Ron Young said he had a rough day Thursday.
Lifeguards who staff the city's beaches year-round find it ironic that they are often asked what they do in winter.
Prices as marked.
Don Rickles
Friday nights usually are hectic for Stacey Augmon, star forward of the Muir High boys basketball team.
Ihave received several copies of the August issue of New Woman magazine, a periodical that purports to represent the interests of liberated females in a male-dominated society.
For the second consecutive day, the United States and Soviet Union matched gold medals as each nation won six Sunday--three apiece in track and field, and swimming.
Last year, 17-year-old Rochelle Shelby spent the summer of an idle teen-ager's dream, watching soap operas and "hanging out."
One union man has the incident on videotape and offers this slow-motion replay: A car surges through the picket line at the Ralphs Warehouse and Bakery and winds up with a Teamster splayed on its hood.
Having been swept by the mighty San Francisco Giants this weekend, San Diego Manager Steve Boros has planned a manic Monday.
Overlapping sports seasons can create a conflict of interests.
Falling interest rates and hopes for progress in shrinking the federal budget deficit touched off a strong advance in stock prices Friday, carrying some market indicators to record highs.
man was just another sleeping bum--was discovered Tuesday near one of downtown Los Angeles' most heavily traveled intersections, police said.
Can lessons about life be learned in a childhood hobby?
By the time the fourth beach ball--in five minutes--had floundered onto the field Sunday afternoon at Anaheim Stadium the question had to be asked: Does anybody here know there's a pennant race going on?
It should have been the ideal Christmas holiday--catch a morning flight to Lake Tahoe, strap on the skis and whoosh down the first snow-packed hill in sight by afternoon.
Once an army of 70,000 workers and volunteers, the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee has dwindled to a rear guard of 10, occupied with such leftovers as the legality of the Los Angeles Police Department's Olympic pins and the disposition of everything from documents to surplus panty hose.
Early every Wednesday morning, as he has for nearly two decades, 84-year-old Paul Keim greets arrivals at the Los Angeles Breakfast Club: "Hello, Ham!"
Call it love among the kumquats. Or sushi bars. Or skyscrapers. Or even trash barrels.
Raymond A.