MAILBAG - April 4, 2000
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Kudos to City Councilwoman Norma Glover, who said at the last council
meeting that perhaps the city should look at the possibility of living
within it’s budget and not planning on having more money from new
developments in the future.
New developments such as the Newport Dunes Hotel do bring in extra
dollars for the city budget, but a high cost to existing residents. I
think most of us would opt for a leaner budget instead of more traffic,
more density and more people in our city.
SUSAN SKINNER
Newport Beach
Community feels the loss of Hirsch
The passing of Newport Beach’s Clement Hirsch is a loss of enormous
magnitude in the life of the Orange County community. Clement Hirsch was
a giant.
There are few men of such kind and serious dignity who pass through
one’s acquaintance and have such an impressive impact. Clement Hirsch was
a gentleman of enormous proportion. He was among Orange County’s finest
citizens. In the decades that I had the privilege to know Clement
Hirsch, I experienced an extraordinary gentleman who extended the
courtesy of courtly and intelligent personal interest to so many who were
hardly his peer, but were each taken by his kindness. He made those of us
of far less stature and accomplishment feel important.
Clement Hirsch was a businessman of significant achievement. He was a
husband, father and grandfather of tremendous devotion. He was a friend
of the great and the unaccomplished. He treated people, both mighty and
humble, with a wonderful equality.
I will long recall the day Clement Hirsch introduced me to the
legendary Willie Shoemaker at Santa Anita. The great jockeyextended a
warm hand of welcome and courtesy. How good that felt to be with Clement
Hirsch, who everyone at the track esteemed and admired.
Clement Hirsch was a man’s man. He liked a good drink and a good
cigar. He enjoyed a good joke. He knew a good horse. He was a natural
with people. He made you feel welcome in his home and in any social
setting.
Clement Hirsch was wise, charming, dashing, energetic and intelligent.
He didn’t suffer fools, but he was good to young people and to those far
less fortunate than himself. He knew his mind and he was not afraid to
express it with candor and conviction. He knew money and he knew its
place. He was rich because of the love of his family, far beyond the
great fortune he so well earned.
Count Clement Hirsch among American patriots. He loved this nation and
he was devoted to Orange County. Count him among the good men who have
built what is good in our community.
Someplace up there today, is a relaxed conversation of old friends
like Jimmy Durante, John Wayne and General Tom Riley. Heaven is a better
place today. Clement Hirsch is there.
THOMAS A. FUENTES
Chairman of the Republican Party of Orange County
Keep old theater open, and clean it
Regarding your recent article on the Edwards Theater near Harbor and
Adams (“Curtain closing on city’s old theater,” March 28), it is a great,
large auditorium and should be a wonderful place to see premier movies.
We live nearby, but will not go there because the facility is dirty (the
restrooms are too filthy to use) and is in a horrible state of disrepair.
The Edwards family is notorious in the community for their lack of
maintenance of their theaters. They build fancy new places, but do not
care about the older ones. Yes, I’ve complained to their operations
manager (and they did send free tickets), but nothing changed.
If Disneyland can be neat and clean, why not Edwards Theaters?
DALE BRAUN
Costa Mesa
Lawsuits keep the legal system going
At the mere mention of litigation, the lawsuit-rednecks come out of
the woodwork with the same tired, old, pointless points. Heaven knew we’d
hear from Steve Smith (“Loss of child is painful, but so is lawsuit,”
Jan. 29).
We should fear a society that has too few lawsuits, than too many.
Lawsuits are an important part of the checks and balances that cause our
system to be near perfect.
If a lawsuit is frivolous, the courts will recognize it with little or
no input from a newspaper columnist. Why is that so difficult to
comprehend?
Vickie Bridgman saying that litigation is often the only way to get at
the truth is a powerful message (“Parent who lost child speaks out
against condemnation of wrongful death lawsuit,” March 28).
Who among us has not had a legitimate concern about some legal matters
and been talked down to, or treated as if we weren’t involved, by some
court or law enforcement official? One need not have lost a child, as the
Bridgmans have, to understand her thinking.
Then there is always the goofy argument that the whole motive is
“money.” So what. Everything else in life seems to be about money, why
are we so ready to treat someone as morally inferior if our motive is
money. Furthermore, why can’t someone have more than one motive for
filing a lawsuit. Monetary assessments are a powerful deterrent to crime,
or should be. (Dennis Rodman being fined $1,000 not withstanding.) GARY
DRIES
Costa Mesa
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