronx in exchange for Jensen and several other players. (A Red Sox scout called the rumored deal "a lot of hogwash.")
Sportswriters spent the off-season speculating whether DiMaggio would retire, and if he did, whether Jensen or Mantle would take over as the center fielder, as there were still concerns that Mantle, who had hurt his knee in the 1951 World Series, wouldn't be fully recovered by the start of the season.
On Opening Day, April 16, 1952, it was Jackie Jensen in center and Mickey Mantle in right. Jensen went 0-for-5 with a GIDP; Mantle, 3-for-4 with a double, a walk, and a stolen base! Seven games into the season, Jensen was 2-for-17 (.118) and found himself on the bench. He'd never play for the Yankees again. On May 3, the Golden Boy was traded to the Washington Senators along with Spec Shea, Jerry Snyder, and Archie Wilson in exchange for Irv Noren and Tom Upton.
In two years with the Senators, Jensen hit an impressive .276/.359/.407 (112 OPS+), but the team was terrible, and Jensen wasn't happy. Still just 26 years old, he later said he had almost quit after the 1953 season... particularly after a harrowing flight to Japan for a series of exhibition games with a squad of All-Stars that included Yankees Yogi Berra, Eddie Lopat, and Billy Martin. That experience gave Jensen a lifelong fear of flying, a phobia that became so intense eventually he could only fly with the help of sleeping pills... and a hypnotist!
He might have quit if not for the trade on December 9, 1953, that sent him to the Boston Red Sox for pitcher Mickey McDermott and outfielder Tom Umphlett. He was homesick, he hated flying, and he now had two little kids at home. Red Sox general manager Joe Cronin convinced Jensen to come to the Red Sox, telling him that Fenway Park was tailor made for his swing. Cronin was right: Jensen was a career .279/.369/.460 hitter, but .298/.400/.514 at Fenway.
It was in Boston that Jensen finally lived up to the hype, becoming a two-time All-Star and winning the A.L. MVP Award in 1958 and a Gold Glove in 1959. During his seven seasons in Boston, he hit .282/.374/.478 in 4,519 plate appearances. In his MVP season, Jensen hit .286/.396/.535 (148 OPS+) with 31 doubles, 35 home runs, and a league-leading 122 RBIs. During his peak with the Red Sox, 1954 to 1959, Jensen's average season was .285/.378/.490 (127 OPS+) with 28 doubles, 26 home runs, 111 RBIs, 14 stolen bases, and 3.6 bWAR. During those six seasons, no one in the American League -- not Mickey Mantle, not Ted Williams, not Al Kaline -- had more runs batted in than Jackie Jensen.
Of course, Mantle was the far better player -- even in Jensen's MVP season, Mantle had more runs, hits, home runs, walks, and a 188 OPS+ -- but Jensen's 127 OPS+ between 1954 and 1959 would have been an upgrade over the aging Hank Bauer's 110 OPS+ in right or the left field merry-go-round of Norm Siebern (113 OPS+), Irv Noren (107 OPS+), Enos Slaughter (103 OPS+), and previously forgotten Yankee Hector Lopez (101 OPS+). Casey Stengel would later say the Jensen trade was the worst one the Yankees had made while he was manager.
Despite his success, Jensen was sometimes booed by the Boston fans, just as they sometimes booed Ted Williams. There even was an article in Sport magazine, "What Do They Want From Jackie Jensen?", taking Red Sox fans to task for their unreasonably high demands from the Golden Boy. In 1956, in a game at Fenway Park against the Yankees, the hometown fans were razzing Jensen so much that teammates had to restrain him from going into the stands after a fan. Later that same game, Williams misplayed a wind-blown fly ball from Mantle, and the fans booed lustily. The very next play, Williams made a leaping catch at the scoreboard to rob Yogi Berra of a double. But Williams, still furious, spit into the crowd. He was later fined $5,000.
And Jackie was unhappy to be away from home. He and Zoe Ann had bought a house near Lake Tahoe, where they could both ski and golf year-round, as well as hit the casinos. They also had a home in Oakland, and a restaurant there, and each year Jensen hosted a pro-am golf tournament. But the marriage was struggling. Zoe Ann, once nationally known for her Olympic exploits, was frustrated to be a stay-at-home mom in the shadow of her famous husband, and Jackie became angry if she engaged in her favorite outdoor hobbies, suspecting there were men around.
Jensen's fear of flying also had become even more intense. Sometimes he was so drugged up that he had to be carried on and off the plane, fueling rumors that he was a drunk. Other times he took trains or even drove while his teammates flew.
Once again Jensen was talking about retirement, and in Spring Training 1957, the Red Sox allowed him to train with the San Francisco Seals, Boston's Triple-A team, rather than having to go to Florida. But he was still miserable. That year, he told Sports Illustrated:
“In baseball you get to the point where you don’t think you have a family. It just looks like I’m not built for this life like some ballplayers. You are always away from home and you’re lonesome, and as soon as I can, I intend to get out.”
The 32-year-old Jensen announced his retirement after the 1959 season, and he spent 1960 home with Zoe Ann and their children and running his restaurant. But he returned in 1961. After hitting just .130 in April, Jensen took a train from Detroit home to Reno, determined to quit once again. After a week away, he rejoined the team and had six hits in his next 10 at-bats. By the end of the season he was at .263/.350/.392, and this time he quit for good.
After leaving baseball, Jensen invested in real estate and a golf course, but lost most of his money. He then got a job working for a Lake Tahoe casino, was a national spokesman for Camel cigarettes, Wonder Bread, and Gillette, and even tried selling cars. Ironically, Jackie found himself on the road almost as much as he had been as a ballplayer. In 1963, he and Zoe Ann divorced, remarried, and then divorced again.
In 1967, Jensen became a TV sportscaster, married his producer Katharine Cortesi, and eventually teamed up with Keith Jackson calling college football games for ABC and a college baseball coach, first at the University of Nevada-Reno and then at the University of California, and he managed the Red Sox team in the New York Penn League in 1970. In 1977, Jackie and Katharine moved to Virginia and started a Christmas tree farm while he coached baseball at a military academy. About five years later, on July 14, 1982, he died of a heart attack at age 55.
You Don't Know Jack(ie):
In 1958, Jensen told Sports Illustrated that the biggest thrill of his career wasn't being an All-American or an All-Star, it wasn't winning an MVP or a World Series. "The biggest is having played in the same outfield with both DiMaggio and Williams."
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2023.06.01 14:03 Berutorutouto6 KINGDOM 2023 Grand American Tour Megathread

