• Bush condemns Trump-era America: ‘Bigotry seems emboldened’

    Bush condemns Trump-era America: ‘Bigotry seems emboldened’
    By STEVE PEOPLES
    NEW YORK — Former President George W. Bush on Thursday denounced bigotry in Trump-era American politics, warning that the rise of “nativism,” isolationism and conspiracy theories have clouded the nation’s true identity.
    Former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, left, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley, center, and former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice participate in a panel discussion at a forum sponsored by the George W.
  • Kelly defends Trump’s call to war widow, raps congresswoman

    Kelly defends Trump’s call to war widow, raps congresswoman
    White House Chief of Staff John Kelly pauses as he speaks to the media during the daily briefing in the Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House, Thursday, Oct. 19, 2017. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)White House Chief of Staff John Kelly stands next to the podium while speaking to the media during the daily briefing in the Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, Thursday, Oct. 19, 2017. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)Rep. Frederica Wilson, D-Fla., talks to repor
  • Irvine Company’s Donald Bren offers ‘1-click’ proposal for Amazon HQ2

    Irvine Company’s Donald Bren offers ‘1-click’ proposal for Amazon HQ2
    Irvine on Thursday, Oct. 19, revealed to the public its proposal to bring Amazon’s second headquarters to the master planned community, specifically to Irvine Spectrum.
    Its selling point? A partnership between the city and its master developer Irvine Company that would allow Amazon to move in quickly and avoid spending billions of dollars, officials say.
    “With the Irvine Co. proposal, Amazon will not be required to invest capital for land acquisition, buildings, or entitlements to bu
  • Manor-alteration fees to increase in United Mutual

    Manor-alteration fees to increase in United Mutual
    United Mutual passed resolutions to increase manor-alterations fees and to implement a deposit for manor-alteration projects, at its meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 17.
    Request processing fees for manor alterations were increased from $10 to $35 for the mutual-consent request processing fee and from $100 to $150 for the variance-request processing fee. The resolution was passed 9-1.
    Director Janey Dorrell said that although Village Management Staff is efficient at their work, a lot of time goes into pr
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  • Bipartisan plan to curb health premiums gets strong support

    Bipartisan plan to curb health premiums gets strong support
    By ERICA WERNER and ALAN FRAM
    WASHINGTON  — A bipartisan proposal to calm churning health insurance markets gained momentum Thursday when enough lawmakers rallied behind it to give it potentially unstoppable Senate support. As the measure’s prospects grew, Republican frustration burst into the open over President Donald Trump’s erratic response to the plan.
    Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., second from right, is surrounded by reporters as she heads to vote on budget amendments,
  • At least $1 billion damaged in California fires, says insurance commissioner

    At least $1 billion damaged in California fires, says insurance commissioner
    A sign warning looters will be shot is seen on the chimney of a home destroyed by wildfires on Wednesday, Oct. 18, 2017, in Glen Ellen, Calif. California fire officials have reported significant progress on containing wildfires that have ravaged parts of Northern California. The fires that swept through parts of seven counties starting Oct. 8 were the deadliest and most destructive series of blazes in California history. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)In this Oct. 16, 2017 file photo, a mailbox, one of fe
  • California Assembly paid $100K to settle harassment claims

    California Assembly paid $100K to settle harassment claims
    By KATHLEEN RONAYNE
    SACRAMENTO — The California Assembly paid $100,000 to settle harassment, discrimination and retaliation claims made in 2014 against then-Assemblyman Steve Fox, who an aide said exposed himself and then fired her when she reported his behavior.
    State Assemblyman Steve Fox, D-Palmdale.The settlement, reached in April, closed out a lawsuit by Nancy Kathleen Finnigan, former legislative director for Fox, D-Palmdale, according to a copy obtained by The Associated Press throu
  • NLCS: Dodgers vs. Cubs live updates from Game 5

