Over the history of film, Hollywood has often hovered precariously between good taste and bad taste.
James Flanigan in his March 25 column says the call for an oil-import tax is to protect exploration by U.S. companies for new reserves.
When a handful of young chefs swept onto the Los Angeles scene a few years ago, they brought a derring-do, anything-goes style that worked.
The Times had a front-page lead story (July 16), "Earlier Tax Cut Sought by Reagan," which was continued in great detail on Page 17.
The tax reform bill being considered is an outrage against decency and fairness.
Whatever happened to all the conservative experts who used to tell us that the only cause of inflation is the deficit?
The government, citing lower oil prices, announced Wednesday it will cut gas and electricity rates in a move to help Panama's ailing industry.
How long will the American people believe that the Reagan Administration can decrease taxes and increase spending without creating ruinous burden of debt?
One of the more persistent questions in the Hollywood filmtown in recent months is . . . whatever happened to "9 1/2 Weeks"?
California's Brown Act requires boards of supervisors, city councils, water districts, school boards and other local bodies to conduct business in public.
Could someone explain the value of jump-starting an economic recovery, already sustained for 3 1/2 years by debt, with lower interest rates and yet, more debt?
Crime is rampant.
The tax reform proposals being considered may have a surprising consequence.
The American College of Physicians has made a valuable contribution to the control of health-care costs with its new guidelines for the use of medical tests.
Lines sung and the mast hummed. Sails billowed like clouds.
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A state water quality board Friday imposed the toughest fine possible on the Exxon Corp. for the
front of their homes, the state Regional Water Quality Control Board has cited a Vasek Polak automobile dealership for illegally discharging industrial wastes.
Water district officials in Costa Mesa said Monday that they expected to have the foul-smelling water that prompted citizens' complaints flushed from water lines by the end of the day.
lack of perspective relative to the function of the Los Angeles Board of Education.