NOTABLE QUOTABLES
“We’re seeking some kind of relief from a total banning of pets.â€
-- Dave Hubert of Newport Coast, a regular with his pet at the park at
San Joaquin Hills Road near Newport Ridge Drive, on why he and about
seven other residents met with Merit Property Management, which owns the
park and sent out the notices telling residents that it would no longer
allow dogs there on or off leashes. The residents plan to work with the
company to find a compromise.
“Every now and then, we make the patient hostile to keep [the
students] on their toes.â€
-- Michael Prislin, on the surprises he has in store for the UC Irvine
medical students who take his Patient/Doctor II class, which is designed
to familiarize students with communicating, performing physical exams and
clinical reasoning-analyzing patient problems to obtain consistent
findings.
“The way I look at it, I want to be a Reaganette. I see Reagan as a
human being who realized that power was corrupt and if you didn’t have a
heart, you were sunk.â€
-- Edie Bukewihge, one of eight Republican challengers to Democratic
Gov. Gray Davis, on her political role model. The 52-year-old Newport
Beach native is a longshot in the race for the Republican nomination,
which will be decided by voters in the state’s closed primary March 5.
“I don’t think there’s a park in the city you can go into that doesn’t
have damage and injuries from people playing basketball, baseball,
soccer, tennis. Somehow, we take a different approach with skateboarding.
We punish the sport, punish all the participants in the sport.â€
-- Mike Kranzley, a Newport Beach planning commissioner addressing the
city council as a resident and father on a revised ordinance that adds
certain areas of city parks to the list of places already off limits to
skateboarders
“There’s definitely a skateboarding subculture -- a culture of
defiance.â€
-- Tod Ridgeway, mayor of Newport Beach, on part of why he agreed with
the ordinance, which passed unanimously Tuesday.
“Maybe they think it’s modern art or something, I don’t know. But I’m
very, very curious.â€
-- Bill Morris, Costa Mesa public services director, on the more than
40 padlocks that were cut off of a fence on the Bay Street bridge
Thursday by Caltrans maintenance workers.
“The play reflects life, and life is not always simple or easy.â€
-- Annie Loui, professor at UC Irvine, on why she chose to put on a
production of Carlo Gozzi’s “Love of Three Oranges.†The play, on stage
at UCI through Saturday, is the story of a hypochondriac prince who is
cursed by a witch to love three oranges and search for them to the ends
of the Earth.
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