    NLCS: Dodgers vs. Cubs live updates from Game 5
    The Los Angeles Dodgers have a 3-1 lead in the National League Championship Series on the road tonight against the Chicago Cubs. A victory puts them in their first World Series since 1988.
    If you are unable to watch Game 5 or looking for some more insight or conversation on the Los Angeles Dodgers follow along below with updates from our reporters at the game. Check out some of the excellent work from the Daily Herald's John Starks and Steve Lundy.Images of theChicago... fb.me/3RIJ81iXnICYMI: #C
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  • Silverado Days rolls back into Buena Park this weekend

    Silverado Days rolls back into Buena Park this weekend
    Buena Park’s annual Silverado Days will bring rides, live entertainment and all kinds of contests to William Peak Park this weekend.
    Running Friday, Oct. 20, through Sunday, Oct. 22, the “good old-fashioned country fair” event is expected to draw up to 50,000 visitors, Silverado Days general chairman Pat Donnelly said. Attractions will include a 100-foot Ferris wheel and flume ride.
    Organized by the Buena Park Noon Lions Club, Silverado Days offers free parking, admission and e
  • UCLA football can’t win when it comes to turnovers

    UCLA football can’t win when it comes to turnovers
    LOS ANGELES >> Despite prolific passing numbers and a running game that’s steadily improved, Jedd Fisch is not yet to applaud the UCLA offense’s performance in the first half of the season. Not until the Bruins cut down on their turnovers.
    “We can be a lot better than we are, I know that, because we leave too many plays out there and we turn the ball over too much,” the offensive coordinator said.
    Turnovers are a sticking point for the Bruins on offense and def
  • Brigadier general from Fountain Valley is a female trendsetter

    Brigadier general from Fountain Valley is a female trendsetter
    It’s a good bet most members of the Fountain Valley High Class of 1982 didn’t expect to have a general in their midst when they met in August this year for their 35th reunion.
    But there was Laura Yeager nee Brandt letting her hair down with her friends.
    Few, least of all Yeager, saw this coming when she was a kid growing up.
    “I think some of them were surprised,” said Yeager, who recently entered her third week as commander of the Joint Task Force North in Texas. “T
  • How to Pack an Evacuation 'Go Bag'

    A few weeks ago, a fire sparked on a tiny trail on the foothills of the Santa Ana Mountains in Anaheim, California. It moved fast, and through news reports, we watched it snake its way toward our sleepy, suburban neighborhood.
  • Free art classes starting at Anaheim Central Library

    Session are planned from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. on Mondays and Wednesdays for those ages 11 to 21 at the Anaheim Central Library, 500 W. Broadway. Session 1 is Manga Studio, and it will run from Nov. 13 to Dec. 11; and Session 2 on clay modelling will be Jan 3 to Feb. 5. Higher Ground Youth and Family Services is presenting An Evening of Purpose and Possibilities on Friday, Oct. 20, in Anaheim.
  • Iraq War vet who rode the bus to do volunteer work surprised with a new car at Costa Mesa repair shop

    Iraq War vet who rode the bus to do volunteer work surprised with a new car at Costa Mesa repair shop
    COSTA MESA — Josue Guerrero-Uribe used to spend hours on buses in the Los Angeles area going to and from various volunteer projects.
    When he left the Marine Corps in 2008 after serving eight years, Guerrero-Uribe struggled with alcohol and anger management issues. He found solace in helping others, putting in hundreds of hours to help build sports fields and teaching financial management and English classes at various schools and libraries to some of Los Angeles County’s poorest resi
  • Luke Walton says NBA players will ‘come after’ Lonzo Ball

    Luke Walton says NBA players will ‘come after’ Lonzo Ball
    EL SEGUNDO – He eschewed norms and a fat endorsement contract so he could produce his own signature sneaker; starred in a reality TV series; was constantly favorably compared by his father to all-time greats.
    Lonzo Ball has never shied away from the fact that all of that has rubbed other players around the NBA the wrong way. On media day in late September, he was asked if he will have a target on his back.
    He shrugged.
    “Probably,” he said.
    How does Ball, a 19-year-old up to thi
  • `Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ star arrested in Palm Springs for alleged domestic violence

