HELPING HANDS: The seventh-grade class at Ojai’s...
- Share via
HELPING HANDS: The seventh-grade class at Ojai’s Oak Grove School needed a community service project. AIDS Care needed a garden at its new headquarters in downtown Ventura. The two hooked up and the result is beautiful, says Doug Green, executive director of AIDS Care. . . . The day the class turned out was wet, Green said. Despite that--or maybe because of it--”we had so much fun, and I think the kids felt great about doing it.”
SECOND STAGE: Until now, dance recitals and theatrical productions at Moorpark College were performed in a converted classroom on a makeshift stage (B1). But life is changing for the actors and dancers. . . . Those who will be using the college’s new Performing Arts Center, which boasts a stage three times the size of the old one, are thrilled. Kristin Henry, a theater major from Thousand Oaks, says the ambience will inspire the audience. “It will look professional even if it’s not, because of the place.”
HAPPY ENDING: If Joshua Isaacs had to do it all over again, “I probably would have gone to bed with a motorcycle helmet on.” . . . Joshua is the Ojai teenager who was attacked by a bear while in his sleeping bag near Big Bear 2 1/2 years ago. He was reunited recently with the camp counselor who saved him, and their story will be told at 9 p.m. Thursday on CBS’ “The World’s Most Dangerous Animals.” . . . Joshua, who ended up with 150 stitches after the attack, still loves to camp.
SHARK ATTACK: Also on the program will be Joe Thomson, who lived for several years in Ventura before moving to Hawaii in the late 1970s. Thomson, now a graphic illustrator in Santa Barbara, lost his right hand to a shark on the north coast of Kauai in 1985. . . . Thomson, who was boogie-boarding, had little warning of the attack: “All of a sudden, this 55-gallon drum of teeth popped out of the water.” . . . Thomson still spends lots of time in the water in Ventura and Santa Barbara counties. “I’m not that nervous here. There’s less sea life.”
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.