Monday's first presidential debate had some amusing moments, like when Trump criticized Hillary's “lack of stamina.” It was ironic because, while Donald might have won the
On the night that playwright Edward Albee died, September 16, 2016, I attended the opening of one of his rarely performed plays, “The Play About the Baby,” at The Road
Editor:
After reading the filed and served Notices from the FAA to the City of Santa Monica dated September 26, it appears the City is now being made to officially
THANKS, OBAMA
It’s horrifying. I never, until very recently, thought I would say the words or even think the thought, “If Trump wins…” A year ago I assured my
It’s nearly impossible to review Robert O’Hara’s new play, “Barbecue,” without falling off the plot line into a SPOILER ALERT. This play, now making its West Coast
When I was training to become a Master Gardener, I remember the first time I looked at a seed under a microscope at the Huntington Library and Gardens Laboratory. A
WHAT WOULD JESUS DO?
I thought that’s what I would hear, when I attended last week’s gathering for local religious leaders’ take on “the moral issues” surrounding LV,
Seeds burst with life. Wondrous, seemingly miraculous, in a seed, as tiny as a fleck or grain, is an embryo of a flowering plant, a food, a tree. Those seeds
By Kevin M. Brettauer
Love it or loathe it, the dark, deconstructionist superhero comic of the 1980s set the genre on a path it’s never steered too far from
It is usually difficult for a one-woman show to keep an audience riveted through the entire performance. But it’s a piece of cake for Leslie Caveny, who wrote and