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What’s changing

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Editor

Dear Readers:

The future of the Los Angeles Times, in print and online, rests in our ability to meet the needs of our readers and deliver news and information that is unique, far-reaching and indispensable. In-depth journalism remains our hallmark and we are committed to that mission in the face of economic challenges to our industry and our nation as a whole.

For proof, look no further than today’s front-page story on California’s war on wildfires, the first of a five-part series. It is news of vital importance to Southern Californians and it took a team of talented reporters, photographers and graphic journalists working on two continents to produce. Latimes.com, which is increasingly becoming the destination of choice that busy readers turn to for breaking news coverage, also brings the series to multimedia life.

Our website just recorded its biggest month ever in June with 115 million page views, a 50% increase over last year. Readers flocked to our online coverage of the overturning of the ban on gay marriage and the Lakers playoff run, and to a new database honoring California residents who lost their lives in the line of duty during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. They also embraced our new Olympics, Technology, Countdown to Crawford, and The Big Picture blogs.

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On the print side, we’ll be focusing on perspective and analysis while still serving as a comprehensive daily news report. And we’re undertaking changes, some of which have already begun. Dan Neil’s Pulitzer Prize-winning “Rumble Seat” car column, for example, has moved to a new home in Friday’s Business section. Next week, the Home section will move to Saturdays and will combine with Real Estate, bringing “Hot Property” and “Man of the House” together. And the paper’s Sunday Calendar line-up will now include a new Arts & Books section, combining the best of Arts & Music with Book Review.

In the coming weeks, you can continue to look forward to more world-class coverage. At the Beijing Olympics, we’ll have a team of more than a dozen reporters, editors, photographers, videographers and mobile bloggers detailing developments in the competition and in China itself. And our political team will be in Denver to cover the Democratic convention and in the Twin Cities to cover the Republicans as the major parties take the next step in campaign 2008.

We are dedicated to covering these and other stories of importance to Southern Californians with the kind of journalism that The Times--the largest news gathering organization west of the Mississippi River--is uniquely able to deliver.

What’s Changing

Calendar / The Guide

The print issue of The Guide will no longer be published. It lives on, however, at theguide.latimes.com, Southern California’s local entertainment resource. Highlights from The Guide will also appear daily in the Calendar and Food sections starting July 31.

See David Strick’s exclusive snapshots from the set each week at latimes.com/hollywoodbacklot. Hollywood Backlot will appear occasionally in Calendar.

Saturday Home

The Home section moves to Saturdays with a variety of new features covering lifestyles, do-it-yourself projects, Lost L.A. Homes and more. Hot Property and Neighborly Advice will relocate from the Real Estate section. Today’s Real Estate section is the final issue.

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Sunday Opinion

Today is the last issue of the combined Opinion and Book Review section. Starting next Sunday, Opinion moves to the back pages of the main news section. Find more opinion features like Dust-Up, Blowback and Opinion L.A. on the web at latimes.com/opinion.

Sunday Arts & Books

Starting next Sunday, the Arts & Music section will merge with Book Review and be renamed Arts & Books. More book reviews and news can be found at latimes.com/books, including daily book news on the Jacket Copy blog, and in the Calendar section during the week.

Friday Business

Dan Neil’s Rumble Seat column moves to Friday’s Business section. Real-time stock prices, investing tools and historical market data can be found at latimes.com/business.

Sunday Business

Next Sunday’s Business section will expand its focus on personal finance to add more coverage of real estate, including features from the Real Estate section, which publishes its last issue today.

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