Hello Kingmakers, this fall kingdom will be embarking on their first tour. This megathread will serve as a hub for all information so please direct any questions or discussions to here. When the tour starts there will also be individual threads for each show so look out for those.
Show Dates:
9/8 - Vancouver — Centennial Theater
9/10 - San Francisco — Fort Mason Cowell Theater
9/13 - Chicago — Park West
9/15 - Toronto — TBD
9/17 - Jersey City — White Eagle Hall
9/19 - Atlanta — Center Stage Theater
9/20 - Fort Worth — Ridglea Theater
9/22 - Santiago — Blondie Club
9/24 - Botoga — Teatro Libre Chapinero
9/27 - San Paulo — Carioca Club
9/29 - Mexico City — Foro Puebla CDMX
10/1 - Los Angeles — Avalon Hollywood
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2023.06.01 14:01 ogreatgames Major League Baseball 2K9: MLB 09 MAGIC - PS2 Game

Major League Baseball 2K9: MLB 09 MAGIC - PS2 Game

![video](5hedan3xr5491 " Play Major League Baseball 2K9 to the fullest! Visit https://ogreatgames.com/products/major-league-baseball-2k9-4 to buy these item(s) & more while supplies last! -- ")
#mlb, #baseball, #gamer --
Major League Baseball 2K9 For Sony PlayStation 2. Experience a cool game of Major League Baseball in Major League Baseball 2K9! Plus this game even features Tim Linecum too as a playable character. Strike out your opponents and hit marvelous home runs in this game. And even play as players from authentic baseball teams such as the San Francisco Giants, or Los Angeles Angels. Plus, pitch fast balls to strike out opponents. Overall, this is an excellent baseball game to experience. --
Hey check out similar videos here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLVduyMnVQjzPiJf6HCiIvUWhY98fBI-45
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2023.06.01 14:00 EchoJobs Sojern is hiring Staff Software Engineer San Francisco, CA [Spring Machine Learning Python SQL Kubernetes GCP Go Docker Terraform]

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2023.06.01 14:00 EchoJobs Nextdoor is hiring Senior Software Engineer - Backend - Core Python USD 180k-275k [San Francisco, CA] [Python Django AWS Kubernetes Rust]

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2023.06.01 14:00 jobsfordevelopers DoorDash is hiring Data Engineer

Job details https://jobsfordevelopers.com/jobs/data-engineer-at-doordash-nov-22-2022-18f6c2
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2023.06.01 14:00 EchoJobs Sojern is hiring Staff Software Engineer [San Francisco, CA] [Spring Machine Learning Python SQL Kubernetes GCP Go Docker Terraform]

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2023.06.01 14:00 EchoJobs Nextdoor is hiring Senior Software Engineer - Backend - Core Python USD 180k-275k [San Francisco, CA] [Python Django AWS Kubernetes Rust]

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2023.06.01 14:00 EchoJobs Sojern is hiring Staff Software Engineer [San Francisco, CA] [Spring Machine Learning Python SQL Kubernetes GCP Go Docker Terraform]

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2023.06.01 13:58 A_SWEATY_JOCK Quickest I’ve ever been done buying a product for the year as I don’t see it getting better than this from retail 🔥only took 3 blasters

Super Bowl Downtown Joe Montana and Brock Purdy Rated Rookie Purple Shock
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2023.06.01 13:51 EchoJobs Qualified.com is hiring Staff Software Engineer - Product USD 200k-250k San Francisco, CA [React GraphQL Ruby PostgreSQL Redis SQL]

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2023.06.01 13:50 EchoJobs Nextdoor is hiring Software Engineer - Full Stack USD 130k-212k [San Francisco, CA] [Machine Learning Django Go CSS AWS Python Java JavaScript HTML React]

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2023.06.01 13:50 EchoJobs Circle is hiring Senior Data Engineer USD 140k-245k [Remote] [API Spark Streaming Python PostgreSQL Cassandra Redis Yarn AWS MySQL GCP Kafka Scala Azure Java SQL DynamoDB]

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2023.06.01 13:50 EchoJobs Nextdoor is hiring Software Engineer - Full Stack USD 130k-212k [San Francisco, CA] [Machine Learning Django Go CSS AWS Python Java JavaScript HTML React]

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2023.06.01 13:32 HokinCookers Roll Call

I know someone has to remember this gem.
I'm not sure how widespread it was, but if you had it, still have it, tell us how you found it.
I'll start: Roderick's Chambers - San Francisco (1998 - before S.F. went to shit.) Fetish Ball - bought it from a vendor there - me fully decked out in a custom leather male corset - with custom shackles, manacles, and a gorgeous posture collar. Long hair, pale skin, waif thin, and looking Elvish. I was modeling them for a good friend and Spiritual Advisor.
Didn't know the songs by name yet except Skin and Lye by Malign - bought it anyway.
Got a lot of play... lost it to shifts in location, time, and/or technology changes - but I had it for years.
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