QUOTES OF THE YEAR
AFTER TRAGEDY’It was the most horrific, horrendous thing I’ve ever
seen in my life. We watched the cloud envelop Manhattan and the river.
I’ll never forget it as long as I live.’
-- Lyle Davis, a Newport Beach resident, on seeing the World Trade
Center collapse from across the Hudson. Davis was in Newark on business
‘You hear about New Yorkers being rude. But when we were out there,
people were walking up to us, shaking our hand. Some even told us they
know where Costa Mesa is and thanked us for our support.’
-- Jim Ellis, Costa Mesa fire chief, on spending a week in New York
earlier this month to deliver a check for $7,500 collected by Costa Mesa
city employees to benefit the families of firefighters who died in the
Sept. 11 World Trade Center attack. Ellis went to New York with his son,
Kevin.
‘Americans come in all colors. You cannot take this out on people
because they are different than you.’
-- Dave Snowden, Costa Mesa police chief, cautioning people not to
point fingers at certain groups because of the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon
‘I think we will all experience these events differently because of
this, in the same way we experience going to the grocery different than
we did two weeks ago.’
-- Sandy Robertson, associate director of the Philharmonic Society of
Orange County, on how the events of Sept. 11 will affect the Eclectic
Orange Festival. The six-week festival opened Friday.
‘Cannot be a Muslim in the eyes of God if you are not acting like a
Muslim. Evildoers do not belong to any religion. Their ideology is pure
evil.”
-- Sayed Moustafa Al-Qazwini, imam of the mosque at the Islamic
Educational Center, stressing that the destruction of life is in no way a
part of Islam. The Costa Mesa mosque held an open house Nov. 3.
‘This event has been compared to Pearl Harbor. But when you take an
American jet plane full of passengers and turn it into a weapon and hit a
building with thousands of people in it with the intent of hurting them,
you wonder where the humanity has gone.’
-- Rabbi Marc Rubenstein of Temple Isaiah, reacting to the destruction
of the World Trade Center in New York City
‘The last thing people should be doing is to panic and come running
into our emergency room.’
-- Steve Moreau, senior vice president at Hoag Hospital, on the
anthrax scare gripping the country
‘I’d like to ask them how they rebound and regroup. It’s OK to talk
about strategy and tactics, but how do you face the aftermath of
something so big? How do you muster your troops, carry on, then return to
normalcy and maintain your level of service to the community?’
-- Jim Ellis, on what he’d like to learn from New York City
firefighters
FAMOUS WORDS’I think that diet food tastes nicer on a pretty
plate.’
-- Sarah Ferguson, Duchess of York, on the Wedgwood china she promoted
at Macy’s South Coast Plaza. Ferguson is also a spokeswoman for Weight
Watchers.
‘It was a great place to write a novel about book burning, in the
library basement.’
-- Ray Bradbury, author, on writing “Fahrenheit 451” at UCLA’s library
on a typewriter that took dimes every half-hour. Bradbury appeared at the
Newport Beach Central Library.
‘Why slow down? I say, don’t retire. Inspire!’
-- Actor Mickey Rooney, who at 78 continues to perform onstage. Rooney
was in town to headline “Command Performance” at Orange Coast College.
‘We’re musicians. We play from our heart and soul. Everybody has their
problems, but if we can make everybody party and forget about it for an
hour and a half.”
-- Steve Lukather of Toto, on the power of music to help people in
times of tragedy. Toto played the Taste of Newport at Fashion Island.
NOT QUITE PRESIDENT
‘It appears to me that they are intolerant of my different views to
the point that they don’t want me in a leadership position.’
-- Wendy Leece, Newport-Mesa school board member, on why she has not
been elected president once in her seven years on the board. Leece took
her campaign public before the board’s vote. The board unanimously
elected Judy Franco.
‘You’ve made this decision into a circus. You are putting your
personal needs ahead of our children’s educational needs.’
-- Cyndie Borcoman, a parent, commenting at the school board meeting
on Wendy Leece’s public appeals to become board president
NOT COWED
‘I did it to lighten up the mood. They can’t be mad at you if you’re
dressed like an idiot.”
-- Carla Hummel, Newport Coast Elementary School PTA mom, on why she
directed morning traffic dressed as a cow
‘I feel it’s my duty to document everything in an event I’m hired to
cover. And if it’s a cow, so be it.’
-- Yana Bridle, a Newport Beach photographer, on taking a photo of a
cow giving birth during a wedding in Italy
SAY AGAIN?
‘It’s not a horse act, it’s not a circus, it’s a spiritual experience.
It’s mystical. It’s very, very special. There is nothing like it.’
-- Dean Corey, executive director of the Philharmonic Society, on
Theatre Zingaro’s national premiere of “Triptyk,” which will open the
society’s fourth annual Eclectic Orange Festival in 2002. Theatre Zingaro
incorporates horses, horsemen, actors and dancers.
