We’ve all done it, even tangentially. Whether in the form of taking a bong rip, unfortunately inhaling at your friend’s sister’s quince, or eating what you swear
Sarah Rathbone wants to change the way you shop for seafood in the spring.
“I’m encouraging people to eat the unknown,” Rathbone said on a recent Saturday at the
Westside Family Health Center’s (WFHC) Director of Development, Celia Bernstein, received a Comerica Bank Best of LA Women's Business Award/Woman of Philanthropy before the start of
AB 2528, a measure that incorporates four state watersheds into the triennial California’s Climate Adaptation Strategy report, has passed out Assembly Natural Resources on a 7-3 vote. The bill,
President Donald Trump's personal lawyer must declare in writing that his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination may be jeopardized if legal proceedings aren't delayed in a
The City of Malibu is holding a Public Safety Town Hall Meeting on Thursday, April 26 at 7 p.m. at City Hall to offer residents information about the range
The City Council plans to have a strategic and broad-based conversation this weekend during an annual retreat at Virginia Avenue Park. The conversation will focus on how to apply new
Students from several local high schools met in a church hall in Santa Monica on Tuesday night to finalize plans for today’s scheduled walkouts at 10 a.m. and
A 16-year-old who was part of a search party looking for a missing high school sports star led the group to discover the boy's body but investigators suspect
A medicine made from the marijuana plant moved one step closer to U.S. approval Thursday after federal health advisers endorsed it for the treatment of severe seizures in children
Selling or advertising gay conversion therapy may soon be classified as a fraudulent business practice in California under a bill passed Thursday by the state Assembly.
Conversion therapy, the practice
The Los Angeles area knitting community will stitch itself together once again this weekend as thousands of knitters, crocheters and weavers hit up dozens of locally owned shops for the