• Why this pizza chain is pouring White Claw into its pies

    Why this pizza chain is pouring White Claw into its pies
    This alcoholic drink is getting its claws into Blaze Pizza, but you better get there before last call because this is happening on one day only.
    One June 18 several local Blaze Pizza restaurants will serve the White Claw Pizza.
    Yes, it’s pizza made with White Claw, the popular hard seltzer drink that tastes like flavored soda water and packs about as much alcohol as a beer.
    On Thursday only, instead of using filtered water to make its dough, the Pasadena-based pizza chain will be using man
  • PG&E confesses to killing 84 people in 2018 Paradise fire

    PG&E confesses to killing 84 people in 2018 Paradise fire
    By MICHAEL LIEDTKE
    Pacific Gas & Electric confessed Tuesday to killing 84 people in one of the most devastating wildfires in recent U.S. history during a dramatic court hearing punctuated by a promise from the company’s outgoing CEO that the nation’s largest utility will never again put profits ahead of safety.
    PG&E CEO Bill Johnson made the roughly 170-mile journey from the company’s San Francisco headquarters to a Butte County courthouse to plead guilty to 84 felony c
  • California house sales fall 41% during virus lockdown, Realtors report

    California house sales fall 41% during virus lockdown, Realtors report
    The coronavirus lockdown walloped California house sales in May, resulting in a 41.4% drop in transactions from the previous year, the California Association of Realtors reported Tuesday, June 16.
    It was the biggest year-over-year decrease since November 2007.
    Median house prices, meanwhile, also fell from year-ago levels, the first such drop in eight years.
    The trend reflects home deals reached during the height of the lockdown in March and April, when open houses shifted online and buyers and
  • Calif. house sales fell 41% during virus lockdown, Realtors report

    Calif. house sales fell 41% during virus lockdown, Realtors report
    The coronavirus lockdown walloped house sales in California last month, resulting in a 41.4% drop in transactions from the previous year, the California Association of Realtors reported Tuesday, June 16.
    That’s the biggest year-over-year decrease since November 2007.
    Median house prices, meanwhile, also fell from year-ago levels, the first such drop in eight years.
    The trend reflects home deals reached during the height of the lockdown in March and April, when open houses shifted online an
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  • Calif. house sales drop 41% in May amid virus lockdown, Realtors report

    Calif. house sales drop 41% in May amid virus lockdown, Realtors report
    The coronavirus lockdown walloped house sales in California last month, resulting in a 41.4% drop in transactions from the previous year, the California Association of Realtors reported Tuesday, June 16.
    That’s the biggest year-over-year decrease since November 2007.
    Median house prices, meanwhile, also fell from year-ago levels, the first such drop in eight years.
    The trend reflects home deals reached during the height of the lockdown in March and April, when open houses shifted online an
  • Do you really even need an HD radio tuner?

    Do you really even need an HD radio tuner?
    The timing of the email was perfect …
    “I read your column each week and many thanks for the radio stations you have turned me on to, most recently KHUG (www.KHUG.rocks). I’ve been looking into replacing my home stereo with one that has HD digital reception. Do you have any recommendations?” — Rick Adams
    I do have some recommendations, which I will get to in a minute. But I was already planning about talking about HD radios and tuners this week anyway … the p
  • Dog-like robots now on sale for $75,000, with conditions (no kids, no harm)

    Dog-like robots now on sale for $75,000, with conditions (no kids, no harm)
    By Matt O’Brien, The Associated Press
    You can now buy one of those unnerving animal-like robots you might have seen on YouTube — so long as you don’t plan to use it to harm or intimidate anyone.
    Boston Dynamics on Tuesday started selling its four-legged Spot robots online for just under $75,000 each.
    The agile robots can walk, climb stairs and observe their surroundings with cameras and other sensors. But people who buy them online must agree not to arm them or intentionally us
  • Hotline newsletter: Pac-12’s history of social tolerance provides an opportunity to separate itself from Power Five peers

