NOTABLE QUOTABLES
“For the past few months I’ve felt like it was my time. Of course you
have doubts and things might not go as planned, but it felt good to get
it out of the way. I will eventually move on and go for new things and
set new goals -- travel, college, NCAA championships, having a
girlfriend, that type of thing.”
-- Aaron Peirsol, Newport Harbor High School senior, on breaking the
world record in the 200-meter backstroke at the Phillips 66 National
Championships in Minneapolis, Minn.
“The name change will let people know worldwide that Costa Mesa is
near the ocean, which is a location that makes the city blessed.”
-- Janice Davidson, chairwoman of Citizens for the Improvement of
Costa Mesa, on the organization’s plan to lobby the City Council on
Monday to change the city’s name to Costa Mesa-by-the-sea.
“The dogs even have better signs than the skateboarders. The dog signs
that warn of leash requirements at least have words. But the message to
skateboarders is ‘You’re only worth a slash.”’
-- John Heffernan, Newport Beach city councilman, on the new signs
posted at city parks outlawing the use of skateboards on any paved park
area with a grade of 6% or greater. The signs show a skateboarder in
silhouette with a red circle and a line drawn through it.
“It’s a very clear and straightforward sign. It’s to stop youngsters
being a nuisance and a safety hazard to people with baby buggies and the
elderly.”
-- Dave Neiderhaus, Newport Beach’s general services manager, on the
anti-skateboarding sign designed by city staff.
“This is a horrible crime. And it’s been committed by people who are
misusing sporting equipment our members manufacture. It’s like using a
baseball bat to hurt someone.”
-- Jessica Sparks, executive director of the Paintball Products
Manufacturers Assn., on a March 24 incident that has left Gary Holdren of
Newport Beach in a coma. Holdren was hit repeatedly by paint-ball pellets
while skating on Back Bay Road. He fell and broke his skull. The
association is offering a reward for information on the culprits.
“This is disgusting. Who hits someone when they’re down? These guys
just didn’t stop. Gary didn’t have a chance.”
-- Bonita Young, girlfriend of Gary Holdren, looking at black
splotches caused by paint-ball pellets on Back Bay Road. Holdren is in a
coma after being hit by the pellets March 24 while he was skating.
“I don’t know if I’d have had the courage to do and go through what he
and the other students did.”
-- Shane Collins, freshman at Corona del Mar High School, on listening
to Terence Roberts talk about his experiences as a member of the “Little
Rock Nine,” the first group of black students to be integrated into the
all-white Central High School in Little Rock, Ark.
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