Quiet prevails at Costa Mesa High
- Share via
Danette Goulet
COSTA MESA - Near empty classrooms and hallways at Costa Mesa High
School proved safe Friday for students who braved the last day of classes
before spring break, despite a bomb threat made earlier in the week.
A warning that “Nazi punks” would blow up the school on Friday the
13th was found scribbled on a bathroom wall on Tuesday by two female
students.
School officials immediately contacted the Costa Mesa Police
Department and an outside security agency, which combed the school
overnight for any sign of a bomb.
Students and staff began the day warily, but before long it was only
the absence of about one-third of the students that reminded them of the
scare.
“I think as the day goes by and things calm down we’re all certain
that there isn’t an explosive device here,” said Steve Pavich, the
assistant principal. “[Police] assured me that most of the night officers
checked in stairwells and in sewage drains. They checked every nook and
cranny.”
Police, who said they were checking inside garbage cans when the sun
rose Friday, remained on campus to make sure everything remained safe and
that everyone remained calm.
When school bells rang students could still be heard in the hallways
shuffling to their next class, but their significantly decreased number
created nowhere near the usual roar.
Don Ryan’s third-period physical science class usually has 31 students
packed in the seats. But Friday only 10 sat scattered about trying to
work on lab assignments without their partners.
“I can spend more time with each kid, but you can’t run a school with
10 kids in a classroom,” Ryan said.
Ryan added that he had only about 25% attendance in his first two
periods and was hearing reports of the same low numbers from his fellow
teachers.
“Teachers made it evident that we felt it was safe,” Ryan said. “I
think all [students] should have been here. Students who stayed home
because their parents told them to are one thing, but I think you’ll find
those with a propensity for ditching anyway are not here.”
Students in attendance Friday seemed to agree with Ryan.
Amber Lopez, 15, said it never occurred to her to stay home.
“They’re just staying home because it’s an excuse,” she said of her
missing peers.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.