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Trouble on the tracks
The Metrolink crash in Oxnard that injured 28 people early Tuesday is a grim reminder of more tragic crashes that have peppered the train system's history. It seems hard, at least initially, to pin heavy blame on Metrolink for this one -- officials say a truck driver took a wrong turn and got stuck on the rails in front of the speeding train. Even so, scrutiny of Metrolink will intensify...
Push and pull: the limits of safety
Metrolink has spent hundreds of millions on safety improvements in recent years, but there are limits on how safe you can make anything. In Tuesday's crash, three state-of-the-art energy-absorbing cars may have prevented deaths. Attention now could focus on at-grade road crossings and the practice of using locomotives to push, rather than pull, passenger cars.
Bowing out early
The battle to succeed retiring Sen. Barbara Boxer was shaping up as a tussle between California's north and south, between Latinos and the Bay Area political establishment. But in the end, former L.A. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosasaid he wouldn't try to take on Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris, a huge early favorite. Maybe, then, a future shot at the governor's chair?
Race and races
Monterey Park was the first city in the continental U.S. with an Asian American majority population and the first to elect a Chinese woman as mayor. Now, March 3 elections could produce its first African American councilman. To read campaign yard signs, you need to know English, Spanish and Chinese. Here's a look at how the city navigates the race issue.
Fixing what ain't broken
The Internet seems to work just fine, but if you like Skyping with grandma, sending emails, browsing Vimeo or sharing a meme on Tumblr, you'll want to know what the FCC is about to do. New rules are intended to preserve the free flow of online traffic -- or "net neutrality." Depending on your place in the online world, they could be a godsend or a nightmare.
Sony dials back
Now we know who's getting Amy Pascal's job. Sony Pictures Entertainment is turning to someone with a record of controlling costs while still producing blockbusters: Tom Rothman, a former Fox film exec who brought us "Avatar" and "Titanic," will be the new motion picture chairman. | |||||||
-- L.A. City Council candidates criticize plans to move election dates. It might improve turnout, they say, but it could give an advantage to incumbents and special interests.
-- Donors pinch-hit with cash to help an east Hollywood youth baseball teamregain access to a field it was priced out of.
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-- Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen appears before the Republican-led Senate, and markets like what they hear.
-- State officials again slam Kaiser Permanente on mental health treatment, saying it makes patients wait too long.
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-- Ex-Marine Eddie Ray Routh is found guilty in the shooting deaths of "American Sniper" author Chris Kyle and friend Chad Littlefield.
-- President Obama begins the veto era of his presidency with swift rejection of the Keystone XL pipeline bill.
-- Islamic State uses a sophisticated recruitment campaign to try to lure Western women to join its fight.
-- With another round of promised reforms. Greece wins a four-month extensionof its bailout by Europe.
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-- "It's Not Crazy, It's Sports." On Sunday, ESPN will air a block of short-form documentaries by Oscar-winning filmmaker Errol Morris.
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-- Inglewood's City Council voted to approve a proposed NFL stadium and jump-start the effort to bring an NFL team back to the L.A. area.
-- FIFA aims to delay the 2022 World Cup to winter to avoid Qatar's brutal summer heat. Top European leagues are not happy.
Passings: Donald R. Keough, 88, former Coca-Cola president who helped usher in "New Coke" -- and usher it out -- in the 1980s.
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"Hollywood's First Femme Fatale": the London Review of Books' take onMariusz Kotowski's work about Pola Negri, a key figure in silent movies.
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"Auntie Fee" has become an online video cooking sensation for her use of salt -- and not just in her recipes. Her language is hotly spiced with cursing, on camera and off. The South L.A. homemaker (a.k.a. Felicia O'Dell) is as unpredictable as a car chase. Viewers find it part of her appeal. See whether you agree.
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2015년 2월 25일 수요일
Today's Headlines: Metrolink crash; Villaraigosa bows out; Fixing the Internet (or not)
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