Football Coach David Frierson of Crenshaw High School was wearing an empty look Monday as he sat on a sideline bench at Hamilton High.
The Reagan Administration, whose concerns about Soviet designs on Iran were cited in President Reagan's authorization of secret arms sales, said Tuesday that intelligence assessments indicate no increase in Soviet influence in Iran.
With pride in their hearts and dollar signs in their eyes, San Diego business and civic leaders Wednesday cheered the recapture of the America's Cup yachting prize and huddled late into the day to plan a public celebration to welcome home Stars & Stripes skipper Dennis Conner and his crew.
As classes began Tuesday in the Los Angeles Unified School District, more than twice as many students were riding buses as during the height of the district's mandatory desegregation program, school officials said.
For practical purposes, Republican leaders have all but abandoned their hopes of denying a second four-year term to state Sen.
The superpower arms talks entered a two-month recess Wednesday with the United States lauding the latest round as productive but the Soviet Union declaring that negotiations are at a standstill.
Dissident Soviet poet Irina Ratushinskaya, allowed to leave the Soviet Union last week, met with British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher today, and her husband said she intends to remain in the West.
Cable television is just beginning to shed the mindset of a construction industry.
Gasoline prices across the nation appear poised for a drop after virtually no change was recorded over a two-week period, with the average price for a gallon at just under 93 cents, the Lundberg Survey reported Sunday.
White House Chief of Staff Howard H.
Saying the dark clouds that enshrouded the company over the last year are beginning to clear, Computer & Communications Technology Corp.
As Henrik Unell sees it, life for a teen-ager in the United States is a lot like it is in Sweden--except for muggings.
An official of the big, predominantly white Southern Baptist Convention said the group's relations with the big, mostly black National Baptist Convention, USA, are better than they have been for three decades.
President Reagan, in a move seemingly designed to build congressional support for renewed covert aid to Nicaraguan rebels, warned Thursday that aid to Nicaragua's leftist government from Iran, Libya and the Palestine Liberation Organization represents a "new danger" in the hemisphere.
A coalition of local feminists asked Friday that the proposed Los Angeles County anti-pornography ordinance be scrapped because it violates the right of free speech and could be twisted into banning feminist and sex education books.
New opportunities have already emerged for American telecommunications firms to increase annual sales to Japan from around $110 million last year to $1 billion within the next three or four years, a high U.S. government official said Friday.
President Reagan's "peace plan" is nothing but a threat to "continue to finance his thugs"--the contras --unless the Sandinista government agrees to a cease-fire, Nicaraguan Foreign Minister Miguel D'Escoto said today.
Members of the Downtown Fullerton Assn. painted a dark picture for the future of their group, which has sought to revitalize retail activity in the downtown area.
Friction between Senate Republicans and the White House intensified Friday as Majority Leader Bob Dole (R-Kan.) described budget concessions embraced by President Reagan as "surrendering to the deficit" and questioned whether the GOP-controlled Senate will accept them.
El Camino Bancorp, parent company of El Camino Bank of Anaheim, reported second quarter earnings of $291,000, virtually unchanged from the $290,000 reported for the same three-month period in 1984.