Good morning -- here's what's happening 03.07.08
Antiwar letters sent by a man living in L.A. are not linked to yesterday's bombing of a military recruitment center in New York City's Times Square, officials say.
School bullies -- they're meaner than ever. Seema Mehta looks at how the Internet has opened a new arena of torment, and how schools are fighting back.
It's all relative for the kin of Curtis H. Connor, 20 of whom were nabbed in a huge alleged insurance scam (by a huge squad -- 200!) of LAPD officers yesterday. Joel Rubin and Ken Bensinger take a peek into the family album.
Accused private eye Anthony Pellicano acts as his own attorney and lays out his case. Greg Krikorian reports from the courtroom.
An off-duty U.S. marshal shoots to death an armed worker in a tattoo parlor. Andrew Blankstein and Richard Winton work to get to the bottom of a snarled tale.
Bill Plaschke's got his eye on the Dodgers' new third-base coach and he likes what he sees.
A college student from Torrance is arrested after half-built pipe bombs are found in his UC Davis dorm, Molly Hennessy-Fiske reports.
Is Palm Springs the gayest city in America? That's what a new book says, and locals are in an uproar. Scott Gold visits and tells all.
Soldiers on their third or fourth tours in Iraq show signs of depression and other mental health problems, a new study shows, Peter Spiegel reports. Please tell me we didn't actually spend money to figure this out....
-- Veronique de Turenne


