By Rebecca Trounson, Los Angeles Times
With the help of other family members, the wife of Donald Nixon, a brother of the president, found and preserved hundreds of items from his childhood home in Yorba Linda.
By Keith Thursby, Los Angeles Times
'Stan the Man,' a career .331 batter, played 22 seasons — all with St. Louis — and won seven National League batting titles and three most valuable player awards.
By Peter Schmuck and Mike Klingaman, Baltimore Sun
The irascible, chain-smoking, umpire-baiting Weaver is the winningest manager in the franchise's history. He led the team to the 1970 World Series title and four American League pennants.
By Rebecca Trounson, Los Angeles Times
In 1963, Hood and Vivian Malone were physically blocked from enrolling at the school by Gov. George Wallace. Later in life, Hood and Wallace became friends.
By Claire Noland, Los Angeles Times
Castillo, a hard-punching bantamweight with a huge following in Los Angeles, fought four celebrated title fights at the Forum between 1968 and 1971.
By Beverly Beyette and Valerie J. Nelson,
Special to the Los Angeles Times
Phillips, writing as Abigail Van Buren, dispensed wry, no-nonsense advice to newspaper readers around the world for over 40 years. Her identical twin also wrote an advice column, as Ann Landers.
By Bill Dwyre, Los Angeles Times
Her tennis talents took her to a No. 4 ranking among U.S. women and into the seventh-seeded spot in the 1949 tournament. She left the amateur circuit to turn pro in 1951 and travel with a touring group.
By Rebecca Trounson, Los Angeles Times
Jonas built his real estate career in the 1950s buying and constructing properties near LAX. He was a leader of the American Cancer Society, ACLU and LA's BEST.
By Valerie J. Nelson,
Los Angeles Times
Conrad Bain was also an uptight neighbor on 'Maude.' When he was cast in the role, he had two decades of New York theater behind him.
By E. Scott Reckard, Los Angeles Times
A low-key bureaucrat, Robert L. Citron's bad bets on Wall St. investments plunged Orange County into insolvency.
By Valerie J. Nelson, Los Angeles Times
Roger Broggie Jr., began work for Walt Disney by tending his backyard railway. He helped give life to Great Moments With Mr. Lincoln and other theme park marvels.
By Rebecca Trounson, Los Angeles Times
Oshima, considered one of Japan's greatest filmmakers, is best known in the West for directing the sexually explicit films 'In the Realm of the Senses' and 'Empire of Passion.'
Daniel J. Edelman, public relations pioneer, dies at 90
Dyer Brainerd Holmes, NASA's manned space flight director in early 1960s, dies at 91; T.S. Cook, coauthor of 'China Syndrome,' dies at 65; Joel Schaeffer, longtime Reseda High football coach, dies at 70
By Elaine Woo, Los Angeles Times
O'Neill emceed the ABC prime-time show that featured frenetic dancers and showcased such acts as the Beatles, the Rolling Stones and the Righteous Brothers.
By Elaine Woo, Los Angeles Times
Leyson was one of the 1,100 Jews saved from the Nazis by German industrialist Oskar Schindler. He taught school in Huntington Park for 39 years and shared his survival story with others.
Associated Press
As editor of the Atlanta Constitution in the 1960s, he helped bring national attention to the civil rights movement as it was developing across the South.
By Elaine Woo, Los Angeles Times
Memories of her experience in a Nazi prison as a young woman shaped her life's work in her adopted country of the United States, where she became a groundbreaking feminist.
By Valerie J. Nelson, Los Angeles Times
Swartz, who was accused of stealing nearly 5 million articles from an MIT archive and was set to be tried in February, was found dead in his Brooklyn apartment.
By Marisa Gerber, Los Angeles Times
Jayne Cortez founded the Watts Repertory Theater Company, which she used to highlight racial inequalities. Her evocative, surreal poetry tackled racial and sexual oppression.