NEWPORT BEACH ‘Friends’ finale party goes to...
NEWPORT BEACH
‘Friends’ finale party goes to the monkeys (and ducks)
A monkey made some friends in Newport Beach at a Star 98.7 FM
screening party for the “Friends” series finale. The monkey who
played Marcel on the long-running sitcom, along with one of the ducks
that appeared on the show, were the official hosts of the party at
Diedrich Coffee on Jamboree Road.
* Not long ago, city officials dreamed of taking over the
day-to-day operations of John Wayne Airport, virtually ensuring that
the airport won’t expand out of control after the settlement
agreement limiting expansion expires in 2015. After two meetings with
county supervisors, city officials had all but abandoned that hope
until county Supervisor Charles Smith, out of left field, asked
county staff members to pursue the idea of selling the airport to pay
off some debt.
* Corona del Mar architect Andrew Goetz has been charged with 26
felony counts of filing false plans with the city and those charges
could carry a sentence of up to 11 years in prison. A number of homes
designed by Goetz now exceed height limits for the city and one was
ordered partially torn down.
-- June Casagrande
EDUCATION
A heavenly appeal for
public television station
As promised, Daystar Television Network filed an appeal last week
to a judge’s ruling that the KOCE-TV Foundation, not Daystar, can buy
the PBS channel.
Dallas-based Daystar, a religious broadcaster, had asked the judge
to rule that Coast Community College District had broken state law
when it selected the foundation as the highest bidder for the
station. If the courts accept the appeal and a motion to stop the
sale, it could hold the process up for a year or more.
* Newport-Mesa schools last week kicked off a month of
appreciation for teachers.
What started off as Teacher Appreciation Week has grown into a
month-long celebration at all district schools. School board members
will visit each site throughout the month and every school has a plan
for taking care of teachers, from luncheons to gifts.
* The Coast Community College District board of trustees named
Kenneth Yglesias the new chancellor for the district.
Yglesias now serves as president of Golden West College in
Huntington Beach. He will take over the chancellor’s position when
Bill Vega retires in June.
The new chancellor, as well as vice chancellors and college
presidents, for Coast Community College District will receive
substantial raises, despite tight budgets.
District trustees approved a raise from $186,608 to $190,000 plus
$10,000 for travel and mileage expenses for chancellor. Salaries for
vice chancellors and college presidents will go from the current
range of $129,631 up to $145,000 as high as $160,000.
-- Marisa O’Neil
POLITICS
Loving the Green at
Orange Coast College
Green Party activist Peter Camejo got a standing ovation from an
auditorium full of students Friday at Orange Coast College, where he
spoke as part of a visiting scholars program that also included panel
discussions of social responsibility and activism with school
faculty.
Camejo opined on the inequalities of the U.S. tax system and
ideological problems with the war in Iraq, and he advised students to
get active in whatever causes matter to them and to vote for the
party that represents their beliefs even if it’s a third party.
-- Alicia Robinson
COSTA MESA
Former Costa Mesa resident dies serving his country
Friends and family mourned longtime Costa Mesa resident Trevor
Win’E, 22, an Army petroleum supply specialist who died in Iraq May 1
after a bomb exploded near the truck he was driving. Former neighbors
of the family, who recently moved to Orange, said Win’E was a
friendly person, and his teachers at Calvary Chapel High School
remembered him as always smiling and encouraging fellow students.
Services will be held at 10 a.m. Monday at Calvary Chapel, 3800 S.
Fairview Road, Santa Ana, followed by graveside services at Fairhaven
Memorial Park, 1702 Fairhaven Ave., Santa Ana.
* The City Council approved an ordinance and council policy
restricting the sale of fireworks based on changes suggested by
Councilman Mike Scheafer. The changes include reducing the type of
fireworks that can be sold and the number of stands.
* City Manager Allan Roeder is following up on a suggestion from
Councilwoman Libby Cowan to examine publicly owned property in the
city, such as the fairgrounds, to make sure it gets zoned in ways
that reflect the city’s goals.
* The Huscroft House is on its way to being fully restored. John
Morehart, who moved the historic early Craftsman-style house to a
property he owns on the Westside will spend more than $100,000 to
make sure the house is restored as authentically as possible.
-- Deirdre Newman
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