    `Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ star arrested in Palm Springs for alleged domestic violence
    Actor Nicholas Brendon, best known for his work on TV’s “Buffy the Vampire Slayer,” is free on $50,000 bail stemming from his arrest at a Palm Springs hotel for alleged domestic violence, police confirmed today.
    Brendon was with his girlfriend in the bar of a hotel in the 180 block of East Palm Canyon Drive last Tuesday when the pair got into an argument and he allegedly pulled her arm and “violently” pulled her by her hair, Sgt. William Hutchinson said.
    Hotel
  • The sick list: Spotting and treating 5 contagious illnesses and ailments your child may encounter

    The sick list: Spotting and treating 5 contagious illnesses and ailments your child may encounter
    You get a school notice about head lice in your kid’s classroom and know your first-grader has been scratching her head incessantly. Or you take your football-playing son to the doctor with what you think is an infected spider bite, and it’s diagnosed  as the bacterial skin infection MRSA.
    Many illnesses that are easily spread peak in the fall and winter months, and this is particularly true among kids as they settle into school routines among their equally germ-prone peers.
    &ld
  • Briefly San Clemente: Learn to survive, street restriping, spooky stuff, stinky stuff, and more

    Briefly San Clemente: Learn to survive, street restriping, spooky stuff, stinky stuff, and more
    Rusty’s handlers at the San Clemente/Dana Point Animal Shelter say the 6 year old is a gentle soul, great on a leash and easygoing, a good companion for someone looking for a low maintenance dog. For adoption info, call the shelter at 949-492-1617 or visit Rusty at 221 Avenida Fabricante, San Clemente. (Courtesy of animal shelter)Orange County Public Works is in the final phase of completing a project that began in April, 2014, the La Pata Gap Closure. It includes construction of Avenida L
  • To help those who need to stay close to home, state tells CSU to favor local students in admission

    To help those who need to stay close to home, state tells CSU to favor local students in admission
    By Larry Gordon, EdSource
    Thousands of potential CSU students have to attend college close to home because of family responsibilities, jobs or financial constraints. So getting rejected by a nearby campus or a major at that local school can have devastating consequences.
    Now, however, help appears to be on the way.
    State legislators have ordered the CSU to expand admission preference to so-called place-bound students when campuses and popular majors are over-crowded. In contrast to students
  • Bob Bergstrom, 76, has been a FAST swimmer for 40 years

    Bob Bergstrom, 76,  has been a FAST swimmer for 40 years
    Sometimes Bob Bergstrom doesn’t feel like waking up at dawn to train.
    Now 76, the longtime Fullerton resident has already captured medals and set personal records.
    Still, four mornings a week, including those pesky ones, Bergstrom heads over to the Janet Evans Swim Complex and goes to work where he has been swimming for four decades.
    “It’s second nature now,” he said. “Get up and get into the pool.”
    Bob Bergstrom, 76, is up before the sun swimming laps at the
  • Santa Ana suspect arrested in High Desert chase-turned-shootout

    Santa Ana suspect arrested in High Desert chase-turned-shootout
    A 43-year-old domestic violence suspect out of Santa Ana is in jail after a pursuit Wednesday in Pinon Hills ended in a shootout with deputies, the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department said.
    Harold Lynn Gunlogson, of Phelan, was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder, assault of a peace officer with a firearm, being a felon in possession of a firearm and possession of a controlled substance. He was booked at the West Valley Detention Center in Rancho Cucamonga, according to jail r
  • Tough Questions with Edison’s David Atencio

    Tough Questions with Edison’s David Atencio
    He’s one of the top wide receivers in Orange County and helps lead Edison into Thursday night’s clash against Los Alamitos at Huntington Beach.
    He has 34 catches for 604 yards and seven TDs.
    He’s also one of the top basketball players in the county.
    And he has a knack of leaping to his feet after hitting the turf.
    David Atencio is also the subject of this week’s OCVarsity Tough Questions, which starts with a tale of a team meal gone bad before the Edison-San Clemente
  • Dodgers fan who caught Turner HR ball also snags Wrigley shot

