The article (Editorial Pages, June 4) by Denis P. Doyle and Terry W.
The nation's biggest teachers' union, saying the Reagan Administration is moving too slowly
Teachers in the Walnut Unified School District won a 6% pay raise for this year when the district's
Hundreds of teachers protesting the lowest pay in the nation launched wildcat strikes that closed
Your editorial (July 20), "Teachers: True or False?"
Teachers walked off the job this morning at 14 schools in the West Covina Unified School District in a dispute over pay and benefit issues.
Many misleading statements are made in the rhetoric surrounding elections.
Barney may deal with some locks that resist repair, but do they talk back?
During the past few months many letters to the editor have appeared in your column concerning the future of education in Hermosa Beach.
The latest information from the Los Angeles Unified School District is that it will be short 2,500 teachers for the 1985/86 school year.
Leaders of a striking teachers union in suburban Chelsea have been fined $40,000 for ignoring a
final approval to a three-year contract with the Teachers Assn. of Paramount.
An outpouring of public sympathy for teachers during their three-week protest for higher pay was
Who's in charge of the Los Angeles Community College District?
In your article "Layoffs: Students Back Their Teachers' Cause" (The Times, May 9), the statements
A labor dispute in the Whittier City School District was settled this week when teachers and
Almost all of the Inglewood Unified School District's 627 teachers picketed their schools before
I am afraid that Barney's letter is indicative of the general public's perception of what a public high school teachers' job entails.
"A Tale of Two Teachers" was really sad, but true in many cases.
How nice of you to print locksmith Dennis Barney's letter (Feb. 26), which compared the salaries, hours, vacations, etc., of teachers and locksmiths.