SCIENCE
January 15, 2008 | By Jia-Rui Chong, Times Staff Writer
The spread of syphilis across the globe was probably sparked by Christopher Columbus and his crew, who ferried the bacterium, or a version of it, from the New World to the Old World, according to a new genetic analysis published Monday. A comparison of 23 strains of Treponema pallidum bacterium found that the modern variety that causes the sexually transmitted disease was most closely related to bacteria collected from a remote tribe in Guyana.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
January 19, 2008 | By K. Connie Kang, Times Staff Writer
In many churches this weekend, religious leaders will extol the life and legacy of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in anticipation of Monday's federal holiday in his honor. Some will quote from his iconic "I Have a Dream" speech, delivered from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial during the March on Washington on Aug. 28, 1963. Others will invoke a letter he wrote while in an Alabama jail four months earlier.
NATIONAL
January 19, 2008 | By Steve Chawkins, Times Staff Writer
When in the course of human events it becomes necessary to locate a rare, vintage copy of the nation's founding document, try looking behind the filing cabinet. That was a lesson learned the hard way at the Supreme Court, where a 185-year-old facsimile of the Declaration of Independence gathered dust for seven years, tucked behind the office furniture, a court spokeswoman acknowledged this week.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
January 20, 2008 | By Cecilia Rasmussen, Times Staff Writer
One of the most feared men in 19th century Los Angeles wore a badge. Both his temper and his trigger finger were notoriously quick, and, after a business partner he had defrauded shot him to death, hundreds attended his funeral but few mourned him. Joseph Franklin Dye was a lawman, oilman and rancher who dispensed his own form of justice in 1870 by killing his boss, City Marshal William Warren.
SPORTS
January 20, 2008 | By Ron Rapoport, Special to The Times
Before the University of Houston's first appearance in an NCAA Final Four in 1967, its players were sitting in a hotel ballroom in Louisville, Ky., when they found themselves in the middle of a chaotic scene. Camera lights flashed, reporters shouted questions and fans begged for autographs as college basketball's greatest player, Lew Alcindor, hidden behind dark glasses, and the rest of the UCLA team entered the room like so many rock stars. "Do they have to pay these guys?"
SPORTS
January 29, 2008 | By Bill Dwyre
Our image of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, although a good one, is outdated. We still have him frozen in mid-skyhook, his No. 33 as memorable as the grace of his shooting motion. The current image should be of a still-shy man, now 60 years old, hunched over a computer keyboard, pulling words from a mind that has long played second fiddle to a 7-foot-2 body and a pro basketball career that will never be replicated. The leading scorer in the history of the National Basketball Assn.
SPORTS
February 1, 2008 | By Dylan Hernandez, Times Staff Writer
So influential was Jackie Robinson that a single phone call from him to Tommy Davis changed the course of Davis' life. Davis, who won batting titles with the Dodgers in 1962 and '63, was among the guest speakers Thursday at the club's first Jackie Robinson Legacy Day, which fell on what would've been the late Robinson's 89th birthday and the eve of Black History Month. Davis shared his stories about Robinson at Dodger Stadium with more than 200 local elementary and middle school students.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
February 3, 2008 | By Cecilia Rasmussen, Times Staff Writer
Artie Samish never ran for public office, but for decades he was one of the most powerful -- and colorful -- players in California politics. Before California had a full-time Legislature and when special interests could quietly give unlimited amounts of money to elect favored candidates, he was a consummate string-puller, a hired gun working for the highest pay.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
February 10, 2008 | By Cecilia Rasmussen, Times Staff Writer
Before pro football came and went, before the Dodgers and Lakers left their hometowns to come here, boxing was the heart of the Los Angeles sporting world. From the early 1930s until the late 1940s, Jim Jeffries' Barn in Burbank drew boxing fans by the hundreds. Although it wasn't nearly as big as the 8,000-seat Olympic Auditorium, L.A.'s other storied boxing mecca, the musty pugilistic monument was as busy as it was beloved.