    Dodgers fan who caught Turner HR ball also snags Wrigley shot
    He’s become Mr. Hawk-tober.
    Remember that fan who made the great catch on Justin Turner’s game-ending home run at Dodger Stadium over the weekend? Guess what? He did it again.
    Keith Hupp came up with his second homer souvenir in the NL Championship Series, corralling the ball Cubs star Javier Baez hit into the bleachers at Wrigley Field on Wednesday night.
    “I’m still kind of a newbie at this ballhawking stuff,” the retired policeman told The Associated Press in a ph
  • For Martha Davis of the Motels, turning her back on her early success helped her find lasting happiness in rock ‘n’ roll

    For Martha Davis of the Motels, turning her back on her early success helped her find lasting happiness in rock ‘n’ roll
    When Martha Davis moved from Berkeley to Los Angeles in the mid-’70s it was a time of great change for rock ‘n’ roll. This provided her and her band mates both an opportunity – suddenly a whole lot of new music was getting played in the bars and clubs of the city – but also a challenge in that the record company guys didn’t know what to make of this band that called itself the Motels.
    “I remember I was asked to be a model for this Warner Bros. in-house t
  • America First! protest organizer Johnny Benitez plans rally Sunday on Extortion 17, Benghazi

    America First! protest organizer Johnny Benitez plans rally Sunday on Extortion 17, Benghazi
    LAGUNA BEACH  — Police officials say they are ready for another rally planned by former America First! organizer Johnny Benitez at Main Beach on Sunday, Oct. 22.
    The rally, now under the name of Onward America, will be focused on creating greater transparency from the U.S. government about attacks on Extortion 17 and American government facilities in Benghazi, Libya, Benitez said.
    Questions still remain unanswered in both incidents.
    In 2011, A U.S. Army Chinook helicopter, with t
  • Yorba Linda woman, Palmdale mayor in court in public corruption case

    Yorba Linda woman, Palmdale mayor in court in public corruption case
    The arraignment of Palmdale Mayor Jim Ledford and two consultants in a public corruption case was set for Thursday morning in a downtown Los Angeles courtroom.
    Ledford and local consultants Kimberly Anne Shaw of Yorba Linda and Susan Burgess Miller of Las Vegas were due in court at 8:30 a.m. at Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center, according to the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office.
    On July 26, Superior Court Judge Mark Hanasono agreed to push back the case because of
  • Here’s what to do when zombies invade Long Beach this weekend

    Here’s what to do when zombies invade Long Beach this weekend
    It may seem like the end of the world is here when the walking dead invade the streets of Long Beach this weekend.
    But don’t worry. There’s no need to hide in bunkers or start going all Rick Grimes (if you don’t know who that is you’re not into zombies) on anyone, because it’s just the annual Long Beach Zombie Fest, happening Oct. 20-22.
    The interactive three-day event is a celebration of all things zombies, and it isn’t for wallflowers either since people are
  • Sabrina Claudio Is Apple Music's Newest 'Up Next' Artist: Exclusive

    Sabrina Claudio performs during the Day N Night Festival at Angel Stadium of Anaheim on Sept. 8, 2017 in Anaheim, Calif.
  • Caltrans is trying to find out why the ground at St. Andrews church in San Clemente is slipping away

    Caltrans is trying to find out why the ground at St. Andrews church in San Clemente is slipping away
    Caltrans and a San Clemente church atop a hill overlooking a freeway construction site are investigating the cause of land slippage in the church’s parking lot.
    Members of St. Andrews by-the-Sea United Methodist Church began noticing small cracks in a corner the parking lot in April, said Mike Wiechman, trustee chair at St. Andrews.
    “In the last month, it has gotten worse,” he said Monday, Oct. 16. “We’ve been in contact with geotechnical firms. We are getting some
  • 30 years later: What was best bet after Black Monday market crash?

