- So Many People . . . How Will We Feed Them? : HOW MANY AMERICANS? Population, Immigration and the Environment, <i> By Leon F. Bouvier and Lindsey Grant (Sierra Club Books: $18; 174 pp.)</i>
- Face-Lift for a Grande Dame
- HOMES OF THEIR OWN : When Architects House Themselves, They Too Face Budget, Site and Design Hurdles
- Avoiding an Odd Couple Odyssey With Friends : Vacations: Before planning a trip with your best buddies, know their quirky habits and spending and sleeping patterns.
- KOREATOWN : Racial Harmony Is Stressed at Forum
- EAST LOS ANGELES : Basic Business Class Offered at Discount
- 'Red Baron' Rated Burned Out at the End : 'Ace of Aces': New biography traces the exploits of Manfred von Richthofen. British and French casualty reports matched claims of aerial victories, writer says.
- Experimental Drug Court Program Heads for Westside : Law: Project seeks to break offenders' cycle of arrest, court, jail and more arrests through treatment. Criminal charges for those who complete the year are suspended.
- Supreme Court to Decide Fate of Term Limits
- 6 Arrested After 2 Police Chases in Anaheim
- In Winter Wonderland, It's Season of Commerce, Crowds : Tourism: Tiny Frazier Park, at the gateway of Los Padres National Forest mountains, feels the annual crush of snow seekers.
- THOUSAND OAKS : Celebrations of Hanukkah Begin Tonight
- Ranchers Oppose U.S. Plans for Return of Wolves
- Taft's 'Hardcore Four' Finish Careers With a Heartbreaking Loss
- Miscellany
- GIRLS' BASKETBALL 1994-1995: SEA VIEW LEAGUE
- 'Twas a Result Not Fit for Wearin' o' the Green
- HOLLYWOOD PARK : Native Regent Comes Long Way for Victory in Generous Stakes
- AUTO RACING : Streak by Drivers of Indy Cars Is Snapped by Dale Earnhardt
- COLLEGE FOOTBALL / Spotlight
- Game Ends Up a Tie, Holtz Ends Up Lost : Irish: Coach, looking for answers, also has to search for a place to hold a team meeting.
- CSUN Played Half Bad, Half Good : College basketball: They had their moments, but Coach Cassidy felt Matadors played poorly in 83-60 loss to UCLA.
- L.A. Speak : Sitcom-Writers' Slang
- Cows Remain Popular On and Off the Farm
- WESTLAKE : Latinos Updated on Status of Prop. 187
- Brain Surgeon Out to Lunch; So Is License
- Pope Soaring to Top of Music Charts
- BREAKING UP IS HARD TO DO
- WOMEN'S BASKETBALL : Thompson Leads USC to Victory
- SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA VOLLEYBALL REGIONAL PLAYOFFS : DIVISION IV : Eagles Again Make Victory Look Easy
- HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL '94-'95 : Pacific League
- It's R.E.M. month for Tori Amos. She's...
- ART : A Late Bloomer : Charles Garabedian came late to art, but his 'Labors of Hercules' at L.A. Louver reveals work sensitive to ancient Grecian themes and loaded with the contemporary symbolism of Jung.
- Seasonal Factors Could Signal Profitable 1995
- For dedicated gardeners, here are suggestions...
- Real Estate Management Panel Will Discuss Future of Market
- EAST LOS ANGELES : Police Seek More Civilian Volunteers
- The Art of Shopping : Craftsmen Exhibit Holiday Wares at Laguna Festival
- Bertrando Ends Career With 10th-Place Finish
- GIRLS' BASKETBALL 1994-1995: SEA VIEW LEAGUE
- NBA ROUNDUP : Records Fall as Cavaliers Down Warriors
- Food Bank Supplies Down but Need Is Up : Hunger: The charities are scrambling to make ends meet amid reductions in private donations and federal surplus items.
- Loyola Marymount Rolls in Opener : College basketball: Jones scores 24 points in 92-51 rout of Division II Cal State Hayward.
