EDUCATION Teacher plans to speak to parents...
EDUCATION
Teacher plans to
speak to parents
Mary Letterman, the former headmaster of Mariners Christian
School, announced last week she plans to speak to parents and
teachers Feb. 8 about the sequence of events leading to her firing
earlier this month. The school board that fired her held its own
meeting for parents and teachers Jan. 20, but board members could not
legally disclose the reasons behind her departure.
Letterman said she trusts the board’s judgment to make decisions
for the best interest of the school, but she said she felt somewhat
slighted because trustees wrote a letter to the school community
stating that it was a mutual decision they’d prayed over. She’s still
unclear about the reasons she was fired, she said.
* UC Irvine students participated in a candlelight vigil Wednesday
to commemorate the one-month anniversary of the Dec. 26 tsunami in
South Asia. Speeches by professors and members of various relief
organizations were followed by cultural dances and a one-minute
moment of silence.
“It was a solemn atmosphere because people were reflective and
thought of all the lives that were lost,” said UC Irvine Volunteer
Center Director Edgar Dormitorio, one of about 70 participants. “But
there’s also a sense of hope that we can follow through with raising
money for the victims.”
COSTA MESA
Planning for more
green in the city
The Planning Commission voted Monday in favor of rezoning a 5-acre
parcel at the Fairview Developmental Center from high-density
residential to institutional/recreational, despite objections from
state officials. The state owns the property and may sell it to help
plug an $8-billion budget deficit, but the city controls the zoning.
The city council still must vote on the zoning change and will take
up the issue Feb. 22.
* Tel Phil Enterprises, which has operated the popular weekend
swap meet at the Orange County Fairgrounds for 35 years, will keep
running the swap meet for at least the next five years. The fair
board on Thursday gave Tel Phil the right to negotiate a five-year
lease with a five-year option to operate the Orange County Market
Place.
Getting a lease inked took more than two years because of problems
with the bidding process the first time around. In the second round
of bids, Tel Phil was the only company to submit a proposal.
* Orange County’s Pacific Symphony announced Wednesday the dates
and locations of its first-ever European tour.
The tour will run from March 20 to 30, 2006, and cover three
countries and nine cities, beginning in Munich, Germany. A recent
$750,000 donation from longtime symphony supporters Sandy and John
Daniels was a major catalyst.
PUBLIC SAFETY
Coach gets fast ball of cash
A jury on Thursday awarded Corona del Mar High School baseball
coach $700,000 in damages in his defamation and malicious prosecution
lawsuit against the parent of a former player.
The jury ruled that Newport Coast physician Marc Martinez acted
with malice in his two prior suits against varsity coach John Emme
and in comments he made to the national media. Martinez pulled his
son, J.D., off the varsity team in 2001, claiming that Emme hurt his
son’s college chances and damaged his arm by forcing him to throw too
many pitches.
* A superior court judge this week decided to keep in Orange
County the retrial of three men in a high-profile gang-rape case.
He denied defense attorneys’ claims that publicity has tainted the
jury pool available for the retrial of Kyle Nachreiner and Keith
Spann, both 20, and 19-year-old Greg Haidl, son of former Orange
County Assistant Sheriff Don Haidl. The trial and final stages of
jury selection are set to start Monday.
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