Your Letters
\”You can either like him or not like him, but you cannot dismiss him\” (\”How the West Was Won,\” Aug. 16).
\”You can either like him or not like him, but you cannot dismiss him\” (\”How the West Was Won,\” Aug. 16).
It was a postcard-perfect afternoon outside Kerckhoff Hall on UCLA\’s campus on Tuesday, Aug. 6., but Debra Bach could not stop crying.
Police believe they have broken a major Ecstasy ring, allegedly led by Israeli nationals, with the arrest of 15 suspects and the seizure of more than $8 million worth of the hallucinogenic drug.
Irv Kaze, a KRLA Sportscaster and longtime sports executive, died suddenly from a heart attack Saturday, June 29, at the age of 75.
As I stood among the mourning nation on that clear, warm morning, I looked around and wept my own salty tears, but they were not entirely bitter and not all ephemeral as the emotions of the moment often are.
Scott Elliott Sraberg, infant son of Karen and Brad Sraberg, died Sept. 3.
Sixty years after hundreds of Jews in a Polish village were slaughtered by their neighbors, Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski offered an apology.
A German corporation that used slave labor to produce some of the weapons that killed American soldiers is now building a monument in Washington to honor the Americans who fought and died in World War II.
\nFifty-six years after Anne Frank perished in Bergen-Belsen, her life and legacy loom larger than ever.