- GIRLS' STATE VOLLEYBALL PLAYOFFS : Harvard-Westlake Victimized by Inconsistency
- GIRLS' BASKETBALL 1994-1995: SEA VIEW LEAGUE
- HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL '94-'95 : Tri-Valley League
- What's Dance Without the Details? : The splendor of late designer Jens-Jacob Worsaae's sets and costumes lives on as San Francisco Ballet's 'Romeo and Juliet' ventures south to the Music Center
- The Last Frontier : On Civil Righs' Cutting Edge, Gay and Lesbian Managers Often Face Choice Between Openness and Ambition
- IT'S THE THOUGHT THAT COUNTS: For Better...
- Weekend Escape: Temecula : Galloping Good Time : Whether playing cowboy or polo prince, Rancho Pavoreal has a horse for any rider
- Your Mortgage : Tips for Home-Buying Career Changers
- Average Mortgage Rates and Indexes
- Vanished Lives : Writer traces the lives of his white, Anglo-Saxon, Protestant ancestors through 2 centuries : FAMILY, <i> By Ian Frazier (Farrar, Straus & Giroux: $23; 386 pp.)</i>
- Five Inmates Escape Medium-Security Prison
- Oxnard Office Shooting Haunts Survivors Nearly 1 Year Later
- Browns Aid Charity Against Spouse Abuse : Awareness: Father of O.J. Simpson's slain wife makes brief statement before ball for Interval House Crisis Shelters.
- <i> A behind-the-scenes look at Orange County's political life</i> : Dornan Really Digging Occupying Capitol Digs of Ousted Speaker Foley
- Christmas Spirit on Parade in Santa Paula
- Tar Heels Struggle to Extend Streak
- Gators Wrestled to Draw : College football: Florida State overcomes 31-3 deficit in fourth quarter. Bowden takes the safe way out.
- HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL '94-'95 : Channel League
- HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL '94-'95 : High-Desert League
- ANALYSIS : NHL Negotiators Get Together, but Not on Issues
- GATT Reality Check Is Drawn on Strong Reserves
- FICTION
- Jockey Will Pull Up Stakes
- FICTION
- COLUMN ONE : Losing the Nuclear Waste War : Errors and inefficiency plague the government's cleanup of deadly debris from the arms race. Even an Energy official says Murphy's Law dogs his agency's efforts.
- Rain, High Winds Buffet Southland
- Awards: Mall Manager Honored
- Leftist Group Stands Good Chance in Uruguay Vote : Politics: President to be elected today. Nation's two traditional parties challenged for first time by socialist.
- Couple Work Miracles, Save Abandoned Dogs : Rescue: Utah couple has found homes for 1,800 sick, blind and old golden retrievers since program started six years ago.
- PERSPECTIVE ON RESEARCH : A Brave New World Is Hatched : An NIH plan would create human beings for study and experimentation, and then dispose of them.
- THE SUNDAY PROFILE : Debt of Honor : Constance Rice was raised to believe that she should advance the cause of racial and economic justice. Now, as counsel for the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, she's doing it.
- Likely Site of Eruption at Mammoth Reassessed : Geology: New upwellings of carbon dioxide suggest that volcanic activity may be more probable west of town. But that could be 400 years from now.
- Robber Takes $1,500 in Post Office Holdup
- Anaheim Blazes Cause Damages to 2 Dwellings
- Lillehammer '94: 16 Days of Glory
- Miami Uses Turnovers to Defeat BC : Big East: After trailing at halftime, 7-3, Hurricanes' defense goes to work for a 23-7 victory.
- ABC Has Technical Difficulties
- Beyond Heavy Metal and Power Rangers : The acclaimed Los Angeles Children's Chorus is not kids' play. Its members know how to 'make music in a beautiful, spontaneous way.'
- THE JUNGLE OUT THERE : A Fearless Interloper, Bougainvillea Has a Hold on L.A.
- Banking on the Community : Credit union manager studies interethnic relations to attract investments from everyone in the neighborhood.
- DOWNTOWN : Chinese Exhibit Shows Arts, History
- SHOWS FOR YOUNGSTERS AND THEIR CHILDREN TOO : 'Toon Town Kids' offers a fun alternative to this broadcast major
- CRENSHAW : Expanded Renewal Plan Is Hearing Topic
- School Stands Out for Better, for Worse : Education: Fullerton's Sunny Hills High is full of achievers, but a few of its grads have made grisly headlines.