    Hotline newsletter: Pac-12’s history of social tolerance provides an opportunity to separate itself from Power Five peers
    *** The Pac-12 Hotline newsletter is published each Monday-Wednesday-Friday during the college sports season and twice-a-week in the summer. (Sign up here for a free subscription.) This edition, from June 16, has been made available in archived form.Moment in Time
    The societal push for racial equality has impacted college football, where athletes are empowered, the establishment is on notice and the bell tolls for past prejudice.
    At Iowa, the longtime strength coach was fired after complain
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  • Appreciative Tustin football players make smooth return to modified workouts

    Appreciative Tustin football players make smooth return to modified workouts
    Support our high school sports coverage by becoming a digital subscriber. Subscribe nowTustin football took a major step Monday toward a goal shared by teams across Orange County.
    The Empire League program became one of the first to return to practice after the coronavirus pandemic halted high school athletics in mid-March and cast a shadow over the football season this fall.
    Ninety players underwent modified conditioning workouts on Tustin’s field, following guidelines that includin
  • Spring wrap-up Q&A: Pacifica track coach was looking forward to Empire League Finals

    Spring wrap-up Q&A: Pacifica track coach was looking forward to Empire League Finals
    Support our high school sports coverage by becoming a digital subscriber. Subscribe nowEditor’s note: The Orange County Register is having the area’s spring sports coaches take part in a Q&A about the 2020 season that was cut short by the coronavirus crisis.
    Vinnie Lopez, Pacifica track and field
    Q: How are you adapting to being home every day during the spring?
    A: It’s been really different. Not only am I the head track and field coach, but I’m also the head footbal
  • Where USC stands at linebacker entering the 2020 season

    Where USC stands at linebacker entering the 2020 season
    Linebacker was a tricky position for USC in 2019. Injuries ravaged the group and made finding a steady rotation around senior John Houston Jr. difficult to do.
    But another year, and perhaps another set of circumstances, for USC linebackers entering 2020. The group is still young, with only one senior among the ranks, but even those young players have some level of experience after the opportunities created by injuries last year.
    Here’s a look at where the Trojans stand at linebacker enteri
  • Whicker: No baseball in 2020 better than MLB’s proposed nonsense

    Whicker: No baseball in 2020 better than MLB’s proposed nonsense
    A 50-game Major League Baseball season is eyewash. A zero-game season is true Visine.
    It lifts the veil, clears the vision, confirms all our suspicions.
    We need a lost season. Baseball, or at least the version that we cherish, needs it too.
    Fifty games is nothing. It is the equivalent of a 3.7-game college football season, a 22-hole Masters.
    The punishingly long season is a player’s biggest challenge. It teases his mind and eyes into thinking he’s successfully grooved. Then it deals
  • Farmer Boys will open a second Fullerton location in late June

    Farmer Boys will open a second Fullerton location in late June
    Fullerton’s second location of Farmer Boys will offer take-out and drive-thru service, with a dine-in option as soon as the restaurant group re-opens its dining rooms.
    The new restaurant is slated to open in late June and a grand opening is planned for August.
    Franchisee Sam Saad started at the company as a cashier in the Inland Empire, worked his way up to manager of multiple units and now has his own store. “I feel fortunate and excited to become a franchise owner,” Saad said
  • State Parks grants extension for annual parking passes because of coronavirus closures

    State Parks grants extension for annual parking passes because of coronavirus closures
    Have a annual State Parks parking pass that expired while people weren’t allowed into the system’s parks or beaches during the coronavirus shutdown?
    Don’t throw away those parking passes just yet.
    State Parks is allowing an extension due to the three months of lost access, according to the California Department of Parks and Recreation website.
    San Clemente surfer Craig Book was stoked on news of the extension. The annual Explorer Vehicle Day Use Pass most surfers use to access
  • Local restaurants of Long Beach you’ll want to try this week

