The archive of all headlines from March 30, 2016, organized by time of publication.
Sample oversaw a dramatic rise in the university's academic and financial profile during nearly two decades at the helm. He was 75. L.A. Now
Sample oversaw a dramatic rise in the university's academic and financial profile during nearly two decades at the helm. He was 75. COMPANY TOWN
Sample oversaw a dramatic rise in the university's academic and financial profile during nearly two decades at the helm. He was 75. L.A. Now
When the case involving California teachers was argued in January, Justice Antonin Scalia was still alive, and the court appeared ready to hand unions a big setback.
The frontrunner says he has been treated ‘very unfairly’ by the party establishment
Apple Inc. refused to give the FBI software the agency desperately wanted. Now Apple is the one that needs the FBI's assistance.FBI hacks iPhone: Does this make your phone less private?
As the controversy surrounding his campaign boss grows, the frontrunner says he has been treated ‘very unfairly’ by the party establishment
When the case involving California teachers was argued in January, Justice Antonin Scalia was still alive, and the Supreme Court appeared ready to hand unions a big setback.
Asked at a forum hosted by CNN if he still pledged to support the nominee if someone else wins, Donald J. Trump said, “No, I don’t anymore,” adding that he had not been treated fairly.
People who stand to benefit most from minimum wage hikes across California are low-income adults, most of them household breadwinners. Technology
People who stand to benefit most from minimum wage hikes across California are low-income adults, most of them household breadwinners. L.A. Now
In a victory for abortion rights advocates, new labeling guidelines will ease access to the pill by requiring fewer doctor visits, lengthening the period in which it can be taken and reducing the dosage.
People who stand to benefit most from minimum wage hikes across California are low-income adults, most of them household breadwinners.Minimum wage updates: California Legislature gets first crack at proposal in hearing today
People who stand to benefit most from minimum wage hikes across California are low-income adults, most of them household breadwinners.Live updates: California Legislature gets first crack at minimum wage proposal in hearing today
People who stand to benefit most from minimum wage hikes across California are low-income adults, most of them household breadwinners.California Legislature gets first crack at minimum wage proposal in hearing today
Bill Rosendahl, a television talk show host who became the first openly gay man to serve on the Los Angeles City Council, has died. He was 70. Rosendahl died early Wednesday morning at his home in Mar Vista, surrounded by friends and family, after a four-year battle with cancer, according to a…See the most-read stories this hour >>
The people who stand to benefit most from minimum wage hikes across California are low-income adults, most of them household breadwinners, according to an analysis by UC Berkeley's Center for Labor Research and Education. A law proposed by Gov. Jerry Brown would gradually lift the statewide minimum…California minimum wage deal passes committee
The people who stand to benefit most from minimum wage hikes across California are low-income adults, most of them household breadwinners, according to a new analysis.California minimum wage deal passes committee
The chief executive of the Los Angeles County Fair Assn., who made more than $1 million in total compensation in 2014 even as the organization reported millions of dollars in losses, has resigned. L.A. Now
The chief executive of the Los Angeles County Fair Assn., who made more than $1 million in total compensation in 2014 even as the organization reported millions of dollars in losses, has resigned.Losses mount as compensation soars at Los Angeles County Fair Assn.
Republican presidential frontrunner tells MSNBC there needs to be ‘some form of punishment’ for women and says he would ban abortion if elected president
Activists from the Irvine-based Center for Medical Progress contend that they were acting as investigative journalists. But unpublicized footage and court records show that their methods were geared more toward political provocation than journalism. L.A. Now