Local students near the attacks
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Michael Miller
Twenty-nine Coast Community College District students and one
instructor were among those shocked Thursday morning when terrorist
bombs ripped through central London.
Golden West College history teacher Dave Moore had flown with his
group to London on Saturday for a monthlong course in theater arts
and British history. The students, some from Golden West and others
from Orange Coast College, heard the blast that tore open a
double-decker bus near the British Museum at 9:47 a.m. The explosion
followed within an hour of three others on underground trains.
Afterward, Moore told district administrators he and the students
were safe.
“All of the Coast students and myself are safe -- shocked but OK,”
Moore wrote in an e-mail to district officials. “The bus bombing
occurred within earshot, but other than that, we have little info at
this moment. ... The students are notifying their parents.”
Although London authorities shut down the city’s buses and trains
shortly after the terrorist attacks, Moore said the students would
not be affected, since they are within walking distance of their
classrooms. As part of the $3,550 cost of taking the summer session,
each student received a bus and underground pass.
For now, the summer program is expected to continue as planned.
“The program had got off to a great start, fantastic night at the
Globe [Theatre], and the resolution right now is to keep right on
course,” Moore said.
Each of the higher education institutions in the Newport-Mesa area
-- Orange Coast College, UC Irvine and Vanguard University -- has
summer programs currently taking place in the United Kingdom. None of
the high schools in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District has an
exchange program in the country now.
Vanguard history professor Michael Wilson, who leads the campus’
study abroad program, confirmed that four of the university’s
students were in London on Thursday while participating in a summer
session in Oxford.
“We’ve been in phone conversations with the program director, and
everything is fine,” Wilson said. “They were tens of miles away from
any of the bombing.”
UCI currently has 209 students living in England, 135 of them at a summer session in Cambridge and the other 74 in a University of
California-system-sponsored program in Cambridge and Sussex. None of
the students were in London at the time of the attacks.
Bruce Hanna, the director of communications for the UC Education
Abroad Program, said a number of UC officials had risen at 2 or 3
a.m. on Thursday to call the program directors in England. UC had a
similar experience during the train bombings in Madrid, when about
300 students were in that area.
“In a sense, we’re relieved that it happened to be a weekday,
because vulnerability is higher on weekends, when students are going
into places like [London],” Hanna said.
He added that the students, who gathered for impromptu meetings in
Cambridge and Sussex following the attacks, have canceled several
events planned for this weekend in London.
A total of 326 UC students are participating in this summer’s
stay-over program.
A few hours after the attacks Thursday, the UC Education Abroad
Program issued a statement announcing that it would not close any of
its summer sessions. However, the statement added that for safety
reasons, “we are advising our students to avoid traveling into
central London for any reason.”
* MICHAEL MILLER covers education and may be reached at (714)
966-4617 or by e-mail at michael.miller@ latimes.com.
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