    Local restaurants of Long Beach you’ll want to try this week
    As California moves forward with opening more restaurants and businesses, we’re excited about where we can eat! Many restaurants are locally owned and would appreciate your business more than you know. Long Beach is a vast area, so we made it easy for you. Check out this list of restaurants with fantastic food that represents the amazing city of Long Beach.
    Robert Earl’s BBQ
    Courtesy of LB Post/ Brian Addison
    703 E Artesia Blvd, Long Beach, CA 90805When their website says they were v
  • Fullerton’s Day of Music will go virtual in 2020

    Fullerton’s Day of Music will go virtual in 2020
    Fullerton will still celebrate its annual Day of Music on the summer solstice, June 21, despite the coronavirus pandemic and the state’s stay-at-home order that has led most music festivals in California to be canceled.
    As many as 30 performances will be streamed on the event’s Facebook and Instagram page, from 1  to 9 p.m. Eight of the performances were taped at Fullerton’s historic Fox Theatre last weekend, and others will be filmed at their homes and other venues, the e
  • Trump signs executive order pushing police reform measures

    Trump signs executive order pushing police reform measures
    By JILL COLVIN, LISA MASCARO and ZEKE MILLER
    WASHINGTON — Following weeks of national protests since the death of George Floyd, President Donald Trump signed an executive order on policing Tuesday that would encourage better police practices and establish a database to keep track of officers with a history of excessive use-of-force complaints.
    In Rose Garden remarks, Trump stressed the need for higher standards and commiserated with mourning families, even as he hailed the vast majority of
  • US Open tennis tournament approved for August in New York

    US Open tennis tournament approved for August in New York
    New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Tuesday the U.S. Open tennis tournament will held on its scheduled dates starting in late August as part of the state’s reopening from shutdowns caused by the coronavirus pandemic.
    The U.S. Tennis Association had decided to go forward with its marquee event in New York City without spectators, pending an OK from the state.
    “We’re excited about the U.S. Open, (which) is going to be held in Queens, Aug. 31 through Sept. 13. It will be held without
  • Cherie Currie talks new music, reviving ‘Queens of Noise’ and how wielding chainsaws is therapeutic

    Cherie Currie talks new music, reviving ‘Queens of Noise’ and how wielding chainsaws is therapeutic
    Though the coronavirus global pandemic put a pause on live concerts as well as most planned album releases, rocker and ex-Runaways frontwoman Cherie Currie just wanted to let her latest solo album rip.
    Currie’s “Blvds of Splendor” had been a decade in the making, but finally dropped digitally back in April via Runaways guitarist Joan Jett and Kenny Laguna’s Blackheart Records. Though the album was originally put out as a very limited edition red-vinyl on Record Store Day
  • Premier League returns Wednesday – here’s what you need to know

    Premier League returns Wednesday – here’s what you need to know
    Some talking points ahead of the resumption of the Premier League following a three-month suspension caused by the coronavirus pandemic:
    RECORD-BREAKING REDS
    The fact Liverpool will win its first English league title in 30 years is not really in doubt.
    Still to be ascertained, however, is how much of a record-breaking season this will be for the team coached by Jürgen Klopp.
    Liverpool needs 19 more points from its remaining nine games to break the record total for a season of 100, set by Ma
  • Age of COVID-19 cases dropping in California

    Age of COVID-19 cases dropping in California
    As California’s economy opens up, coronavirus cases are getting younger and younger.
    A new analysis reveals that more than 44% of new diagnoses are in people age 34 or younger, up from 29% a month ago.
    There’s a corresponding drop in cases among older people. The proportion of COVID-19 cases among Californians older than 50 has plummeted from 46% to 30.5% in the past month.
    Cases among middle-aged Californians – ages 35 to 49 – have plateaued, neither rising nor falling.
  • Age of coronavirus cases dropping in California