    30 years later: What was best bet after Black Monday market crash?
    Let’s take a look at how key assets classes have performed since the stock market crash of Oct. 19, 1987 known as “Black Monday.”
    We track $10,000 in various investments and what it would have grown to since the fateful day when the Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged 22.6 percent.
    Results, which include dividends paid and reinvested, show asset class index; growth amount as of Oct. 10 in dollar terms; and the annual average rate of return over 30 years, according to data from
  • Why does Great California ShakeOut begin at 10:19 a.m.?

    Why does Great California ShakeOut begin at 10:19 a.m.?
    LOS ANGELES — The annual Great California ShakeOut Drill will be held today, with millions of Southland residents joining people across the state — and around the world — as they drop, cover and hold to practice their readiness for a major earthquake.
    As of Wednesday, nearly 3.6 million Los Angeles County residents had registered at www.ShakeOut.org to participate in the drill, along with nearly 830,000 in Orange County. Across the country and globe, more than 10 million people
  • How Stephen Colbert, Steve Carell, Louis C.K. got canceled in ‘Too Funny to Fail’

    How Stephen Colbert, Steve Carell, Louis C.K. got canceled in ‘Too Funny to Fail’
    “These guys were nobodies,” Dana Carvey stresses in the fascinating documentary “Too Funny To Fail,” which premieres Saturday on Hulu.
    “It’s absolutely true,” laughs Stephen Colbert in an interview for the film, “I had absolutely no prospects of getting a job.”
    By the way, the other guy Carvey was talking about is Steve Carell. It was the mid-1990s and Carvey was at the top of his game, having come off of eight successful years on “Satu
  • ‘The Walking Dead’ fans talk death and survival before the hit AMC show returns on Sunday

    ‘The Walking Dead’ fans talk death and survival before the hit AMC show returns on Sunday
    There’s so much suspense looming as the eighth season of AMC’s hit post-apocalyptic TV series “The Walking Dead” returns at 9 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 22. Not only is the episode slated to be a nail-biting series kick-off, but it’s also the milestone 100th episode of the Emmy Award-winning series.
    The battle is certainly brewing between Rick Grimes & Co. and the show’s latest protagonist, Negan, and his loyal brood. One thing is for certain, someone is going t
  • Woman, child and baby found unconscious, naked and covered in white powder in LA; baby later dies

    Woman, child and baby found unconscious, naked and covered in white powder in LA; baby later dies
    A baby died after she was found naked, unconscious and covered with white powder with an 8-year-old girl and a 26-year-old woman believed to be their mother early Thursday, Oct. 19, 2017, in this parking lot behind the Numero Uno Market at South San Pedro and East 23rd streets in South Los Angeles. (Google Street View)LOS ANGELES — A woman, a little girl and a baby were found naked, unconscious and covered in white powder this morning in the parking lot of a South Los Angeles market, and t
  • Gretchen Carlson’s new book ‘Be Fierce’ finds the former Fox News anchor on the front lines in the fight against sexual harassment

    Gretchen Carlson’s new book ‘Be Fierce’ finds the former Fox News anchor on the front lines in the fight against sexual harassment
    Gretchen Carlson’s new book, “Be Fierce: Stop Harassment and Take Your Power Back,” brings her to Southern California for public events in Huntington Beach and Santa Monica on Sunday, Oct. 22, 2017. (Photo by Brigitte Lacombe)Gretchen Carlson’s new book, “Be Fierce: Stop Harassment and Take Your Power Back,” brings her to Southern California for public events in Huntington Beach and Santa Monica on Sunday, Oct. 22, 2017. (Photo by Brigitte Lacombe)Gretchen Car
  • Stocks or homes? What Black Monday 30 years ago taught us

