• Florida Coastal School of Law has officially made the move. The school is now at 8787 Baypine Rd. in the Baymeadows area. Phone numbers and e-mail addresses will remain the same.
• Jacksonville attorney Steven K. Yablonski has been elected vice chairman of the Judicial Nominating Commission for the First District Court of Appeal.
• The “Superman” movie is a hit at the World Golf Village and its run there has been extended to mid-August. Over 20,000 tickets have been sold so far.
• The newest YMCA facility opened Tuesday at the Southside Baptist Church, a joint venture between the Y and the church.
• The lighting in the statues outside the Arena is back in operation. There were wiring problems.
• Those hoping for a little pampering at the 2006 Speaking of Women’s Health conference will have to wait another year for its return. It sold out five weeks before the Aug. 19 event.
• Just after Bob Baughman signed up to run for City Council, he got a little present from the City. Baughman, who was formerly the head of the City’s parks department, was leaving the Supervisor of Elections office Monday with City Council member Sharon Copeland and found a parking ticket on his car. He’d been in the office about 15 minutes.
• This month’s Business After Hours will be on the 27th at nOSH on North Main Street from 5:30-7:30 p.m. It’s one of the Chamber of Commerce’s networking events. Info: 366-6600.
• Correction. In a story Tuesday, Heart Gallery Executive Director Jim Adams was misidentified.
• The Jacksonville Economic Development Commission will hold a special meeting July 26 at 9 a.m. on the 15th floor of the City Hall Annex. The meeting makes up for the canceled July 13 meeting.
• Resumes are already rolling in for Chip Patterson’s position as chief of the city’s emergency preparedness division. Patterson recently announced that he’s leaving for a job in the private sector. Louisiana-based Bill Bollier is among the emerging candidates. He managed medical operations at the Superdome in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina.
• The firefighters blazing down Bay Street to the Blackstone Building Tuesday morning didn’t spend very long at the call – and they said it was the kind of call they like to get. It was a false signal that went off while work was being done on the alarm system.
• Lutheran Social Services will get a $10,000 check from the Food Lion Charitable Foundation on Thursday. The money will help the Second Harvest Food Bank provide meals and snacks to low-income children involved with the Police Athletic League.
• The San Marco Movie Theater is featured in a book titled “Popcorn Palaces: The Art Deco Movie Theatre Paintings of Davis Cone.” Other theaters featured include the Senator Theatre in Baltimore and Loew’s Grand in Atlanta. A painting of San Marco Theater is on the back cover. Cone is a realist painter who was intrigued by classic theaters like these and there’s a story on each.
• Owners of jBunaé, the Landing’s latest store, say business is better than expected so far. “All the response has been really uplifting,” according to Vicki Moody, who owns the store with her son John. “I didn’t know what to expect, and it’s all been good.” John said nearby night clubs have been an unexpected source of business, too. The dress codes don’t allow men wearing T-shirts, so they walk over to jBunaé to buy collared shirts.
• Even if you don’t play golf, there is a reason to visit Inside Golf near Hemming Plaza. Owner Mary O’Donnell decided that since she has so much wall space around the computerized golf simulators, she would make it available for local artists to display their work. Currently on exhibit: clouds and landscapes, linocut prints, Nigerian-influenced wood block prints and Chinese flying fish. O’Donnell said she was inspired to offer full-time gallery space after Inside Golf was a stop on Downtown Vision Inc.’s First Wednesday Art Walk last month.