    Age of coronavirus cases dropping in California
    As California’s economy opens up, coronavirus cases are getting younger and younger.
    A new analysis reveals that more than 44% of new diagnoses are in people age 34 or younger, up from 29% a month ago.
    There’s a corresponding drop in cases among older people. The proportion of COVID-19 cases among Californians older than 50 has plummeted from 46% to 30.5% in the past month.
    Cases among middle-aged Californians – ages 35 to 49 – have plateaued, neither rising nor falling.
  • Powell warns that long downturn would mean severe damage

    Powell warns that long downturn would mean severe damage
    By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
    WASHINGTON  — Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell warned Tuesday that the U.S. economy faces a deep downturn with “significant uncertainty” about the timing and strength of a recovery. He cautioned that the longer the recession lasts, the worse the damage that would be inflicted on the job market and businesses.
    In testimony to Congress, Powell stressed that the Fed is committed to using all its financial tools to cushion the economic damage from th
  • Suspect in custody after Diamond Bar pursuit, standoff with OC deputies

    Suspect in custody after Diamond Bar pursuit, standoff with OC deputies
    A man was in custody Tuesday morning after leading Orange County Sheriff’s deputies on a north county pursuit that included hitting a deputy’s vehicle, then barricading himself in his car, authorities said.
    Just after 2:30 a.m. deputies in Yorba Linda tried to pull over the suspect in a car for traffic violations and possibly driving under the influence, the Orange County Sheriff’s Department said.
    The driver did not stop and led deputies on a short chase, where at one point he
  • California developing guidelines for reopening Disneyland and other theme parks

    California developing guidelines for reopening Disneyland and other theme parks
    California state officials plan to issue COVID-19 guidelines and modifications for Disneyland, Universal Studios Hollywood and other theme parks as the major tourist destinations prepare to reopen in July following months-long coronavirus closures.
    Shuttered since mid-March, California theme parks have proposed reopening dates along with detailed COVID-19 health and safety plans that still need to be approved by state officials.
    Sign up for our Park Life newsletter and find out what’s new
  • Spring’s Outstanding Seniors: Trabuco Hills’ Isaac Korn wins boys track and field honor

    Spring’s Outstanding Seniors: Trabuco Hills’ Isaac Korn wins boys track and field honor
    The Orange County Register is selecting an Outstanding Senior from each of the spring sports as a way to honor some of the top student-athletes who didn’t get a chance to have a normal and complete final high school season because of COVID-19.
    This is the Outstanding Senior for boys track and field:  Isaac Korn’s track and field season was off to a fast start.
    The Trabuco Hills senior’s time of 38.65 seconds in the 300-meter hurdles was second fastest in California. K
  • Outstanding senior, girls track and field: Sophia Hartwell, Orange Lutheran

    Outstanding senior, girls track and field: Sophia Hartwell, Orange Lutheran
    Sophia Hartwell had long-range plans for her track and field senior season at Orange Lutheran.
    Those long-range plans included doing well enough in the long jump and triple jump to get on her on the medalists’ podium at the CIF State Championships.
    Hartwell was on her way. In this shortened season she had reached a wind-legal 17 feet, 10.25 inches in the long jump, the fifth-best mark in the state. Her wind-legal 37-3 in the triple jump was the seventh-best mark in the state.
    For establish
  • Andrew McMahon will headline City National Grove of Anaheim’s Drive-In OC series

    Andrew McMahon will headline City National Grove of Anaheim’s Drive-In OC series
    With larger-scale concerts and events still on hold because of the continued spread of novel coronavirus, promoters and venues are getting creative with presenting live entertainment to the masses.
    Nederlander Concerts has announced its all-ages Drive-In OC series in the parking lot of City National Grove of Anaheim which will feature movies, concerts and more all presented to guests in their personal vehicles this summer.
    The series officially launches on July 3-4 with Movies Under the Moon, pr
  • Graduating students saluted … by circus performers

    Graduating students saluted … by circus performers
    Parades have become a common thing these days, celebrating birthdays, anniversaries, graduations and more.
    On Saturday, June 13, the Green Valley neighborhood in Fountain Valley was treated to a unique version of the celebration.
    Jennifer Drilling, a Fountain Valley native who grew up in Green Valley, organized a 2 1/2-hour parade through the community that featured five circus performers — two stilt walkers, an acrobat duo and one Hula-Hooper.
    Drilling, a successful cirque artist who has
  • Is Disneyland reopening too early?