‘I guess there’s not a lot of people carving giant pumpkins. It’s an
unusual distinction.’
-- Mike Valladao of San Jose, on being dubbed the World’s Most
Renowned Pumpkin Carver. Valladao carved orange gourds for the Orange
County Market Place’s fourth annual Trick or Treat Festival on Oct. 28.
‘Do you, Olive, take Tino to be your stud puppy and Dog Chow dog?’
-- The wedding vows of pugs Olive and Tino at a canine wedding
fund-raiser Feb. 10 to benefit Little Angels Pug Rescue. Olive licked
Tino in assent.
‘The Alaskan pig is a myth. The show started in Alaska.’
-- Marc Stamper, pig trainer, clearing up one of the ongoing mysteries
of the Orange County Fair. The All Alaskan Pig Races are held in Newport
Arena at the fairgrounds.
‘We don’t see many donkeys. Maybe some members of our City Council.’
-- Bill Akers of Seal Beach, on seeing farm animals at the Orange
County Fair
OUR FAVORITE ISSUE
‘It does give us a lot of credibility. The FAA does listen.’
-- Bob McGowan, a member of the New Millennium Group that backs an
alternative runway plan for El Toro, on pilot endorsement of the layout
‘ETRPA wanted to put the county on notice. We wanted to insist that
they follow the rules.’
-- Meg Waters, spokeswoman for the El Toro Reuse Planning Authority,
on why the group sued Orange County in 1998 over the hiring of a law
firm. The county and ETRPA announced that they settled the suit.
‘I believe it’s nothing more than South County using trench warfare
and terrorist activity to challenge any kind of development at El Toro of
any kind. It’s mean-spirited.’
-- Gary Proctor, Newport Beach councilman, on ETRPA filing the suit in
the first place
‘ETRPA is a mean-spirited organization. They want to stop an airport
at El Toro in any way they can.’
-- Bruce Broadwater, Garden Grove mayor, on the El Toro Reuse Planning
Authority’s vote to end flight restrictions at John Wayne Airport
‘If I could do anything with that facility, I would give it back to
the Marines. We need to preserve our military air base infrastructure if
needed for a national emergency.’
-- Jim Silva, Newport-Mesa’s county supervisor, on the planned El Toro
airport
‘It’s unrealistic to think that El Toro might become a military base
again.’
-- Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, on the speculation that El Toro might
convert back to a military air station in light of the Sept. 11 terrorist
assault
‘This county, they can’t do anything right. It’s a failed process.
That’s why it’s a comedy of the absurd.’
-- Meg Waters, after the Board of Supervisors delayed a vote on the
proposed El Toro airport
‘We can’t understand why Costa Mesa -- who will get absolutely creamed
-- has not joined the fight to support El Toro. To have only two council
members here is pathetic.’
-- Tom Anderson, a member of the Airport Working Group, during a
meeting on the proposed airport
‘Until six months or so ago, I focused just on El Toro. But after
talking to people down there . . . now I’m saying that El Toro is one of
several possible solutions.’
-- Richard Riordan, gubernatorial candidate and former Los Angeles
mayor, explaining that his shift to a regional solution for future air
traffic does not mean he’s turning his back on locals
‘Virtually everybody, maybe not everybody but more than 90%, I talk to
wants El Toro. It’s just a lack of information. And that’s going to
change. We’re going to get the word out.’
-- Steve Bromberg, Newport Beach councilman, on his commitment to El
Toro airport
‘The ETRPA proposal is a simplistic, self-serving effort to shift the
total burden of meeting the county’s air transportation demands on Costa
Mesa and nearby communities.’
-- Libby Cowan, mayor of Costa Mesa, on a possible move by the El Toro
Reuse Planning Authority to fight for a larger John Wayne Airport
‘Costa Mesa and Newport Beach are naive to think that there are going
to be two airports seven miles apart.’
-- Meg Waters, on Cowan’s stance
‘To say you can [handle] it with John Wayne . . . is a media position
and has nothing to do with reality.’
-- Gary Proctor, on the projected growth in the need for air travel in
Orange County. Proctor said that by 2020, 38 million passengers from the
county are expected to travel by air.
MISTAKES HAPPEN
‘People make mistakes. Mistakes happen and I guess I made a mistake.’
-- Jim Ferryman, Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustee, on
being arrested Sept. 27 on suspicion of driving under the influence of
alcohol. The arrest came after Ferryman was involved in a collision on
Newport Boulevard in Costa Mesa.
‘We made a mistake. Mistakes do happen.’
-- Chief David Snowden of the Costa Mesa Police Department, on an
erroneous press release that said Miroslav Maric, 49, of Newport Beach
had died after being pulled off life support. Maric, who was shot outside
a fast-food restaurant, was still alive at the time. According to the
hospital, he died the following day.
