The Santa Monica League of Women Voters has reelected Karen Grosz to a two-year term as president.
The Western Bank of Commerce in Westwood has donated $1,000 to the nonprofit CLARE Foundation, which offers aid to alcoholics.
Nine new faculty positions and one management position have been approved for the 1985-86 academic year by the Santa Monica College Board of Trustees.
of Transportation for completing a sound wall on the Santa Monica Freeway.
The city is sponsoring a toxics roundup day June 1 to enable residents to rid their homes of unwanted household toxic chemicals such as pesticides, pool acids and paint products.
The Santa Monica College Board of Trustees has voted to ask the county Board of Supervisors to
The City Council gave final approval to an ordinance to rezone six lots north of Wilshire Boulevard for residential use.
The City Council has adopted rules, procedures and fees to regulate the storage of hazardous materials in underground tanks.
Santa Monica Community College District Board of Trustees.
The Rent Control Board has expanded the conditions under which landlords may raise rents if they pay for gas and electricity used in their apartment buildings.
The City Council selected the nonprofit Community Corporation of Santa Monica to develop 55 units
The Board of Supervisors has appointed Raymond Weaver and Paul Matthies to the county Beach Advisory Committee.
Dan Cohen, a Santa Monica resident, will serve as a senior assemblyman at the California Senior Legislature next week.
The City Council adopted a resolution stating its intention to change the procedure for demolishing commercial and industrial buildings in the city.
Karla Klarin's high-relief paintings have taken a slow, sure ride from the grubby industrial center of Los Angeles to the suburbs.
Joyce Treiman's current work doesn't look all that different from her familiar fantasy-tinged realism but its effect is movingly new.
Monica just as the grand hoopla around the opening of new modern art facilities at the County Museum and the Museum of Contemporary Art peaked.
In his first gallery show since the mid-1970s, William Tunberg makes a welcome reappearance with a series of exquisitely crafted wooden boxes/assemblages notable for their visual puns, black humor and ambiguous reverberation of meaning.
Mimmo Paladino's art buttonholes you like a professional panhandler who's got his pathos-shtick down so pat that you slip him a dollar before you realize you've been righteously had.
Even when Daniel Douke was turning out Photo-Realist paintings of swimming pools, he was as interested in abstract patterns as in his ostensible subject matter.