    Stocks or homes? What Black Monday 30 years ago taught us
    In this Oct. 19, 1987 photo, traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange watch monitors for transactions. What if the stock market plunged 20 percent tomorrow? The question may seem absurd when the market is in the midst of one of its calmest runs in history and at record highs. But it’s what investors had to deal with 30 years ago, when “Black Monday” blasted stocks on Oct. 19, 1987. (AP Photo/File)This is how papers across the country headlined the stock market plunge
  • Review: Sichuan cuisine is hot now and Chili Party heats things up

    Review: Sichuan cuisine is hot now and Chili Party heats things up
    Okay, it’s official. Orange chicken is out. Spicy water fish is in.
    Sichuan has become the “it” cuisine of 2017, or maybe the decade. With so many new Sichuan restaurants opening in Orange County lately, the idea of going out for Chinese food has been forever altered. These days it’s all about mouth-numbing peppercorn and throat-searing chilies, the hallmarks of Sichuan province.
    The latest serious newcomer to O.C.’s thriving Sichuan scene is Chili Party, which open
  • Review: Here’s another chance to make your lips vibrate

    Review: Here’s another chance to make your lips vibrate
    Related Articles Best thing I ate: okra from a mesquite grill Review: Good news, bad news about this amazing brisket Best thing I ate: A uniquely California twist on chilaquiles Review: Roux in Laguna Beach is a flirty, sexy ode to New Orleans Best thing I ate: Possibly the best burger everOkay, it’s official. Orange chicken is out. Spicy water fish is in. Sichuan has become the “it” cuisine of 2017, or maybe the decade. With so many new Sichuan restaurants opening in Orange Co
  • Kelly kept tragedy out of politics, but Trump brought it up

    Kelly kept tragedy out of politics, but Trump brought it up
    By LAURIE KELLMAN and ROBERT BURNS
    WASHINGTON  — It’s known as some of the saddest ground in America, a 14-acre plot of Arlington National Cemetery called Section 60 where many U.S. personnel killed in Iraq and Afghanistan are interred. On Memorial Day this year, President Donald Trump and the man who would be his chief of staff visited Grave 9480, the final resting place of Robert Kelly, a Marine killed Nov. 9, 2010, in Afghanistan.
    “We grieve with you. We honor you. And
  • The hamburger you have to try

    The hamburger you have to try
    When the James Beard Foundation announced its second annual Blended Burger Project in May, chef Greg Daniels of Haven Gastropub in Orange quickly rose to the call. The contest posed the challenge of creating an artisanal burger in which at least 25 percent of the patty is ground mushrooms, promoting the blended burger concept as a more healthful and arguably tastier version of the classic beef burger. Daniels’ creative calibrations resulted in the Haven Breakfast Burger, a menu entré
  • Former Trump Adviser Arthur Laffer On The Republican Tax Plan

    Economist Arthur Laffer, known as "the father of supply-side economics" and who was an economic advisor to President Ronald Reagan, speaks to an executive committee meeting of the California Republican Party at their convention in Anaheim, Calif., Friday, Oct. 4, 2013. The Trump administration says it wants lawmakers to pass the Republican tax overhaul plan by the end of the year.
  • Spain ready to revoke Catalan autonomy amid independence bid

    Spain ready to revoke Catalan autonomy amid independence bid
    By ARITZ PARRA and CIARAN GILES
    BARCELONA, Spain  — Spain’s government on Thursday immediately rejected a threat by Catalonia’s leader to declare independence unless talks are held, calling a special Cabinet session for the weekend to activate measures to take control of the region’s semi-autonomous powers.
    Catalan president Carles Puigdemont’s warning came in a letter to Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy with minutes to spare before the expiration of a dead
  • As U.S. warns of Cuba attacks on diplomats, tourists ask: Were we hit, too?