CRYSTAL CLEAR
‘The heart of the cove is the community; it’s a family community
that’s lived here for generations. It’s like a family being splintered
apart.’
-- Erica Killen, on saying goodbye to her Crystal Cove cottage.
California State Parks gave Killen and other residents until 5 p.m. July
8 to leave the historic buildings.
‘If the cottages are vacated, it would be destruction by abandonment.’
-- Al Willinger, Crystal Cove resident, on the state parks department
taking the first step to evict tenants from the cottages at Crystal Cove
State Park Beach so it could replace aging septic tanks
‘This is another delay in the process that opens this [beach] up to
public use. We’re surprised by it, but we don’t think it has any merit.’
-- Roy Stearns, spokesman for California State Parks, on the Crystal
Cove Community Trust lawsuit
‘We certainly appreciate the time we had here. We will miss it.’
-- Dolly Shatford, a Crystal Cove cottage resident, on leaving
‘For years and years, people wouldn’t come down here. It’s really good
to see people on this beach. There’s a lot more people on this beach
since [the residents] left.’
-- Jeannette Merrilees, a Crystal Cove activist, on the number of
people now using the public beach
WAVE GOODBYE
‘This is one of the worst summers in the last decade. The summer of
1995 is comparable to this one. But on a scale of one to 10, I’d give
this year a four. Pretty bad.’
-- Adam Wright, a Surfline swell forecaster, on how the waves have
been this summer
OUR FAVORITE COUNCILMAN
‘Even if I win, I don’t get my money back. Not only do I get my name
smeared, but I get my pocketbook clobbered.’
-- Chris Steel, Costa Mesa councilman, on his ongoing defense against
perjury charges regarding nomination papers
‘If I were to advise somebody in my position, that’s what I’d tell him
-- ‘take the plea.’ But I’m different. I want to go forward with this on
principle.’
-- Steel, on being torn between taking a misdemeanor plea and going to
trial
‘What you heard in there was not the whole story.’
-- Steel, adding that during a pretrial hearing the prosecution took
statements he had made out of context
‘It’s gone so far. Anything can happen now.’
-- Steel, after pleading not guilty to felony perjury charges
‘I feel very good about it. This is all very emotional for me.’
-- Steel, on having the civil case against him tossed out of court
‘There wasn’t a lot we could do. We aren’t allowed to spot zone, and
people want us to spot beautify. We can’t decide what is beautiful.’
-- Steel, on the council’s 3-2 vote July 2 to limit the height of a
17th Street retail building to 18 feet after community members
complained. The decision overruled Planning Commission approval of a
design that soared to 25 feet in spots.
‘I want to attract people who can really afford to live here. It would
improve our property values, improve our schools. That’s been my goal
from day one. I’m not in favor of subsidized housing or affordable
housing. We’ve got to get serious about the people we’re letting live
here.’
-- Steel, addressing a community meeting held by Mesa Verde Community
Inc. The meeting was the first of three set up to give residents an
opportunity to ask questions of city officials.
‘SOS has great intentions. But their expansion is just disastrous
because it’s inviting in . . . social problems and cultures we don’t need
and bringing down our schools.’
-- Steel, on why he’s opposed to Share Ourselves’ expansion.
WASTE NOT, WANT NOT
‘When an affluent community starts to have less waste, it generally
indicates that things are starting to go downhill.’
-- Dave Niederhaus, Newport Beach’s general services director, on
predicting the economy from a community’s trash
OUR FAVORITE BAD BOY
‘He’s my interior designer.’
-- Kevin Finegold, owner of Josh Slocums Restaurant in Newport Beach,
on the role Dennis Rodman is playing in the eatery. Rodman loaned
Finegold money for the restaurant’s renovation.
‘Man! It was like Woodstock out here. It was just that instead of
hippies, there were porn stars.’
-- Chris Kyle, neighbor of Dennis Rodman, commenting on Rodman’s 40th
birthday party
‘I don’t understand. I’m not hurting anybody, I’m not jeopardizing
anybody. They’re just giving me grief for no reason.’
-- Dennis Rodman, former NBA superstar, on the trouble he’s run into
lately with city and law enforcement officials regarding parties at his
Newport Beach home
MUDDY WATERS
‘It’s actually pretty standard. I’ve seen a washing machine come out
of the river.’
-- Boyd Mickley, a Newport Beach lifeguard, on the debris that has
washed onto the Newport Beach shoreline from the Santa Ana River
‘I see kids out there playing in gutter water. People don’t know what
pollution is, what’s in the runoff, because they can’t see it. They think
it’s clean.’
-- Bob Caustin, founder of Defend the Bay, on how beachgoers ignore
signs of bacterial contamination posted by the Orange County Health Care
Agency
‘The reason this is so important in Newport is because some of the
best recreational swimming areas are surrounded by boats.’