- Pope Praises Courage at Ceremony for Cardinals
- WITH AN EYE ON . . . : Julianna Margulies, head nurse on 'ER,' enjoys the treatment she's getting
- SOUTH-CENTRAL : Free Job Readiness Workshops Planned
- Woman Fights for Normal Life : Health: While the test for Huntington's disease has about 98% accuracy, she refuses to let its positive diagnosis dictate her life. To prove it she got a dog and bought a house.
- Social Workers Aiding the Elderly Face Daunting Task : Health: Adult Protective Services employees are frequently overwhelmed and paid little to cope with often heartbreaking crises.
- RESTAURANTS : BARGAIN ABUNDANCE : At Ca'Brea,Abbondanza Only Occasionally Equals Buon Appetito
- Protect Your Family From Poisonous Gas
- Is Property a Danger to Children?
- Seniors Shed Their Geriatric Blues, Explore Red-Hot Musical Horizons : Retirement: Their 100-member band is composed of people ages 50 and up, nearly all retired.
- Burl's : Negotiating the Hazy Border Between the Sexes, an 8-Year-Old Boy Unpuzzles the Shifting Lines of Gender and Identity
- The Body Politic : Battle of the Bins
- A summary of selected City Hall actions this week affecting central Los Angeles. : CITY COUNCIL
- EAST LOS ANGELES : Parade Tradition Is Back Again Today
- Soldier's Diary Comes Home After 50 Years : World War II: Woodland Hills man this week will turn over the journal to the dead author's family in Japan.
- Profile : Ann-Margret Follows Her Instincts With 'Heart'
- REGION : Shelters Add Beds to Weather Winter
- CITY ARTS : Small Wonders
- It's a Loss Of Faith : Prayer in school distracts us from what the Puritans taught: Trust the "I." It is no substitute for civic cohesiveness.
- Facing Up to Threat of Jail Overcrowding : Grand Jury's Call for New Facilities Is Timely, Prudent
- A Lesson in Controlling One's Destiny : Lake Forest Mobile Home Residents Marshal Resources Toward Long-Term Security
- Bringing a Little Magic to a Small, Small, Cruel World
- Lakers Take Step in Right Direction : Pro basketball: Victory over Bullets puts them two games above .500 for first time in since 1992-93 season.
- DNA Nobel Winner Asks Big Questions : Science: Today Dr. Francis Crick is busy wading into other scientific swamps: How did the Earth come about? What are dreams? How does the brain work?
- Swiss Skier Wins in World Cup
- HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL '94-'95 : Free-Lance
- NCAA SOCCER PLAYOFFS : Titans Will Be Challenged by San Francisco
- Fullerton Soccer Team Meets USF in Playoffs
- HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL '94-'95 : Northwest Valley Conference : North Valley League
- Bottom Line : Bawdy and Soul
- A Taxing Matter in Britain
- So Many People . . . How Will We Feed Them? : WORLD WAR III: Population and the Biosphere at the End of the Millennium,<i> By Michael Tobias (Bear & Co.: $29.95; 656 pp.)</i>
- FOOTBALL ROUNDUP : Wilson Pulls Away From Washington
- Incest: Sexual Politics or a Matter of Therapy and Recovery?
- USAir Crash Prompts Study of Rudder System on 737s
- CULTURE : Italian Government Funds U.S. Arts Center
- Ho Chi Minh Trail: Memories of War Still Linger in the Dust : Vietnam: The 12,000-mile footpath helped defeat a superpower. It has since opened up rich, vast areas to commerce and farming.
- SOUTH GATE : Emergency Funds Help 2 Libraries
- Platoon's Lone Survivor Would Do It All Over Again
- Superpowerdom: Is It the Mantle America Needs to Wear? : Answer is yes, but in the post-Cold War era there can be no real leadership without consistency and no consistency without leadership
- Garden Grove City Council Approves Pact for 85 New Bus-Stop Shelters
- A Grammar Question? This Teacher Is at Your Beck and Call
- Notes about your surroundings
- Hard Work and Heartbreak : The Daunting Task of Social Workers Who Aid the Aged
- COLLEGE ROUNDUP : Chapman Rallies Past Sonoma State
- Finally, Fresno St. Gets a Win : WAC: Reggie Brown scores four touchdowns to lead Bulldogs over San Diego State, 49-42.
- HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL '94-'95 : Alpha League
- STATE CROSS-COUNTRY CHAMPIONSHIPS : Garritson Wins Battle of Freshmen
- CROSS-COUNTRY : Thousand Oaks Boys Win Title
- GIRLS' BASKETBALL 1994-1995: SEA VIEW LEAGUE : On Court, Burgess Strikes Right Note : Basketball: Disappointments along the way help to motivate Woodbridge standout, who's also an accomplished singer.
- GIRLS' BASKETBALL 1994-1995: SEA VIEW LEAGUE
- CLASSICAL : Tradition Updated, Some Gaps Filled
- CINEWOMEN : Schmooze, Network, Showcase
- BOX SET : Roots in a Box: Early Elvis, R&B;, Country
- NCAA SOCCER CHAMPIONSHIPS : UCLA, Cal State Fullerton Face Second-Round Games
- OJAI : Residents to Protest Weather Radar Tower
- UCLA Keeps Pressure On and Cruises : College basketball: Bruins build early 15-point lead in opener and roll over Cal State Northridge, 83-60.
- Groups Stage Rally Against Trade Pact
- HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL '94-'95 : Northern Conference : Northwest League
- Leap of Faith : Faith Baptist Routs Brentwood, 60-26, to Win Eight-Man Title
- HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL '94-'95 : Magnet Conference
- Repeat Offenders : Trouble Follows Some Guys Around
- THE HANKS BOYS : Hey, Even Big Brother Wasn't Always Big
- Boy, Vet Share Grieving as Pet Cat Dies : Heartbreak: The boy came full of trust, a faith in authority. How could she tell the youngster that his beloved companion was likely going to die?
- USC : 3 Students Hurt as Fire Hits Dormitory
- Congress' Course Awaits Selection of GOP Leaders
- Assault in Chechnya Fails
- Caught on the Borderline : San Diego Men Say They Were Framed for Cardinal's Murder, but Extradition to Mexico Is Imminent
- FOOTBALL ROUNDUP
- FOOTBALL ROUNDUP
- Stingy Mater Dei Defense Shuts Down Loyola, 31-7
- Los Angeles Times Interview : Suzan Shown Harjo : Fighting to Preserve the Legacy --and Future--of Native Americans
- Hate Crime Case Hinges on Group Responsibility : Courts: Civil trial targets 10 youths present at Laguna Beach beating in 1993. Expanded laws have given victims a better chance to seek compensation.
- To West Texans, It's 'God's Country' : Frontier: The region is dry, dusty and virtually deserted. Early explorers compared it to hell. But the hardy few who live there feel differently.
- Allen Had an Urgent Kneed for Over-the-Hill Linebacker
- COMMUNITY COLLEGE REGIONAL SOCCER PLAYOFFS : Moorpark's Fisher Makes Save, Sinks Cypress
- Red, Round and Ripe : Ireland's hot Cranberries are back in the States on tour. Just don't call them a Top 40 band. 'Most pop bands are laughed at. . . . We're kind of in the middle. We're a mix of pop, rock and alternative.'
- No Mere Flight of Fancy : Mall-Style Retailing Helps Airports Land New Income
- Insight : There's Opportunity for U.S. as Latin Trade Barriers Fall Away
- Speak Like a Local Abroad
- Southland Home Sales Flatten Out
- DESPERATE WOMEN NEED TO TALK TO YOU...
- How to Make Board Comply With the Rules
- Eagle-Eyed in Santa Barbara
- Festivals, Feasts & Fairs
- 'Mindwalk'
- CALIFORNIA ALBUM : At the Altar of Public Opinion : San Jose's sculpture of an Aztec deity honors a culture's history, city leaders say. But fundamentalist Christians call the feathered serpent a symbol of evil that invites God's wrath.
