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CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
February 20, 2008 | By Jennifer Delson,
Developer and philanthropist Donald Bren on Tuesday reached beyond the Orange County communities he helped build and define, announcing an $8.5-million donation to benefit after-school programs in Santa Ana and east Los Angeles County. The gift will bolster Santa Ana-based THINK Together, an after-school program that extends the school day for children who need extra coaching with classwork or homework help, often because their parents are working or lack English skills.

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CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
February 20, 2008 | By Jordan Rau and Evan Halper,
Public Utilities Commissioner Timothy A. Simon solicited donations from companies he regulates to help pay for a nonprofit conference on green energy hosted last month by one of his political patrons, documents and interviews show. Two weeks after the conference, the three most generous corporate donors to the Willie L. Brown Jr.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
March 3, 2008 | By Mary Engel,
The Los Angeles Free Clinic will change its name next month to the Saban Free Clinic in honor of a $10-million donation, the largest in the clinic's 41-year history, from philanthropists Haim and Cheryl Saban. The gift, which the clinic plans to announce today, will be used to create an endowment, said clinic co-director Abbe Land.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
March 31, 2008 | By Steve Chawkins,
The news hit Opera Santa Barbara like Wagnerian thunder: An anonymous donor had pledged $5 million -- the largest gift in the group's 14-year history. The windfall, announced in February, will finance an annual production by one of the donor's six favorite composers. In an operatic flourish, the benefactor's name will be unveiled only after his or her death -- on programs for productions made possible by the bequest.
NATIONAL
April 2, 2008 | By Josh Meyer,
Saudi Arabia remains the world's leading source of money for Al Qaeda and other extremist networks and has failed to take key steps requested by U.S. officials to stem the flow, the Bush administration's top financial counter-terrorism official said Tuesday. Stuart A.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
April 19, 2008 | By Larry Gordon,
It's not everybody's favorite spot on the USC campus, but to Verna B. Dauterive the basement of Doheny Memorial Library remains a beloved landmark where her life changed. There, in 1947, she was doing homework for her master's degree in education when another student struck up a conversation. He was Peter W. Dauterive, a former soldier who was getting his business degree on a GI Bill and one of the few fellow African American students at USC in those days.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
June 7, 2008 | By Charles Ornstein and John M. Glionna,
An influential U.S. senator sent a series of letters Friday seeking additional details about four liver transplants at UCLA Medical Center involving patients who were suspected members or associates of Japanese organized crime groups. "While surgeons do not seek to pass moral judgment on the patients they treat, Americans hope at the very least that foreign criminal figures wait in line along with the rest of us," Sen. Charles E.
ENTERTAINMENT
June 21, 2008 | By Chris Pasles,
An anonymous donor has given the Colburn School in downtown Los Angeles $9 million to support its Dance Institute. The donation is the largest single gift to the school after Richard Colburn's founding endowment of $20 million and will be added to the Dance Institute's $1-million endowment, bringing the total to $10 million.
ENTERTAINMENT
June 22, 2008 | By Suzanne Muchnic,
Joe AND Etsuko Price are back. Twenty-five years ago, they joined with the Los Angeles County Museum of Art to fulfill a dream. The Prices donated $5 million to help construct the Pavilion for Japanese Art and promised a spectacular collection of Japanese paintings to the museum. Five years later, the building was completed: an eye-popping, lotus-like structure on the east end of the museum campus.
WORLD
August 9, 2008 | By Caesar Ahmed and Tina Susman,
Tigers have not fared well in Iraq. Under Saddam Hussein, they languished in zoo cages, hungry and haggard. During the 1991 Persian Gulf War, they survived on scraps provided by sympathetic zookeepers. And after Hussein's ouster in 2003, one of the two tigers in the Baghdad Zoo was shot and killed by a U.S. soldier. With the arrival of two Bengal tigers from a North Carolina sanctuary for endangered animals, Iraqi and U.S. officials are hoping the future is brighter for tigers here.
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