-- Jack Skinner, Newport Beach environmentalist, on a proposed federal
bill that could change Newport Harbor’s protected status
‘I get into arguments with rich guys all the time. [They say,] ‘It
isn’t my problem.’ But all of a sudden, when it comes to their backyard,
they get religious.’
-- Randy Seton of Orange County CoastKeeper, on his work to educate
the owners of the mansions in Corona del Mar above Buck Gully. Many of
the homes are suspected of contributing to the polluted runoff that heads
into the gully.
THE SPORT OF KINGS
‘The beauty of golf and the horrible thing about golf is that it takes
. . . five hours. The good part is that you get to be away from
everything. The bad part is that nobody can reach you.’
-- Hank Adler, co-chairman of the Toshiba Senior Classic Golf
Tournament, on the down side of playing golf
‘My husband’s done this so long, I don’t know any quote-unquote normal
people.’
-- Lea Thompson, wife of Leonard Thompson, on what it’s like to travel
along with her husband, a professional golfer, on the Senior PGA tour
LADIES NIGHT
‘We used to talk about our little kids, then school, then marriages.
Now it’s our aches and pains and hormone intakes. And then there’s
e-mail. And we’ve learned a lot of off-color jokes.’
-- Kathy Munson of Costa Mesa, on the conversations held during ladies
poker night. Munson is part of a group that has been meeting to play
cards for 30 years.
IN THE HOUSE FOR LIFE
‘Reports of my demise have been greatly exaggerated.’
-- Chris Cox, Newport Beach’s representative, on rumors that President
Bush might pick him for a federal judgeship, causing him to vacate his
congressional seat
‘I have told my colleagues in Congress not to run for my leadership
post just yet. I have not yet determined my own mind.’
-- Cox, acknowledging that he has talked with the White House about a
possible federal judgeship. He did not get the post.
NO MORE FISH TO FRY
‘We’re still kind of in a state of shock about not being able to do
it, but we’re starting right away and working to see what we can do in
upcoming years. It is now the “Somewhat Annual Fish Fry”? The “New and
Improved Fish Fry”?’
-- Mike Scheafer, president-elect of the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor
Lions Club, on what happens now that this year’s Fish Fry was canceled
‘What am I going to do? I’m going to have to bang on doors asking for
fish. The fish was my favorite part. I have gone to every [Fish Fry] that
I can remember. It was like a Costa Mesa reunion.’
-- Diane Swarts, facilities manager at the Costa Mesa Senior Center,
on the canceling of the Fish Fry
FAREWELLS
‘She seemed like she was on a quest for something else in life.’
-- Tamara Bartlett, a friend of 16-year-old Ceceline Godsoe,
remembering the “free spirit” who was found dead Sept. 21 on a trail in
Fairview Park
‘She was a very pretty girl who didn’t know she was pretty, as so many
pretty women are.’
-- William Godsoe of Costa Mesa, on his daughter, Ceceline
‘I’m surprised he touched so many lives. I never thought Costa Mesa
and Estancia would be so close.’
-- Mario Macias, a former teammate of football player Matt Colby, on
the effect Colby’s death on Sept. 29 has had on the two rival high
schools
‘Oh, but he hated walking.’
-- Dorothy-Jo Swanson, reminiscing about her late husband, Harold, who
was Corona del Mar’s first mail carrier. Harold Swanson passed away Feb.
8. He was 85.
‘Of course it is a loss. But it’s a happy one. The last two weeks, she
has been really tired. I think she was ready. She was ready to go.’
-- Suzy Olympius of Costa Mesa, on her daughter Brianna, who died
Sept. 14 from complications from a brain tumor. Brianna attended fourth
grade at Newport Heights Elementary School last year.
‘He was wonderfully social, always up and enthusiastic.’
-- Larry Sweet, on his son, Brian. Brian, a Costa Mesa resident and
Newport Harbor High School graduate died while running at Orange Coast
College.
‘He was a one-man, vertically integrated industry. He grew the coffee,
imported it himself, roasted it -- in a roaster that he invented -- and
sold it to the end user.’
-- Martin Diedrich, on his father, Carl, when he passed away
‘Every time I bicycle around the Back Bay, I say ‘Thank God for the
Robinsons,’ because they saved one of the greatest areas of open space. .
. . It’s like saving Central Park for the city of New York.’
-- Jack Skinner, Newport Beach environmentalist, on fellow
environmentalists Frances and Frank Robinson. Frances Robinson died June
30 of heart failure. She was 82.
‘I miss her smile, her love of life.’
-- Rick Johns of Newport Beach, on his late wife, Rosalind Williams,
who died in last June after a battle with cancer. Williams, who was 55,
was the president and chief executive of the Newport Beach Conference and
Visitors Bureau.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.