- New Development to Sprout on Lot of Trash and Weeds : Design for Commercial-Housing Project on Former Site of Pepperdine University Will Be Picked by Dec. 13
- BOYS' BASKETBALL PREVIEW : Top 10 Players to Watch
- The Nation : Sony's Woes in Hollywood Reflect its Weakness in 'Knowledge Value' Industries
- Time for the Delegation to Step Forward : It's a New Era--Let's Hope Our Congressmen Use Their Influence to Benefit O.C.
- LSU Concludes Hallman's Regime With 30-12 Victory Over Arkansas
- SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA VOLLEYBALL REGIONAL PLAYOFFS : DIVISION I : Newport Harbor Isn't Hospitable in Sweeping to Victory
- Players Feel Wind Down to Their Skins : Golf: Everyone struggles, but Azinger and Stewart share lead at $80,000 after nine holes.
- New York's Pacific Rim Shot : Three New York art giants have announced plans for L.A. showcases, banking on the region as a powerhouse cultural center. All that potential Pacific Rim business doesn't hurt either.
- NEWS ANALYSIS : Bosnia Peacekeeping Role Makes U.N. Forces Pawns
- Retro : Reactivating 'Rockford' : JAMES GARNER GETS BACK IN THE P.I. BUSINESS WITH MOVIES FOR CBS
- For Seniors : Muralist, Restaurateur Offer Musical Taste of Italy
- Fire Unit Helps Gang Members Restart Lives : Forest Service: Fighting wilderness blazes keeps young adults off the streets. But the work is only seasonal.
- 'Wayne's World 2'
- FOOTBALL ROUNDUP
- Straight Into Fray for New City Leaders : Government: Two new council members--and a third to be appointed or elected--face some of the biggest decisions in Anaheim's history.
- DMZ, Korea Buffer an Ideal Wildlife Refuge : Ecology: Time heals scars of warfare, but either renewed fighting or peaceful reunification could prove disastrous to feathered inhabitants.
- They're Elderly but Not Retiring : Bette Davis said, 'Getting old ain't for sissies.' Here is the view from a retirement home where octogenarians live active, full lives.
- DOWNTOWN : Thanksgiving Meal to Show Off Shelter
- Childhood Hobby Grows Into Mobile Zoo : Naturalist: A fascination with animals has led Dean Davis to amass some unusual pets. Now, the self-taught zoologist takes them on the road and shares them with others.
- The Politics of America's Changing Work Experience
- L.A. Schools Stuck in the Low-Tech Rut of Past : High technology won't solve all our educational problems, but it is a vital element of learning for our children--the future work force.
- THE NBA / MARK HEISLER : Eyed by the Birds and Then Gored by the Bulls
- SIMI VALLEY : Council to Allow Ads on Bus Stop Benches
- COVER STORY : Arresting Drama : With 'Reality' Cop Shows Helping Crack Tough Cases, Beverly Hills Police Turn to TV Viewers to Solve Slaying
- CHESS : ALL HAIL GATA KAMSKY
- Slam the Door on Low-Income Housing Plans : The city's proposal to use federal quake recovery funds to construct such high-density buildings could lead to more crime and urban decay.
- Pasadena Coalition Struggles to Attain Harmony : Nonviolence: Formed amid outrage over the slayings of three youths, a year later the politically potent group has raised funds for youth.
- United Way Campaign
- Still in the Swim : Recreation: Rae Terran conquered her fear of the water late in life. At 94, she still teaches a class in the Burbank YMCA pool.
- Woman Killed, Driver Arrested After Riverside Freeway Crash
- HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL '94-'95 : Camino Real League
- Raiders Face '90s Version of the Vaunted Steel Curtain : Pro football: Defensive battle looms against Pittsburgh's stingy and blitzing unit in another crucial game.
- Play, Play, Play on Lake Oroville
- Small, Cheap, Brilliant : Courtyard apartment complex in Escondido uses a lot of imagination to overcome size and cost limitations
- Thailand Imprisons Drug Offenders
- Marine Aces True Hell-for-Leather Pilots : World War II: Between them they shot down more than 50 Japanese planes. But their prowess in the skies was about the only similarity between Gregory (Pappy) Boyington and Joe Foss.
