EDUCATION KOCE staying in the family instead...
- Share via
EDUCATION
KOCE staying in the family
instead of going to Daystar
Orange County’s only public broadcasting station came one step
closer last week to ensuring its format will stay intact.
A superior court judge threw out a request by religious
broadcaster Daystar Television Network to halt the sale of KOCE-TV by
Coast Community College District to the station’s fundraising wing.
Daystar is promising to appeal the ruling, but foundation and
district officials expect Federal Communications Commission approval
of the transfer in the next 60 to 90 days.
* More than 40 people are coming from all over the country to
celebrate the 82nd birthday of their former elementary school
teacher.
Fifth- and sixth-grade teacher Garlan Wetzel left such an
impression on his students with field trips and a caring attitude
that most of his class from 1957-1958 jumped at the chance to
celebrate with him again. Wetzel, a former advertising salesman for
the Daily Pilot when it was known as the Globe-Herald and Pilot,
taught at the now-closed Lindbergh School and other Newport-Mesa
schools for 30 years.
* More than 100 Ensign Intermediate School students this week
received recognition for outstanding character.
Teachers, parents and coaches nominated students they felt best
demonstrated good character, which is part of the district’s
education program. The awards were presented by the school and the
Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce.
-- Marisa O’Neil
PUBLIC SAFETY
More victims come forward
in Westside assaults case
Police said last week they believe three victims who came forward
on Monday with assault allegations were attacked by the same group of
men responsible for five other assaults in the Westside since
December.
Most of the women were walking alone and all but two of the eight
reported assaults happened in broad daylight, Costa Mesa Police Lt.
John FitzPatrick said. All of the women were reportedly grabbed as
they were walking on Victoria Street, then touched inappropriately.
* An 82-year-old woman, who was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease
a year and a half ago, went missing for about a day but was found
Thursday night and returned home.
-- Deepa Bharath
COSTA MESA
Fewer sparklers in the city,
council tells residents
Costa Mesa is still a fireworks-friendly city, but the selection
to choose from may be slimmer in the future.
On Monday the City Council agreed in principle to Councilman Mike
Scheafer’s ideas to tighten the handling of firework sales by
essentially reducing the number of fireworks stands and the type of
fireworks that can be sold. Scheafer’s ideas still need to be written
into an ordinance that will go through the normal public hearing
process.
* The Renee and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall impressed city
leaders Monday and it hasn’t even been built yet.
The council members were awed enough by the prestige the hall will
bring that the majority of them agreed to waive a traffic fee of
about $660,000 that would have been paid by the Orange County
Performing Arts Center. In exchange, the gift will be prominently
featured on a wall of honor or its equivalent in the hall. The waiver
means that the city is now more than $1 million short on a major
freeway access project.
-- Deirdre Newman
POLITICS AND ENVIRONMENT
A new Grand Old head honcho for Orange County
Orange County Republicans named Scott Baugh the new GOP chairman
at a meeting of the party central committee Monday. Baugh, an
attorney and former assemblyman, replaces Tom Fuentes, who retired
after chairing the county GOP for 20 years. Before electing Baugh,
Republicans honored Fuentes at a reception at the Westin South Coast
Plaza hotel.
Baugh quickly named a 23-member transition committee to forge a
political plan for the party to boost membership and get Republicans
elected. The team has six Newport-Mesa residents as well as members
of the New Majority and Lincoln Club, powerful fundraising groups
some said were alienated by Fuentes.
* Environment California, a research and policy group, held a
slimly attended rally in front of Newport Beach City Hall on
Wednesday to release a report critical of the Bush administration’s
environmental policies. The report claims the administration plans to
allow states to delay cleaning up polluted waters and has already
made changes that weaken enforcement of the Clean Water Act, among
other criticisms.
Event organizers said they had been hoping for a better turnout,
but only a couple of residents who happened to be passing by stopped
for the rally.
-- Alicia Robinson
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.