BUSINESS
October 22, 2008 | E. Scott Reckard and Roger Vincent, Reckard and Vincent are Times staff writers.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. plans soon to sign a major lease of office space in Orange County, probably in Irvine, where as many as 600 people would liquidate the assets of troubled banks and thrifts based in California and other Western states. The agency needs 200,000 square feet of space and has looked at locations across Southern California, FDIC spokesman David Barr said. "It's a temporary office -- three to five years is what we're looking at," Barr said Tuesday.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
October 4, 2008 | Susannah Rosenblatt, Times Staff Writer
The nation's economy might be crumbling, and the housing market may be in crisis, but Newport Beach is still dreaming big. The wealthy beach town's aging City Hall, a conglomeration of overstuffed buildings wedged next to a supermarket, is getting a makeover. Five designs for a new civic center offer flamboyant and wildly divergent visions for the symbolic heart of Orange County affluence. What could be more Newport Beach than an illuminated, sail-shaped roof and an upscale wine bar?
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
September 25, 2008 | John L. Mitchell, Times Staff Writer
Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa has asked the city to block the eviction of a nonprofit organization from a city-owned building that City Councilman Bernard C. Parks said was illegally being used by the group to organize voters against his bid for a seat on the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors. For eight years, Strategic Concepts in Organizing and Policy Education's headquarters has been at 1715 W. Florence Ave.
NATIONAL
August 31, 2008 | From Times Wire Reports
A fire broke out early Saturday at the Oregon Capitol, leaving the building with damage from smoke, water and fire, including to the governor's ceremonial office and the offices of some of his high-ranking staff members. The fire was put out in about 20 minutes, said Capt. Calvin Curths of Oregon State Police. Five janitors were working inside the building and exited safely after being alerted by a fire alarm. The blaze is being investigated as a possible arson.
WORLD
August 16, 2008 | Megan K. Stack, Times Staff Writer
They squat in abandoned buildings, crash in rickety schoolhouses or sleep under bushes and trees. They stumble into the city wooden-faced and traumatized, children in tow, with little or nothing but the clothes they were wearing when they fled their houses. Tens of thousands of Georgians have been forced from their homes by days of fighting and Russian occupation, leaving this small country suddenly swamped in a major humanitarian crisis.
ENTERTAINMENT
August 5, 2008 | Christopher Hawthorne, Times Architecture Critic
BEIJING -- On the first morning of my recent stay in Beijing, I picked up the China Daily, the government-run English-language newspaper, to see the following phrase near the top of the front page: "Good Times Get Better." It was a teaser for a story inside the paper about the expanding number of luxury boutiques in the Chinese capital.
NATIONAL
July 15, 2008 | From Times Wire Reports
The American flag has many labels: Stars and Stripes. Old Glory. And sometimes, made in China. Congress can't halt the flow of Chinese-made flags, but lawmakers can try to control where they are flown. The House declared that any flag flown on federal property should be made in the U.S. "It's not a major problem facing the nation," said Rep. Bob Filner (D-Chula Vista). "But it's an irritant." Filner, chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, wanted to force the government to buy only U.S.-made flags.
WORLD
July 2, 2008 | Don Lee, Times Staff Writer
A man stormed into a police building Tuesday and fatally stabbed six officers, Shanghai police said. Several officers were injured. A suspect was arrested and initially described on the Shanghai police website as a 28-year-old unemployed man from Beijing who took revenge against authorities because he was being investigated for stealing bicycles. However, this information was later deleted from the site.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
June 4, 2008 | Margot Roosevelt, Times Staff Writer
How many city officials does it take to change the lightbulbs? Too few, apparently, have dedicated themselves to the task. Los Angeles Controller Laura Chick issued an audit Monday of energy conservation -- or the lack thereof -- in the city's offices, police and fire stations, libraries and senior citizens centers, and declared that the city's 12-year-old program to cut back on electricity use needs "a complete overhaul."
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
May 11, 2008 | Ruben Vives, Times Staff Writer
County officials on Saturday dedicated a more than $30-million civic center in East Los Angeles that took nearly a decade to complete. The center, at 4801 E. Third St., serves residents of the unincorporated neighborhood, as well as those from Montebello, Monterey Park, Commerce and Los Angeles. Angie Castro, a spokeswoman for L.A. County Supervisor Gloria Molina, whose district includes East L.A., called the center the heart of the neighborhood.