Mexico will be sending firefighters to help fight the Eaton Fire near Pasadena, Governor Gavin Newsom announced on Friday.Newsom said on X (formerly known as Tw
Gavin Newsom said firefighters from Mexico were en route to help fight the Eaton Fire. The Eaton Fire is one of several still burning and devastating the Los Angeles area. The fire was first reported Tuesday,
Mexico has sent 72 firefighters to Los Angeles ... The fire has moved towards homes in the Brentwood area. The Eaton Fire near Pasadena, which also ignited on Jan. 7, has grown to 14,117 acres ...
Pasadena City College Tournament of Roses Honor Band, the Lincoln-Way Marching Band, All Star Marching Band Mexico, Rancho Verde Crimson Regiment, Helsingør Pigegarde, 605 All-Star Band ...
After authorities reopened parts of Altadena for the first time since the Eaton fire, residents returned to a grim checkerboard of destroyed homes next to others that were largely spared.
T he two ends of Los Angeles ’ Cultural Crescent—formed by the majestic Santa Monica and San Gabriel Mountains and their foothills, which ring the northern end of the great L.A. Basin—are gone. For nearly a century they represented two ends of L.A.’s cultural spectrum.
Rodney Nickerson had lived in Altadena since 1968, when he bought his three-bedroom house on Alta Pine Drive with $5 down. The 82-year-old military veteran and church deacon received no warnings to evacuate before the Eaton fire swept through his neighborhood,
Weeks before Matias Bernal migrated to the United States from Mexico City in 2002, he and his younger sister were held at gunpoint by three strangers who
At least 28 people are believed to be dead and more than a dozen others remain unaccounted for as multiple wildfires rage across Southern California.
Mexican president says President Trump can call the gulf whatever he wants but that the world will still call it the Gulf of Mexico.
The recent fires that ravaged Altadena, California, have left a trail of destruction in a community with deep roots and a rich history.
Some donned red, white, and blue and celebrated the 47th president. Others filled the streets in protest of another Trump presidency.