Elementary school given 2,000 books Oak View...
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Elementary school given 2,000 books
Oak View Elementary School students have 2,000 new books on hand
to fire up their imaginations thanks to community-minded locals.
The Rotary Club of Huntington Beach and Sunrise Rotary Club
presented the books to Oak View children bright and early Monday in
an outdoor ceremony. To show the schools thanks, girls on Oak View’s
spirit team gave club members a cheer.
The books were donated in cooperation with “Reading by 9,” a
program sponsored by The Los Angeles Times. This was the third year
Rotary Club members donated books to Huntington Beach schools. Last
year, 2,000 books were given to Perry Elementary School and in 2002,
Oak View students received 2,350 books.
Holding up a paperback in front of the children, Dale Dunn,
community service chairman for the Rotary Club of Huntington Beach,
showed the students a sample of what they will be able to read.
“They’re real cool books too,” Dunn said. “Here’s ‘How to be Cool
in the Third Grade,’” Dunn said.
Guests on hand for the ceremony included district Supt. James
Tarwater, Mayor Cathy Green, School Board President Barbara Boskovich
and City Councilman Gil Coerper.
“These books can bring you so much fun and so many travels and so
many experiences,” Green said.
Most of the children attending Oak View are English learners.
Principal Karen Catabijan credited the program and other community
efforts with helping students read. Another program that helps the
school, she said, is the Canine Literacy Program, in which volunteers
bring dogs to the school and children read with the animals.
“It’s the reader and the dog, just sitting with the students
reading,” Catabijan said.
Brethren musicians have eyes on festival
Budding musicians jazzed it up over the weekend at a music
festival in Placentia.
The Brethren Christian High School jazz band was one of 10 schools
that competed in the second annual Mimi’s Cafe Battle of the Bands at
Bradford Field on Saturday.
“All the bands were good. Everyone had a great time,” Band
Director Len Montgomery said.
The competition was a fundraiser for music groups, and the
earnings gained from 4,000 tickets sold will make it easier for
Brethren students to attend the Monterey Jazz Festival in April,
Montgomery said.
Though Brethren musicians did not take home the crown, the group
received a standing ovation after playing its four-song set,
Montgomery said.
City school district taking precautions
Officials with the Huntington Beach City School District plan to
use a vent to release methane gas trapped underneath Kettler
Elementary School.
Methane is a nontoxic gas that can explode if in a 5%
concentration above ground. Methane detected below the surface has
been found exceeding the gas’ lower explosive limit, the minimum
concentration of gas in the air that can cause an explosion, but it
cannot ignite underground.
Official tests have not found any methane above the surface.
The passive vent would be another safety measure taken by the
district after methane gas was discovered beneath the school in
November 2003. Underground methane was also found in tests conducted
in January, February and on Sunday.
“This weekend we did our last borings and we found our last
elevated methane hole, and that kind of lets us know where the plume
is,” said Wayne Nunnery, the district’s maintenance and operations
supervisor.
The district has already installed methane detectors in all the
school’s classrooms, as well as in closets and the kitchen area.
“It’s probably maybe an overkill, but if it makes people
comfortable, that’s what we do,” Nunnery said.
Parents keeping an eye on the school can attend weekly meetings
with district officials and consultants monitoring the problem. The
meetings are held from 3 to 5 p.m. every Friday at Kettler
Elementary, 8750 Dorsett Drive. The school’s telephone number is
(714) 536-7568.
Music students look to make purchase
Students in Marine View Middle School’s music program are raising
money to buy a new grand piano.
So far, students working with the PTSA have collected $8,500
toward the $25,000 cost of the desired Yamaha Grand Piano, said Lynn
Silver, director of the school’s Jazz Ensemble.
“We are really cooking here,” she said.
Anyone who donates $100 can become one of 88 “Key Donors.” A
Spring Fling scheduled for May 21 will feature a performance of “Only
in America” by the Jazz Ensemble and a silent auction.
Donations can be mailed to Marine View Middle School, 5682 Tilburg
Drive, Huntington Beach, 92649.
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