    Is Disneyland reopening too early?
    Disneyland is planning to reopen on its 65th anniversary, this July 17. The news has thrilled some theme park fans and disturbed others, including some who have started an online petition asking Disney to reconsider that decision.
    Many Californians remain worried about the spread of the novel coronavirus in the state. The growing number of cases has many people wondering if state officials and business leaders are making the right decision to reopen businesses, such as theme parks. Will the new
  • First drug proves ability to improve survival from COVID-19

    First drug proves ability to improve survival from COVID-19
    By MARILYNN MARCHIONE
    Researchers in England say they have the first evidence that a drug can improve COVID-19 survival: A cheap, widely available steroid called dexamethasone reduced deaths by up to one third in severely ill hospitalized patients.
    Results were announced Tuesday and researchers said they would publish them soon. The study is a large, strict test that randomly assigned 2,104 patients to get the drug and compared them with 4,321 patients getting only usual care.
    The drug was given
  • Coronavirus: Here are some case trends in the U.S., California and its counties

    Coronavirus: Here are some case trends in the U.S., California and its counties
    Experts are looking at trends and averages to know when it’s safe to open up the nation, state and counties. There are some good trends and some not so good trends to consider.
    California and U.S.
    Data from Johns Hopkins University’s Coronavirus Resource Center shows that California’s three-day moving average of new cases is steadily increasing. You can follow the trends of every state and country on the Coronavirus Resource Center website.
    California’s test positivity ra
  • Mater Dei’s Jaden Cantafio savors narrow victory at Orange County senior golf showcase

    Mater Dei’s Jaden Cantafio savors narrow victory at Orange County senior golf showcase
    COSTA MESA In-N-Out Burger delivered to the course. Custom, embroidered score books for every player. A golf bag and prestigious invite for the winner. And best of all, camaraderie with friends while playing golf.
    Nothing can bring back the spring of 2020 for seniors but the inaugural Orange County Boys Golf All-Star Senior Showcase at Costa Mesa Country Club took its best swing on Monday.
    Twenty-eight seniors from Southern California played the par-70 Mesa Linda Course and picked up a few perks
  • Reaction: MLB community speaks out on Rob Manfred’s comments about 2020 season

    Reaction: MLB community speaks out on Rob Manfred’s comments about 2020 season
    Commissioner Rob Manfred told ESPN on Monday that he’s “not confident” that there would be a baseball season in 2020, after a breakdown in talks between MLB teams and the player’s union on how to split up money in a season delayed by the pandemic.
    The comments come less than a week after saying that he was “100 percent” certain that there would be a season in 2020.Commissioner Rob Manfred losing confidence there will be MLB games in 2020 https://t.co/FHrG
  • Traditions: Tales of tusks and Titans

    Traditions: Tales of tusks and Titans
    What exactly is a Titan? “Why do you have an elephant for your mascot?”
    Those are two common questions that arise when a Cal State Fullerton athletic team makes its inaugural visit to an area. While the relatively young institution carved out of the Orange County citrus groves may be too young for many traditions, there are some recognized legends.
    The very first Tuffy the Titan mascot logo was created by a Disneyland artist in 1966 after “The First Intercollegiate Elephant Rac
  • Man struck by multiple vehicles in Santa Ana hospitalized

