NEWS
May 23, 2012 | By Paul West
WASHINGTON -- Mitt Romney won't carry the Latino vote this year. No Republican nominee for president ever has. But improving his margins among Latinos is crucial to his chances of defeating President Obama, as new poll numbers out of Florida show. The Quinnipiac University survey, just out Wednesday morning, gives Romney a six-point statewide lead over Obama, 47% to 41%. Florida has the nation's third-largest Latino population, and Romney drew 40% among Latino voters to Obama's 42%. A previous Quinnipiac poll, conducted three weeks earlier, showed the race a statistical dead heat (Romney 44, Obama 43)
ENTERTAINMENT
May 14, 2012 | By Ben Fritz and Steven Zeitchik, Los Angeles Times
Often film sequels are slam dunks at the box office, a seamless continuation from where a previous hit left off. But as the new installment of the 15-year-old franchise "Men in Black" proves, getting to the big screen isn't always a cakewalk. One of the most troubled productions in recent Hollywood memory, Sony Pictures' latest movie in the Will Smith-Tommy Lee Jones sci-fi-comedy franchise encountered multiple script rewrites, a discontented star and a three-month production shutdown as writers and studio executives scrambled to fix a project that nearly fell apart . By the time it was over, the studio had run up a tab of nearly $250 million - making "Men in Black 3" one of the most expensive releases of the summer.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
May 11, 2012 | By Rebecca Trounson, Los Angeles Times
The U.S. foreign-born population has risen to its highest level since 1920, with 13% of all those living in the nation in 2010 having been born elsewhere, a new report from the Census Bureau shows. Forty million of those residing in the U.S. in 2010 were born in other countries, up from 31 million, or 11% of the total, a decade earlier. The foreign-born share of the population dropped between 1920 and 1970, hitting a low of 4.7% in 1970, before rising again for several decades. But that growth has slowed in recent years as immigration has dropped, census officials said Thursday.
NATIONAL
May 10, 2012 | By Mark K. Matthews, Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON - The number of U.S. satellites watching Earth is expected to plummet by 2020, and weather forecasting, including hurricane tracking, could suffer as a result, a new report warns. The study, released last week by the nation's top science advisors, estimated that the fleet of science satellites operated by NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration would "decline precipitously" from a peak of 110 probes last year to fewer than 30 in 2020. The drop is a result of several factors, including budget problems and rocket accidents, and scientists said the United States risked blurring its vision of Earth if it did not act quickly to replace satellites expected to die during the next eight years.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
May 10, 2012 | By Carla Rivera, Los Angeles Times
The number of eligible California high school graduates entering the state's public four-year universities has plunged in the last five years, as budget-strapped institutions increasingly adopt practices to reduce enrollment, a new study has found. At University of California and California State University campuses, enrollment rates dropped by one-fifth, to fewer than 18% of all state high school graduates in 2010, from about 22% in 2007. The report, released Wednesday by the Public Policy Institute of California, found that these declines have occurred even as demand has risen: The number of high school graduates in California reached an all-time high of 405,000 in 2010; the number of seniors who completed college admission requirements increased dramatically, as did the number of students taking and passing Advanced Placement exams.
BUSINESS
May 8, 2012 | By Alex Pham, Los Angeles Times
A drop in the number of subscribers for Star Wars: The Old Republic triggered a 10% slide in shares of Electronic Arts Inc. in after-hours trading Monday, overshadowing news of a better-than-expected quarter for the Bay Area game publisher. EA, which in February said it had 1.7 million active subscribers for The Old Republic, reported that the figure fell to 1.3 million at the end of April. Although "active subscribers" doesn't translate exactly to paying subscribers because it includes people using a 30-day free trial, it is a good gauge for how many people have bought the title and are actively playing it online.