Top 10 quotes of the year
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Whenever there is tragedy or triumph or just plain curiosity, we can
always rely on someone to come through and put it into perspective. And
1999 was no different. So, we’ve put together those one, and sometimes
two, liners that left an impression with us. Hope you enjoy hearing the
words all over again.
“It is insanity.”
-- Gary Monahan, mayor of Costa Mesa on learning the news that a man had
just driven into Southcoast Childhood Learning Center, killing two
children and injuring several others.
“Oh great, now we have to find 51 friends.”
-- Ron Downey, on learning that his wife, Mary, had won a contest giving
them a free lunch for 51 of their closest friends.
“The lights are always off up here.”
-- Dennis O’Neil, then Newport Beach’s mayor, after being asked if the
lights on the dais could be dimmed during a slide presentation.
“Alo reaches out and grabs an A-1 Steak Sauce bottle and hits Wood and
cuts his head, and then they start rolling around on the floor. The
officers come in, join in on the fight with Wood and finally subdue
Wood.”
-- Ron Smith, of the Costa Mesa Police Department, on a fight at Norm’s
Restaurant.
“We’re teenagers, and we love getting presents for Christmas. We were
thinking how sad it was that other kids weren’t as fortunate.”
-- Lauren McMeikean, who set up a Christmas toy drive with her friend
Kara DeMille. The two 13-year-olds volunteer at the Someone Cares Soup
Kitchen.
“I think the name turned a lot of people off.”
-- Helen Wick, a Balboa Island resident, after Bad Ass Coffee Co. closed
its island store.
“What amazed me was that someone decided, ‘Let’s take these things and
grind them up and stick them up our nose.’ ”
-- Robert Cunard, Corona del Mar High School assistant principal, on high
school girls’ use of the prescription drug Ritalin as a weight-loss aid.
“We were just thinking, ‘What if this was on C-SPAN?”’
-- Christopher Cox, Newport Beach’s congressman, on meetings of his
committee on Chinese espionage of U.S. military technology.
“Will this stop kids from smoking? I don’t think it will. Will the
ordinance send a message to your kids? Yeah, it will. It’ll say, ‘You
kids can’t be trusted and your parents don’t know what they’re doing.”’
-- Doug Scribner, a Costa Mesa resident who works with youths, on a city
ordinance to regulate tobacco sales.
“About 10 years ago, I looked at my blood donor’s card and saw I had 50.
So I thought, what the hell, I’ll go for 100.”
-- Ralph Clark, after reaching his goal of donating 100 pints of blood.
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