Coast enrollment down, applications accepted Orange Coast...
Coast enrollment down, applications accepted
Orange Coast College is showing a 6.19% decline in spring semester
enrollment compared to last year.
The college is offering 6.7% fewer classes than it offered a year
ago. Enrollment figures were released Tuesday by OCC’s admissions and
records office. Spring semester classes begin on Feb. 2.
OCC had 18,045 students enrolled for spring classes as of Tuesday
morning compared to 19,236 on the same date last year. OCC will offer
151 fewer course sections this spring than last.
The college has scheduled 2,106 sections for spring 2004, compared
to 2,257 last year. The college is offering about 200 more classes
this spring than last fall.
Registration by touch-tone telephone for new and returning
students is underway. All students who are California residents are
charged an $18-per-unit registration fee for classes.
Spring applications are being accepted -- and registration
appointments are available -- in OCC’s admissions office. The office
is open Monday through Thursday from 9 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. and Fridays
from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
OCC’s spring class schedule is posted on the college’s website at
https://www.orangecoastcollege.com. Printed copies of the schedule are
available for free in the admissions office.
For spring registration information, call (714) 432-5072.
John Wayne hopes to add direct route to D.C.
Aloha Airlines is seeking to add a new route from John Wayne
Airport to the nation’s capital.
Aloha last week applied to the U.S. Department of Transportation
to add the new route direct from Orange County to Ronald Reagan
Washington National Airport. The new route would be the only direct
flight to the Washington D.C. airport from Orange County. Service is
expected to begin July 1, assuming the regulatory approvals are in
place by late June.
Local named best in building business
Newport Beach-based John Laing Homes was recently named 2004
Builder of the Year by “Professional Builder Magazine.”
Building industry leaders nominate companies, which are then rated
by the magazine’s editorial staff on innovation, reputation and
overall excellence. The company, which builds homes in California and
Colorado, is among the top five privately held home builders in the
nation. It ranks 28th on a “Professional Builder Magazine” list of
the top 400 home builders in the country based on its 2002 revenues
of $600 million.
John Laing Homes also recently received a “Good Scout” award for
its community service. The Orange County Council of the Boy Scouts of
America presented the award to the builder for its work with scouting
programs, such as an expansion of the Boy Scouts’ Newport Beach sea
base.
The remodeled base will include more classrooms, a library, an
amphitheater, a conference room, a crew center, a picnic area and new
boating equipment.
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