Bluffs of a Costa Mesa emigre called...
- Share via
Bluffs of a Costa Mesa emigre called
John T. Hawley writes in the Daily Pilot (“Not being welcomed in
Costa Mesa quite a shock,” Mailbag, Aug. 17) that he has moved
himself and his family from Costa Mesa to Newport Beach but continues
to have his industrial business on Costa Mesa’s bluffs, and that he’s
shocked that citizens of Costa Mesa are now trying to build on our
bluffs what Newport Beach has on its bluffs -- homes with ocean
breezes and views.
Perhaps Hawley should have tried to move his business to the
bluffs in Newport Beach. Then he really would have been shocked, as
people in that city would probably have risen up en masse to tell him
that such locations aren’t appropriate for industrial businesses in
the year 2003.
I haven’t seen any industrial buildings in Newport Beach’s
Eastbluff or Dover Shores or up in Corona del Mar. Most of these
areas aren’t even as intrinsically desirable as Costa Mesa’s Westside
bluffs. So, why must Costa Mesa be burdened with buggy-whip
businesses from a bygone era that are helping drive down property
values and the quality of life of our city, while Newport Beach has
homes where homes should be?
Could it be that Costa Mesans tolerate this because they’ve been
made stupid by breathing in pollution from the Westside industrial
area?
For a quick look at what some of the businesses on the Westside
bluffs are putting into our air, soil, and water, readers may want to
go to the following Web site, www.scorecard.org. Perhaps Hawley
understands something about pollution, and maybe that’s why he has
moved his family to Newport Beach, one block up wind of Costa Mesa’s
industrial area.
M. H. MILLARD
Costa Mesa
Something about Mary Sullivan Slack
My thanks to the Pilot and to Tom Titus for a delightful
reminiscence and updating of our dear friend Mary Sullivan Slack.
It was in April 1988 that Mary and Pati Tambellini cast me as
Slack’s co-lead and love interest in the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse
production of “Call Me Madam” -- my second show. That show earned
rave reviews from Titus in the Pilot and from the reviewer for the
Register, and for me an obsession was born. Prolific in her theater
activities, Mary was producing “HMS Pinafore” (Kent Johnson and Tim
Nelson directing) at Newport Theatre Arts Center while starring in
“Call Me Madam” at Costa Mesa.
So, as we were completing “Madam,” Slack persuaded Johnson to
insert me into the role of Sir Joseph in “Pinafore,” just two weeks
before it opened. Slack subsequently got me cast in other shows she
was involved with and prompted me to do shows at other theaters --
including the Laguna Playhouse -- and to serve a term on the board of
directors of the National Theatre Arts Commission. There will always
be a warm and affectionate spot in my heart for Slack and what she
opened me up to. I look forward to her visiting our theater community
again.
GORDON MARHOEFER
Costa Mesa
Emergency landing argues for El Toro
Southwest Airlines makes an emergency landing on Aug. 15 at tiny
John Wayne Airport while a much better facility at El Toro is still
unused. With two 10,000-foot runways, two 8,000-foot runways and no
one in the noise zone at El Toro, it is unlikely Irvine can keep this
fine airport closed. Los Angeles has entered the fray, and I love
L.A.
Clearly, JWA is an accident waiting to happen, yet Irvine’s
anti-El Toro, pro-JWA strategy has always been to dominate local
control, meaning local control for the housing developers. El Toro is
a great national asset -- too big for Irvine and the Irvine Co. and
too important for overruling eminent domain. The airport is very much
needed in the region. The houses Irvine wants to build are not.
I suggest Irvine study the history of Ontario Airport in San
Bernardino County. More recently, it should review the steps to the
mammoth expansion of O’Hare Airport in Illinois, run by Chicago in
Cook County. Local controllers fought valiantly in DuPage County but
lost. In the long run, I believe it will be better for Irvine to
welcome the planned El Toro International Airport. Then everybody
wins and no more accidents at JWA.
DONALD NYRE
Newport Beach
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.