Gains & Losses
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GAINS
A LONG AND HAPPY MARRIAGE
Diane and Harold Schechter could probably teach many young couples a
thing or two about getting along. The pair have been married almost 62
years. And it’s not that they haven’t had their share of marital spats,
they just know how to deal with them. “You fight, but you have to make
up. And never go to sleep mad,” Diane said. As for Harold, he has another
theory about their success as a couple: “I say I’m the lord and master of
my house, and she could do whatever she likes,” he said.
HOLDING OFF ON WATER MIX
The Orange County Sanitation District has decided to hold off on
releasing waste water that contains a higher concentration of bacteria
into the ocean until researchers determine the cause of contamination
that forced the city beaches to close last year. The district received
the OK in October to change the current mixture of water that has
received primary treatment with water that has gotten a more stringent
secondary treatment, from a 50-50 blend to a 70-30 blend. While the
mixture -- which is pumped five miles off the coast -- is safe, it’s nice
that the district is concerned about the effect it might have on the
effort to pinpoint a cause of the contamination.
FUTURE WORLD LEADERS
A week after they returned from a Model United Nations conference in The
Hague, Netherlands, students from Edison High School’s Model United
Nations team were jetting off to compete in another event at Old Dominion
in Virginia. Preparing for the competitions is challenging for the high
school teens. “You have to do college-level research,” said Ken Ammann,
the team’s advisor. “You have to make an oral presentation in front of
thousands of people, and you have to learn your country’s policy.”
LOSSES
REHLING FORCED TO RETIRE
Ken Rehling gave 32 years to the Marina High School football program --
first as a player, then as an assistant coach and most recently as head
coach. His involvement ended last week when Principal Carol Osbrink and
Athletic Director Paul Renfrow asked him to resign. “I was told that it
wasn’t anything that I did, that it didn’t have anything to do with our
staff nor our football team,” Rehling said. Osbrink and Renfrow said they
want to take the team in a new direction, and they wanted someone else to
lead the way. Marina finished the 1999 season with a 5-5-1 record.
A MILLION TO GO
The Take the Plunge campaign and the Huntington Beach Union High School
District have begun construction on a new aquatic complex at Huntington
Beach High School. The only problem is, the group is still $1 million
short of what it’s going to cost to finish the project. So far, Take the
Plunge members have raised about $600,000. “We need the school district
and the city to come up with the rest of the funds,” said Dan Hay, a
member of the Huntington Beach Foundation, which is the umbrella
organization for Take the Plunge. Meanwhile, school district officials
are scratching their heads. “I don’t see where the money will come from
in such a short time,” Assistant Supt. Patricia Koch said.
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