- Raising a Ruckus
- CUDAHY : Literacy in Spanish Language Taught
- Slain Officers Remembered as Heroes in War on Crime : Memorial: Hundreds attend separate services for two of the three investigators killed last week at D.C. police headquarters.
- The Nation : The Sinking Feeling That May Cost Us $100 Million
- Neither Palestinians nor Israelis Ready for Peace
- MOORPARK : Workers OK Contract With Muranaka Farms
- MTA Tracks Down Artists to Beautify Rail Routes : Transit: Eighty have been hired--and many more will be needed--to decorate commuter lines. Applicants must be able to think big and put up with the project's red tape.
- Night Howls : Even With Little Cash and No Wheels, Kids Find Plenty to Do on a Friday Evening
- VENTURA COLLEGE BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT : Generous Moorpark Survives Late Rally
- Rams Gunning for Chargers : Pro football: Marquez Pope has no love for former team and has had visions about outcome of today's game.
- HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL '94-'95 : Golden League
- 'Duets II' Debuts
- HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL '94-'95 : Valley Pac-8 Conference : Mid-Valley League
- Mr. Feynman's Day Off : The late Nobel Prize winner Richard Feynman had a passion for the bongos, mischief and physics. Now the first marriage of the genius turned folk hero has become an unlikely love story from star-director Matthew Broderick.
- Destination: U.S. Holiday Events 1994 : Glow Time, U.S.A. : Cities around the country lighten up for the holiday season
- Lynching Survivor Keeps Memories Alive : Tribute: 80-year-old man documents his victimization by a mob as well as hangings in his new Black Holocaust Museum. He says his stories aren't taught in history books.
- Use of 'Dark Fiber' Is Lighting Up Telecommunications
- THE PRIMAL CHEESEBURGER: A Generous Helping of...
- Sailing to Polynesia
- Verbatim
- OUT AND ABOUT : Memory Book
- SOCIAL CLIMES : Film Noir . . .or With Cream
- Hotel Fete for Woman, 99, Fulfills Dream Deferred by 1906 Quake
- Bell Rings Up Venice, 29-3, to Advance to Semifinals
- Yeltsin Vows to Take Offensive on Slumping Economy : Russia: President seeks support outside Parliament for his 1995 budget, which many lawmakers oppose.
- BOYLE HEIGHTS : Hospital's Garden Helps Patients Heal
- Nicole Simpson's Family Attend Shelter Fund-Raiser
- GAME OF THE WEEK : Dorsey Turns Taft into the Heartbreak Kids : With Seconds Left, Dons' Antwain Wilson Returns an Interception for the Winning Touchdown, 26-20
- 'House of Angels'
- EAST LOS ANGELES : Speakers on Lead Poisoning Sought
- Smooth Operator : Precise, Steady Robotic Arm Assists Doctors in Surgeries
- Volcanoes Strung Along Cascade Range Define Picturesque Powder Keg : Northwest: An average of two eruptions a century have occurred in the Cascades over the last 4,000 years. Majestic Mt. Rainier is considered the most dangerous today.
- County Waste Solutions Amount to Same Old Rubbish : It's time for the political leadership of Greater L.A. to once and for all stop dumping trash in one another's canyons and bring an end to urban landfills.
- Zones of Controversy : REDEVELOPMENT: OFTEN MISUNDERSTOOD, OFTEN FEARED
- ROUNDUP : Nevada Defeats Northridge in Women's Basketball, 74-71
- Trojans Still Need to Straighten Their Bowl-Tie
- PEARLS OF WISDOM: Another album coming out...
- COVER STORY : Cranking Up the Volume : Robert Rodriguez made 'El Mariachi' with a borrowed camera on a wheelchair doubling as a dolly. Now his second film has big stars, a big budget--and lots of really expensive equipment.
- TWILIGHT OF THE IDOLS: Recollections of a...
