A Farm Grows In Compton

As the city pushes forward with “Birthing a New Compton,” many Richland Farms residents hope to simply recapture the old days.



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NRDC Employees Take Environmental Mantra To Heart

For employees at the famed Natural Resources Defense Council, environmental awareness begins at home.



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Health Care Is A Basic Human Right

(Photo by Neil Parekh/SEIU Healthcare, Creative Commons)

Is health care a business or a right?



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RAM Clinic Fills In Gap In Dental And Vision Coverage

Kandice Andrews only looked slightly nervous as dentist Nebil Hagar bent over her.
"Will it hurt?" she asked.
"Not at all," the dentist responded, as he gently painted bonding material between her front teeth to fill in the five-year-old decay that had eaten away the enamel there.
Upon finishing his work, Hagar handed Andrews a hand-held mirror. 
Despite her best efforts to keep her emotions in check, a few wayward tears began to roll down the petite, bubbly 25-year-old student's cheeks as she inspected her new smile and

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Long Beach Museum Of Art Launches Careers

VIDEO: The pioneering art museum in Long Beach celebrates its diamond anniversary with two special exhibitions by California artists.

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A Long Goodbye For A Legendary Teacher

More than 20,000 people are expected to pay their respects to Jaime Escalante, a renowned math teacher who worked with inner-city kids in East Los Angeles.

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Doctor Sentenced To Four Years For Over-Prescribing Drugs

Prosecutors called Dr. Daniel J. Healy "nothing more than a drug dealer in a lab coat” and dubbed his medical practice “a cash-and-carry narcotics store."

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Census Outreach Gets Rocking

Many Latinos typically balk when it comes to filling out census questionnaires and other government forms. Rock the Census hopes to change this.

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Locals React To Health Care Bill's Passage

Consequences of the health care overhaul begin to sink in for Los Angeles residents.

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Community Leaders Say More Work On Health Care Lies Ahead

Health care legislation may have passed the House, but there is still work that needs to be done.

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Health-care: Local Community Action Organizations' Reaction

Local Community Action Organizations involved in helping to shape the landmark health-care legislation passed over the weekend took some time out Monday to celebrate their victory.  
However, the organization representatives say the real work has just begun.


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Meg Whitman: Who Is She Kidding?

Meg Whitman's barrage of radio ads mislead the public. Government misspending is not the cause of California's economic woes. What we need now is a people, not business-centered approach.

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Cabbies Seek Council's Help To Bypass Hotel Doormen

Cab drivers say the practice of swapping cash for customers with hotel doormen has further hurt them in the recession. A proposed ordinance would ban the practice.

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Rally at Pershing Square

Educators, parents and teachers rally at Pershing Square against a proposed $2.4 billion cut to education.

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Teachers Set To Rally

Teachers in Los Angeles and throughout California will join forces Thursday to rally against potential lay offs and a proposed $2 billion cut to education. The Los Angeles Unified School District Board of Education has already voted to send 5,200 preliminary lay off notices to teachers, counselors and nurses.

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Cortines Makes Charter Recommendations

Seven of those campuses went to Charter organizations

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Baca Unveils Policy Regarding Armed Suspects

The department says its policy, which encourages deputies to contain suspects while waiting for backup, is the first such policy in the nation.

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Fiorina Stepping It Up

But has the Fionrina campaign gone from boring to just plain weird in its attempt to get publicity?

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Iconic Hollywood Sign Scheduled For A Makeover

Activists hope to raise $5.5 million by April to purchase the land to prevent developers from doing so.

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Council Delays Vote On Layoffs

L.A. City Council has voted to push the fate of 1,000 city employees off for another 30 days.

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Polls Say Obama Did Something Right

Obama's popularity took a jump in the hours immediately following his first State of the Union Address. Americans said they felt especially confident in his economic plans.

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The State Of The Union: A History

A history of the State of the Union Address and a round up of some of the most historical addresses.

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The State Of The Union: A History

President Barack Obama will deliver his first State of the Union Address before Congress tonight, but Thomas Jefferson literally had his speech on the state of our nation delivered to the House and Senate.



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Severe Winter Storm Expected To Slam Southland

L.A. is bracing for the fourth and most severe storm of the week.

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I Heart Google

From the search engine that started it all, to Gmail and Gchat, there are a thousand reasons to love Google.
Now, we can add one more reason to the list.
The Internet giant threatened to pull out of China this week, citing censorship requirements and allegations that government-hired hackers broke into the accounts of suspected dissidents
Make that a thousand-and-one reasons to love Google. 
When Google began its China operations, the company incited the wrath of human rights activists around the world by giving into to the government's strict censorship requirements. At the time, company executives argued that giving the Chinese people better access to some information beat no information at all. Doing business in China would not, Google execs assured, violate the company's famous informal motto, "don't be evil."
However, the game changed dramatically when hackers - supposedly bankrolled by the regime - accessed the private Google accounts of a number of Chinese users in kind of "digital espionage."
Within days of uncovering the breach, Google ceased censoring its search results and threatened to pack up its operations and leave the country all together.
I applaud Google.
While it's the not most popular search engine in China (that honor belongs to the government-sanctioned tool known as Baidu), Google stands to rake in around $600 million this year in China. Furthermore, the company could lose out on billions more in the long run if it pulls out of China.
With all that at stake, Google's brave decision to stand up to this restrictive regime should be applauded. 
Though experts contend the government likely won't back down in this mighty battle of wills, by leaving China, Google will set a precedence throughout the tech world and burn a new path in the way business can help foster human rights not just in Asia, but worldwide.


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Los Angeles To Open First-In-The-Nation Gang Intervention Academy

With the opening of the L.A. Gang Intervention Academy, city officials hope to reduce the population of the estimated 40,000 active gang members in the city.

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L.A. City Panel Recommends Permanent Anti-Gang Office

L.A. spent more than $1 billion in fighting gang-related activity last year.

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UCLA Students React To 32% System-Wide Fee Increase

Hundreds of UCLA students protested the fee increase last week.

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Stupak Was Right

Let's make a deal: I'll keep my hands off your uterus if you quit trying to reach into my pockets to pay for your abortion.

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L.A. Police Chief Nominee Shares Plans For Future At Forum

Beck plans to take a bottom-up approach to reducing crime by giving neighborhood captains more resources.

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Planned Parenthood claims they don't push abortions.
However, take a quick look at their Web site, and you'll see an entire section devoted to abortion facts.
Two links detail the procedures behind both chemical and surgical abortions. 
A photo of a capable-looking female doctor holding up a bottle of pills (presumably the abortion pill, RU486)  and explaining their use to her patient as if they were any other medication completes
The site even advises minors living in states with parental consent laws on how to bypass mom or dad and get court permission for an abortion.

barely a mention of adoption or parenting, two other viable options in dealing with an unintended pregnancy. 


(Everybody's doing it! It's no big deal!)
From the bottom of my heart, I believe women deserve better than abortion. 
They deserve education to prevent unintended pregnancies, and real support in carrying to term should one occur.


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Kids With Knives: Debating Zero Tolerance

LISTEN: Neon Tommy columnists go head-to-head on a no-strike policy for children in public schools.

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LAUSD Launches Effort To Bring Dropouts Back To Class

Counselors at LAUSD's roughly 660 schools hit the streets on Student Recovery Day to track down students and offer services to get them to return to school.

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