Mailbag - March 4, 2001
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David Lansing’s cute little letter chastising Wendy Leece [“School
board trustee Wendy Leece’s comments are just precious,” Feb. 25] is
what’s hard to stomach! What possessed the Daily Pilot editors to edify
it by naming it “Letter of the Week,” compared with, say, Rick Rainey’s
thoughtful, intelligent and challenging comments regarding Joe Bell’s
column?
GENE BEAVIN
Costa Mesa
‘The Look’ needs a dose of reality
The spring fashions that you had in “The Look” are absolutely
ridiculous. I don’t know when the Daily Pilot is going to get real. Real
people don’t wear $400 shoes and $1,000 shirts. I don’t know what kind of
a message you’re sending to the kids in Newport Beach that this is the
norm.
If I want to read Town and Country magazine, I’ll buy Town and Country
magazine, but I want the news not to know what some la-di-da people are
wearing.
SANDRA BASMACIYAN
Corona del Mar
Time to make a stronger stand against bigotry
Bill Turpit made a lot of good points in his essay “Who Belongs in
Costa Mesa?” Community Forum, Feb.4.
But he was also far too polite.
From Orville Amburgey’s attempts to ban day laborers to Chris Steel’s
recent efforts to usurp the power of the federal government and
investigate the citizenship status of volunteer commission members, Costa
Mesa has had a long history of bizarre anti-Latino policies.
Combine that with City Hall’s extraordinarily poor record promoting
Latinos to management positions, despite the fact that they make up
nearly a third of the city’s population, and it seems there is a pattern
of officially sanctioned and supported discrimination.
Turpit’s essay was well-meaning, but if he ever hopes to put an end to
the entrenched, institutionalized bigotry of Costa Mesa’s power elite,
he, like the city’s Latino community, is going to have to be a little
more assertive.
CINDY LUCAS
Costa Mesa
Keep The Worm out of the news pages already
Grow up. Your adolescent pandering to anything relating to Dennis
Rodman insults the intelligence and demeans the interests of the adults
in this community.
The free advertising provided to our least-deserving citizen should be
beneath the dignity of our local paper.
DICK TAYLOR
West Newport Beach
Absolutes are never a good thing
As one who has lived some 70 odd years, I am adamant about fewer and
fewer things. I have learned not to say “never” or “always,” for the only
thing constant in this life is change. Zero tolerance was a mistake from
the beginning and should be dropped.
BETTS HARLEY
Costa Mesa
Deregulation pitchmen are sure quiet now
Does anyone else remember when electric deregulation was being touted
as [being] so great for the consumer?
We would be able to choose any competitive power supplier, possibly
even one on the East Coast, instead of Edison.
So who are all these companies? I’d like a list.
GAYLE COURTNEY
Newport Beach
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