Not quite top 10, but close
UC Irvine Muslim students stole the day
UC Irvine’s graduation ceremonies was a tense affair this year
when Muslim students chose to wear green stoles with Arabic writing
and symbols on them.
Muslim students said they were an expression of their faith, but
others accused them of aligning themselves with terrorist
organizations like Hamas, who wear the same color and use similar
symbols. University officials allowed the students to wear the
stoles, citing their 1st Amendment rights, despite calls from Jewish
groups to ban them from the graduation.
The dispute followed months of tension, most notably the torching
of a cardboard display built by Arab students on campus.
Assemblyman floats fairly controversial idea
Costa Mesa city officials and residents cried foul in April when
then-Assemblyman John Campbell suggested the state-owned Orange
County Fairgrounds be sold and the fair moved to the planned Great
Park on the closed El Toro Marine Corps Air Station.
Some of his constituents worried about what Costa Mesa would lose
in travel and tourism dollars driven by year-round events at the
fairgrounds.
After Costa Mesa’s stiff opposition led Campbell to abandon the
idea, it popped up in a massive report on ways to streamline state
government and cut costs that Gov. Schwarzenegger commissioned. The
report used the fairgrounds as an example of how the state could sell
off “underutilized” properties to bring in cash.
Trustee accused of betraying public trust
Bickering became a biweekly tradition in the Coast Community
College District’s boardroom this fall, when trustee Armando Ruiz
refused to admit his decision to retire from the board and run again
two days later -- as an incumbent.
Trustee Jerry Patterson and teacher’s union president Dean Mancina
demanded answers, while board president George Brown felt that Ruiz
wasn’t legally inclined to speak.
By retiring from the district and from an elected position at
Irvine Valley College on the same day, Ruiz cashed in on a
little-known state loophole that would allow him to double-dip in
both pensions, increasing his annual Coast pension from $5,000 to
$55,000 and his combined annual pension to about $120,000.
Fellow trustee Jerry Patterson called Ruiz out publicly in board
meetings, saying Ruiz was “intentionally misleading the voters with
his campaign designation as the incumbent governing board member.”
Ruiz won reelection Nov. 2 with 40% of the vote.
The story they never wanted you to read
Newport-Mesa and Santa Ana schools never realized the sizable
checks they received came from a Newport couple.
David and Monica Gelbaum sent schools a couple grand here, a
couple million there -- and after 10 years it all amounted to nearly
$20 million. Former Newport-Mesa Principal Scott Paulsen, who headed
five schools over the years, made their generosity known in
September.
The couple had long asked for anonymity -- a request that Paulsen
honored for years. But when he learned the couple’s names would be
printed elsewhere, he wanted the Newport-Mesa community to learn the
news first.
The donations established new jobs and school clubs, paid for
state-of-the-art science and technology centers and bought equipment
and supplies for local schools, teachers said.
Corona del Mar
turns triple digits
Corona del Mar centennial celebration organizers spent all year
coming up with creative ways to mark the area’s 100-year anniversary.
In the end, the concept came to them easily enough -- a three-day
public beach party.
Residents and visitors were welcomed to share in the moment by
indulging in free pancake breakfasts and barbecues, competing in
surfing and sandcastle competitions and listening to live bands.
The Corona del Mar Centennial Foundation also wowed the public
Oct. 16 with a fast-paced fireworks show, shot off from the jetty
over the waterfront.
Foundation members also announced they’d immediately begin
construction on Centennial Plaza, part of the city’s “Vision 2004”
project, expected to open during Newport Beach’s centennial
celebration in 2006.
A time capsule will then be buried under the plaza, which is
expected to feature a 26-foot clock tower surrounded with foliage,
sitting areas and a 3-foot tile wall.
Gropings in broad daylight strike fear
A string of sexual assaults on Victoria Street had many Costa Mesa
residents scared to walk down the street in daylight.
Police recorded 10 similar sexual assaults between November 2003
and April on Victoria Street between Placentia Avenue and Harbor
Boulevard. All the incidents involved one to three men grabbing women
from behind and groping them. In one case, they pulled a woman into
nearby bushes, leaving her 18-month-old son unattended in his
stroller.
Police circulated fliers in the neighborhood and composite
sketches of two possible suspects. The assaults are still under
investigation.
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