    As U.S. warns of Cuba attacks on diplomats, tourists ask: Were we hit, too?
    By JOSH LEDERMAN
    CHARLESTON, S.C.  — Chris Allen’s phone started buzzing as word broke that invisible attacks in Cuba had hit a U.S. government worker at Havana’s Hotel Capri. Allen’s friends and family had heard an eerily similar story from him before.
    The tourist from South Carolina had cut short his trip to Cuba two years earlier after numbness spread through all four of his limbs within minutes of climbing into bed at the same hotel where the American government
  • Cal State Fullerton’s Mildred García: Elevator rides with students bring music to my ears

    It happens every morning on the elevator at California State University, Fullerton: Students file in around me — some bright-eyed and bushy-tailed, others in desperate need of the Starbucks they clutch to their hearts like their first-born — but it’s not their contrasting states of alertness that strike me; it’s the many disparate languages they’re speaking.
    To me, the sound of three or four languages over the course of a 10-floor elevator ride is America personifie
  • OCFA Accused of Not Responding Before Canyon Fire 2 Erupted

    Flames light up an Orange County neighborhood where a wildfire, dubbed the Canyon Fire 2, has charred thousands of acres on Monday, Oct. 9, 2017. The night before the Canyon Fire 2 blaze erupted in the Anaheim Hills, ultimately charring 9,200 acres and destroying 25 structures, Orange County Fire Authority officials were alerted to flames in the area but the agency never responded, a retired sheriff's deputy said Wednesday.
  • Alternate facts gain historical perspective from Cal State Fullerton researchers

    Alternate facts gain historical perspective from Cal State Fullerton researchers
    “Which is right? And which is an illusion?”
    And with due respect to the Moody Blues, can what’s not true still be real?
    In a year of questions about fake news, Cal State Fullerton is presenting a lecture series to give some historical perspective on “alternate facts.”
    The three-part series, “Interdisciplinary Conversations on Alternate Facts: Evidence, Interpretation and Reality,” put on by the College of Humanities and Social Sciences, pulls from the re
  • Music students sing of Hogwarts at Segerstrom Center

    Music students sing of Hogwarts at Segerstrom Center
    The CSUF University Singers and Concert Choir joined the Pacific Symphony Oct. 6 and 7 at Segerstrom Center for the Arts in Costa Mesa to perform the Academy Award-nominated score from “Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban” while the film played on a 40-foot screen as part of the Harry Potter Film Concert Series. CSUF professor of music Robert Istad conducted.
    Cal State Fullerton’s University Singers took the stage with the Pacific Symphony Oct. 6-7
  • Whicker: What price victory? Cubs dug deep to win Game 4

    Whicker: What price victory? Cubs dug deep to win Game 4
    CHICAGO — We know how difficult it is to beat somebody four times.
    The Cubs found it exhausting to beat the Dodgers once.
    Wade Davis, bear hunter and survivalist reliever, threw 48 pitches to get the six final Dodger outs. He gave up a majestic home run to Justin Turner, in the matchup Cubs’ fans wanted on Sunday night.
    He kept losing contact with the strike zone, and he had to endure a needless delay while six umpires tried to convince themselves that Curtis Granderson foul-tipped a
  • CSUF business school popular for minority students

    CSUF business school popular for minority students
    By Jeong Park
    Wenxi Fan had to decide where he would go for his undergraduate business education.
     
    On one hand was USC, with its $45,000-plus tuition. On the other hand was Cal State Fullerton, with its $6,000 tuition.
     
    USC had a higher ranking in accounting, what Fan sought to study. But paying nearly $40,000 more? No, Fan said.
     
    “Our accounting program is pretty awesome,” said Fan, now a graduate student at CSUF.
     
    More than 2,500 Asian students and 2,800 His
  • Cal State Fullerton cross country runners aim for strong season finish

    Cal State Fullerton cross country runners aim for strong season finish
    By Jeong Park
    Cal State Fullerton cross country coach John Elders believes his team can have one of the best finishes in his 30-year tenure at the school.
    Elders said confidence is the key to achieving that finish, as his team prepares for the Big West championship at UC Riverside on Oct. 28.
    “(Runners) just have to trust the whole process,” he said. “We just need to let our fitness do the racing.”The team is coming off its best finishes in more than a decade, with the me

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