    Man struck by multiple vehicles in Santa Ana hospitalized
    A man suffered serious injuries early Monday, June 15, when he was struck by “several vehicles” on a Santa Ana street, authorities said.
    It happened just before 1:30 a.m. on the westbound side of First Street at Flower Street, according to Santa Ana police Lt. Andrew Alvarez.
    Orange County Fire Authority paramedics took the man to a hospital, Alvarez said.
    The westbound side of First Street was shut down between Flower and Main streets for the crash investigation, which will include
  • Netherlands can wait: Sophie Frost continues her Cal State Fullerton story

    Netherlands can wait: Sophie Frost continues her Cal State Fullerton story
    This is the hilarious part of Sophie Frost’s college career. The part that makes you laugh when she describes how she got here. Yes, it also doubles as the part where Frost plays the reluctant guest who, now, doesn’t want to leave.
    Five years ago, Frost wanted nothing to do with Cal State Fullerton. She was still cranky over the University of Oregon showing — then withdrawing — interest. The other colleges interested in her were smaller than she liked; she wanted to play
  • Man accused of being ‘Golden State Killer’ to plead guilty

    Man accused of being ‘Golden State Killer’ to plead guilty
    By DON THOMPSON
    SACRAMENTO — A man accused of being the rapist and killer who terrorized California residents in the 1970s and 1980s has agreed to plead guilty to dozens of crimes in return for being spared the death penalty, a law enforcement source and a victim’s relative said Monday.
    Joseph DeAngelo, a former police officer accused of being the Golden State Killer, is expected to plead guilty on June 29 and be sentenced in August to life without the possibility of parole after the
  • A deliciously cautionary tale about writing groups

    A deliciously cautionary tale about writing groups
    Ask any writer how it’s going during quarantine, and they will respond, “Not much different than my regular life.” That’s how creativity works for writers. You hole yourself up in your house, plant your butt in your chair, stare at the computer screen, get up, pace the floors aimlessly trying to figure out the next scene, check the fridge for snacks, walk the dog 18 times a day waiting for ideas to come.
    Or, if the writing is going well, you sit at your desk clattering aw
  • Supreme Court ruling is like pot of gold at end of Rainbow Flag

    Supreme Court ruling is like pot of gold at end of Rainbow Flag
    The minute she read the headline about the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark civil rights decision barring job discrimination against LGBT people, Peg Corley turned to her partner.
    “Good news, honey,” Corley, executive director of the LGBTQ Center Orange County, said on Monday morning, June 15. “The Supreme Court is taking a stand to protect our rights!”
    Soon, text messages started flooding Corley’s phone, adding to the euphoria felt by members of the lesbian, gay
  • In Santa Ana, police reform might focus on the power of police union

    In Santa Ana, police reform might focus on the power of police union
    As the nation focuses on law enforcement and calls for police reform, a powerful player in Santa Ana politics – the Santa Ana Police Officers Association – soon might face a reckoning of sorts.
    Last month, the police union was powerful enough to get a sitting councilwoman recalled. Last year, it got a majority of the council to approve $25 million in pay raises before officials figured out how to pay for it.
    But on Tuesday, that same council is scheduled to begin talks about creating
  • Court right to nix Gov. Newsom’s executive order on voting

    Court right to nix Gov. Newsom’s executive order on voting
    We were pleased to see a Sutter County district court halt Gov. Gavin Newsom’s executive order detailing how California counties should implement his vote-by-mail edict. That’s not because we necessarily oppose the expanded use of absentee ballots, especially during the coronavirus pandemic, but because such rules should be passed by the Legislature.
    In a constitutional democracy, the process — and not just the underlying policy — matters. In the midst of the stay-at-home
  • Plummer Auditorium name change looked at after petition calls out possible Klan ties

    Plummer Auditorium name change looked at after petition calls out possible Klan ties
    Fullerton Joint Union High School District leaders will consider renaming its Plummer Auditorium after more than 27,000 people signed a petition demanding the change over concerns whether its namesake may have had ties to the Klu Klux Klan.
    The school board is set to discuss the name change at its 6 p.m. meeting on Tuesday, June 16.
    Built in 1930, Plummer Auditorium is used by the district’s high schools and community organizations for theater performances and other events.
    The building is
  • Let citizens police law enforcement