- Lively Language : James Tate is the winner of this year's National Book Award for poetry : WORSHIPFUL COMPANY OF FLETCHERS, <i> By James Tate (The Ecco Press: $20; 80 pp.)</i>
- HOLLYWOOD : El Centro Called 'Model' Housing Project
- BOYS' BASKETBALL PREIVEW
- CRENSHAW : In Industrial Area, a Rain Forest Thrives
- How to Stay in Shape <i> and</i> Watch TV : RATING THE FITNESS SHOW SMORGASBORD
- WESTLAKE : Counseling Service Survives, Relocates
- TRW, Lockheed: High-Tech Help
- OXNARD : 2 Held on Suspicion of Dealing Drugs
- Curing an Identity Crisis on the Internet
- Redevelopment's the Road to Recovery : Property tax plan is essential to aiding quake-ravaged sections of the Valley
- Method Acting as Motivation : UCI Latino Drama Club Pushes Anti-Gang Message
- The Real Buzz on Helicopter Noise : It may be a nuisance, but it's not an FAA safety issue
- Quake May Have Sprung Deadly Leaks : With colder weather here, checking home's gas heating system may prevent a tragedy
- NCAA WATER POLO CHAMPIONSHIPS : Top-Ranked Stanford Meets USC in Final
- USC Gets Even, but That's All : Blocked Field Goal Sets Up Tying Score : College football: Trojans settle for 17-17 tie, ending losing streak at 11 games against Notre Dame.
- GIRLS' BASKETBALL 1994-1995: SEA VIEW LEAGUE
- SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA VOLLEYBALL REGIONAL PLAYOFFS : DIVISION II : Huntington Beach Settles Matters on Court With Victory
- North Exposure
- Notaries
- Another Man's View of Hughes Aircraft
- The Good Doctor
- Ethics Missing From Cadaver Class
- Concealed Weapons
- POP : Do You Hear What We Hear? : Prick up your antlers: Calendar's annual recordings guide is here to help you sift through the year's notable pop, jazz, classical, children's and holiday music--and the best of the box sets. : Separating Best Bets From Lumps of Coal
- Earthquake Repairs
- Whining Aside, There Are Positive Signs in Fullerton
- POP : Do You Hear What We Hear? : Prick up your antlers: Calendar's annual recordings guide is here to help you sift through the year's notable pop, jazz, classical, children's and holiday music--and the best of the box sets. : Separating Best Bets From Lumps of Coal
- Drama Festival Showed Bright Side of Grant High
- On Warm Memories of the Fuzzy Lint Trap
- Ahmanson Development Accord Short-Sighted
- SEDUCED ON 42ND ST.
- A Country Tired of Democrats Gives GOP Its Turn
- Why Not Regulate HMOs as Insurers?
- Sears, a Casualty of 'Financial Synergism'
- Irvine Schools Fail the Standards Test
- On Warm Memories of the Fuzzy Lint Trap
- A Parody? Sure. Funny? Well . . .
- 'ER' PARENTAGE
- High-Five Mrs. Bs
- POP : Do You Hear What We Hear? : Prick up your antlers: Calendar's annual recordings guide is here to help you sift through the year's notable pop, jazz, classical, children's and holiday music--and the best of the box sets. : Separating Best Bets From Lumps of Coal
- POP : Do You Hear What We Hear? : Prick up your antlers: Calendar's annual recordings guide is here to help you sift through the year's notable pop, jazz, classical, children's and holiday music--and the best of the box sets. : Separating Best Bets From Lumps of Coal
- POP : Do You Hear What We Hear? : Prick up your antlers: Calendar's annual recordings guide is here to help you sift through the year's notable pop, jazz, classical, children's and holiday music--and the best of the box sets. : Separating Best Bets From Lumps of Coal
- 'What They Least Kill Is Writers' : The silencing of Cuba's artistic and literary community under Castro : MEA CUBA, <i> By Guillermo Cabrera Infante</i> . <i> Translated from Spanish by Kenneth Hall with the author (Farrar, Straus, Giroux: $23; 503 pp.)</i>
- 'TREK' TENSIONS
- POP : Do You Hear What We Hear? : Prick up your antlers: Calendar's annual recordings guide is here to help you sift through the year's notable pop, jazz, classical, children's and holiday music--and the best of the box sets. : Separating Best Bets From Lumps of Coal
- A Vote of Confidence
- More Horrors
- Republicans
- Valley Needs More Police on the Street
- Keep CRA Out of Sherman Oaks
- Hispanics Should Lobby Spanish-Language TV
- Amigos de Bolsa Chica Supports Preparedness