These are dark, angry days for Eddy Borysewicz, suspended by the United States Cycling Federation for 30 days as coach of the Olympic cycling team for his role in the blood doping of eight team members last summer.
Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres, touring the city where Adolf Hitler plotted the extermination of millions of Jews, on Wednesday visited the site where the Nazi dictator's would-be assassins were executed.
The semiconductor industry, which suffered its worst year ever in 1985, should begin to rebound this year, but the climb back to prosperity will be much slower than the fall, a leading analyst told industry executives Tuesday.
Even if some people lose their jobs, the American public is ready to accept major cuts in government spending to reduce the federal deficit, Rep.
It was a cliffhanger to the end.
Secretary of State George P.
West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl conferred Wednesday with Guenter Mittag, economics expert of the East German Communist Party's ruling Politburo.
City services in Glendale will remain basically unchanged if the $184-million budget for 1985-86 proposed this week is adopted, city officials announced.
U.S. Steel Corp. Chairman David M. Roderick borrowed a bit of Lee A.
Thanks to real estate and development pressures from the Westside and Glendale/Pasadena, Hollywood is poised to be the next "hot commercial area of Southern California," according to Los Angeles Councilman Michael Woo, whose 13th District includes Hollywood.
Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone said Thursday that last week's Geneva summit offered Japan "a chance for a breakthrough" in its relations with the Soviet Union.
Philippine Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile said Monday that the Communist-led insurgency here cannot not be contained for at least a decade, an estimate at sharp odds with that of President Ferdinand E.
Bucking the retail industry's nervousness about fall sales, the head of Carter Hawley Hale Stores said Thursday that the Los Angeles-based company expects double-digit increases in sales in the second half.
Computer Automation Inc., a struggling Irvine computer and electronics manufacturer, said Friday that it expects a loss of $12 million to $15 million for its 1985 fiscal year, bringing its total losses for the last three years to more than $20 million.
Artificial heart recipient William J.
A U.S. mission to revive peace talks in the Mideast ended in apparent deadlock Sunday as Assistant Secretary of State Richard W.
Canada has decided to restore its aid program to El Salvador because of improvements in the Central American country's human rights record, External Affairs Minister Joe Clark said Wednesday.
Archbishop Roger M.
The Defense Department activated its media pool for the third time since April to cover a mock Marine "invasion" of San Clemente Island, and a Pentagon spokesman pronounced the exercise the "most successful" yet.
Inglewood school board member William (Tony) Draper has accused other board members of favoring a political ally for voting to grant the woman a rare permit allowing her daughter to attend school outside the district.