Coastline foundation will host fund-raiser The...
Coastline foundation will host fund-raiser
The Coastline Community College Foundation and its Acquired Brain
Injury Program staff will hold their second annual fund-raiser to
benefit brain injured students in Newport Beach on Oct. 19.
Since more than 700,000 Americans are affected by brain injuries
of both traumatic and non-traumatic natures per year, Coastline has
established a two-year program to retrain those individuals and
provide them with the skills they’ll need to become more independent.
The program has a specialized curriculum that emphasizes cognitive
retraining, socialization and career development to promote
individual responsibility and independence.
The event will include dinner, swing dancing to a live band, a
silent auction and a presentation by Shalini Malhota, a student in
the program, about her experiences.
Tickets are $80 per person and the event will be at the Radisson
Hotel, 4545 MacArthur Blvd. For more information, call (714)
241-6214.
Hoag Hospital earns consumers’ award
Hoag Hospital has received the Consumers’ Choice Award for the
seventh year in a row, the company announced Friday.
The award is granted each year by the National Research Corp., an
independent organization that measures health-care provider
performance. Hoag was ranked by the organization as Orange County’s
most preferred hospital based on overall quality of care. Nationwide,
151 hospitals received the honor this year. Hoag was the only one in
Orange County.
Newport Coast group will meet Tuesday
The Newport Coast Advisory Committee will hold its next meeting
from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Newport Coast Elementary School
Multi-Purpose Room, 6655 Ridge Park Road. The public is welcome to
attend and participate.
Items for discussion on Tuesday’s agenda include the installation
of a traffic signal at Newport Coast Drive opposite Sage Hill School,
speed control on Newport Coast roads and rules governing installation
of cellular antennas on homeowner associations’ land. For more
information, call the Newport Beach City Manager’s office at (949)
644-3000.
UC Irvine welcomes memory expert
Elizabeth Loftus, a forensic memory expert ranked among the 100
most eminent psychologists of the 20th century, has joined the UC
Irvine faculty as a Distinguished Professor in the School of Social
Ecology.
The Distinguished Professor title is the highest campus-level
distinction and is reserved for senior faculty members who have
achieved the highest levels of scholarship over the course of their
careers.
Loftus comes to UCI from the University of Washington in Seattle
where she spent 29 years.
Considered a pioneer in false memory research, Loftus has helped
to prove that, in some cases, people believe they experienced events
that never occurred. Her research also showed that eyewitness
accounts, notably those given in court, often are inaccurate.
At UCI, Loftus says she looks forward to establishing new
collaborative projects with the faculty in the departments of
psychology and social behavior; and criminology, law and society,
where she will hold a joint appointment.
“I’m excited to come to Irvine and join the outstanding group of
scholars working at the intersection of psychology and law -- some of
the most distinguished psychologists in the world,” Loftus said in a
press release.
Loftus has served as an expert witness or consultant in some of
the nation’s most high-profile trials, including the McMartin
Preschool molestation case, the “Hillside Strangler” case, the
Michael Jackson case and the trials of Oliver North, the Menendez
brothers and the police officers involved in the Rodney King beating.
Boy Scout Sea Base will break ground
A Friday groundbreaking ceremony will kick off the $5.2-million
renovation of the Boy Scout Sea Base in Newport Beach.
The base, established in 1937, provides maritime recreational and
educational activities on behalf of the Orange County Council of the
Boy Scouts of America. For more information, call (714) 546-4990.
Costa Mesa offers free landscaping trees
Costa Mesa officials are offering free trees to those who would
like to beautify the front of their homes and help the environment at
the same time.
Residents of Costa Mesa can help improve their neighborhoods and
reduce air pollution and heat by taking advantage of the city’s Free
Parkway Tree Program, officials said. The city will plant a parkway
tree in public land in front of any residential property, as long as
space permits, for free.
Several varieties of trees are available depending on the size of
the planting area and all the city asks in return is that residents
agree to water it on a regular basis. Watering instructions are
provided with each tree.
To request that a tree to be planted in front of your home, call
the city of Costa Mesa’s Maintenance Services Division at (714)
754-5123.
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