BRIEFLY CHURCH HOSTING MEETING WITH CITY.The Los Angeles City Council's Public Works Committee will travel out of City Hall this week to hold a community hearing in Northridge. Councilman Greig Smith, who chairs the three-member panel, said the session will be held at St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church stood across Liberty Street from the South Tower of the World Trade Center in New York City, USA. It was completely destroyed in the September 11, 2001 attacks when the South Tower collapsed. , 9501 Balboa Blvd., Northridge. The community meeting is part of an effort by the city to hear directly from the public without requiring them to drive to City Hall, Smith said. ``No one knows better which streets need resurfacing, which trees need trimming and which sidewalks need repair than (those) who live and work in these areas,'' Smith said. - Daily News CHP CHP Chapter CHP Combined Heat and Power CHP California Highway Patrol CHP Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi (Turkish: Republican People's Party) CHP Chemical Hygiene Plan (OSHA) CHP Community Health Plan investigating cause of fatalities California Highway Patrol officials said Monday they were investigating whether alcohol played a part in the wrong-way-driving collision that killed three people on the Pacific Coast Highway Pacific Coast Highway may refer to:
The crash killed the wrong-way driver, identified as 22-year-old Miguel Martinez of Mexico; his passenger; and 15-year-old Agoura High School Agoura High School is a four-year high school, freshman-senior, in Agoura Hills, California, United States. It is the largest high school in the Las Virgenes Unified School District, with an enrollment of approximately 2,400 students. cheerleader Kim Kimble Gast, who was in a van struck by Martinez's Mercury Cougar, officials said. The teen was traveling with three other church youth group members and one of their parents to a church retreat at Pismo Beach early Saturday when Martinez struck their minivan, the CHP reported. - Daily News Grants aid police communications The U.S. Justice Department awarded Los Angeles police agencies $6 million in grants for communications systems that would improve the sharing of information during terrorist attacks and other crises. The funding was part of $66.5 million in grants obtained for police agencies nationwide through an amendment to the homeland security bill that Congress approved in April, said Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif. Feinstein noted that Congress also has approved $55 million in funding for fire departments to obtain such communications systems. ``In all too many jurisdictions, police, fire and emergency medical services An Emergency medical service (abbreviated to initialism "EMS" in many countries) is a service providing out-of-hospital acute care and transport to definitive care, to patients with illnesses and injuries which the patient believes constitutes a medical emergency. can't communicate with each other via radio when an emergency occurs. This was the case on Sept. 11, during the Columbine massacre and following the Oklahoma City bombing See Terrorism "The Oklahoma City Bombing" (Sidebar); Venue "Venue and the Oklahoma City Bombing Case" (Sidebar). ,'' Feinstein said. - City News Service 22-year-old hiker dies of heatstroke heatstroke, profound disturbance of the heat-regulating mechanism of the body, also known as sunstroke. It is characterized by extremely high body temperatures and sometimes by convulsions and coma. NEWBURY PARK - A 22-year-old Ventura hiker died of heatstroke while traversing the rigorous Boney Trail in the Santa Monica Mountains The Santa Monica Mountains are a low transverse range in southern California in the United States. Geography They run for approximately 40 mi (64 km) east-west from the Hollywood Hills in Los Angeles to Point Mugu in Ventura County. , authorities said Monday. Even though he was dressed appropriately, was hydrated hy·drat·ed adj. Chemically combined with water, especially existing in the form of a hydrate. Adj. 1. hydrated - containing combined water (especially water of crystallization as in a hydrate) hydrous and took frequent breaks, John Andrew Doyle John Andrew Doyle, DL (14 May 1844 – 4 August 1907) was an English historian, the son of Andrew Doyle, editor of The Morning Chronicle. He was educated at Eton and at Balliol College, Oxford, winning the Arnold prize in 1868 for his essay, went into cardiac arrest on his descent from the Danielson Monument area about 5 p.m. Saturday. About a mile into the ascent, Doyle complained of being hot and possibly wanting to turn around. At one point, Doyle fell, dragging one of his friends into some brush, authorities said. Doyle would not drink more water offered by his friends, one of whom ran nearly three miles to the culture center for help. - Associated Press Plea bargain fails in weapons trial Celebrity private eye Anthony Pellicano will go to trial next month on weapons charges after he could not reach a plea bargain deal with prosecutors Monday, officials said. Pellicano, who is free on $400,000 bail, appeared in court and offered to plead guilty to one charge of illegally possessing C-4 explosives, said Thom Mrozek, spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's Office in Los Angeles. But prosecutors were not willing to drop two other charges. - Associated Press |
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