    Let citizens police law enforcement
    Given the choice between an armed protest or an unarmed riot, I’d choose the former.
    This year, I’ve had the chance to attend both the infamous Richmond gun rights rally in Virginia and the ongoing George Floyd protests in Washington, D.C. It’s strange to think that I felt safer in the presence of masked militia-men armed to the teeth with the AR-15s that they carried openly while the police stood idly by, than I did last Sunday night (May 31) surrounded by unarmed protesters a
  • San Manuel Casino has reopened and here’s what it’s like

    San Manuel Casino has reopened and here’s what it’s like
    For the hundreds of people who lined up in San Manuel Casino’s parking garage shortly before noon on Monday, June 15, a totally different experience awaited them inside the Highland property, which reopened after being shuttered for three months to combat the spread of the novel coronavirus.
    Before entering, they had their temperatures checked and answered screening questions before entering a revamped casino full of plexiglass, thermal cameras and signage encouraging social distancing.
    Sa
  • Report: Lakers’ Avery Bradley among player coalition skeptical of NBA’s plan to return

    Report: Lakers’ Avery Bradley among player coalition skeptical of NBA’s plan to return
    The NBA’s full-steam return from its hiatus next month has lost some momentum as players have begun expressing dissent in the last week over the plan to return to play in Orlando. And reports indicate that differences of opinion could divide the Lakers locker room as the team considers chasing its 17th championship.
    An ESPN report Monday indicated that Avery Bradley, the nine-year veteran guard signed by the Lakers as a free agent this year, is one of the organizers behind a coalition of p
  • OC no longer requires face coverings for all, but workers at essential businesses must still mask up

    OC no longer requires face coverings for all, but workers at essential businesses must still mask up
    When Orange County’s health officer last week dropped the requirement for wearing masks in public when people can’t keep a distance from others, that didn’t mean everyone can go bare-faced everywhere.
    While the latest countywide health order says wearing a face covering is now a “strong recommendation” for people when they’re in public, a rule county supervisors passed in April still mandates masks for workers at grocery stores, restaurants and other public-se
  • Dan Black, from a B- student to CSUF’s $8 million man

    Dan Black, from a B- student to CSUF’s $8 million man
    At age 58, after selling a multimillion dollar company (the first of three multimillion dollar companies he would create), Dan Black was set for life. He could have surrounded himself with the trappings of wealth — big house, fancy cars and the like — but instead he had an epiphany.
    “I thought, ‘I got the American dream.’ If I wanted to, I didn’t have to work the rest of my life,” Black recalled. “So, I said, ‘How did I get so lucky?’ T
  • Garden Grove’s Howard Trinh, Los Amigos’ Fatima Zeferino win $1,000 scholarships from Strawberry Festival

    Garden Grove’s Howard Trinh, Los Amigos’ Fatima Zeferino win $1,000 scholarships from Strawberry Festival
    Support our high school coverage by becoming a digital subscriber. Subscribe nowTwo high school athletes were among the eight winners of $1,000 scholarships from the Garden Grove Strawberry Festival Association.
    Garden Grove High water polo player/swimmer Howard Trinh and Los Amigos soccer player/runner Fatima Zeferino earned the scholarships as part of the association’s program that honors graduating seniors from each school in the Garden Grove Unified School District.
    Trinh, Garden Grov
  • California attorney general joins calls for police reforms

    California attorney general joins calls for police reforms
    By DON THOMPSON
    SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Attorney General Xavier Becerra on Monday called for California to create a way to end the law enforcement careers of police officers who engage in serious misconduct, along with other changes in tactics and training in the wake of weeks of national protests over police brutality.
    But he stopped short of backing proposals to have his office investigate police uses of force and sidestepped questions about nationwide calls to reduce funding for police dep

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