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AN AYE FOR AN I
Proponents of Wal-Mart could put to better use the “perverse money”
they’re spending to defeat Measure I, the ballot initiative that
jeopardizes the retailer’s plan to open a store, resident Don McGee said
at last week’s Huntington Beach City Council meeting.
“It seems to me they could have bought a better vowel,” he said. “If I am
I, then I am supposed to vote against myself by voting no on I,” he said.
“Asking me to vote against myself is asking way too much. Aye on I is
more like it.”
PREOCCUPIED BY FOUNTAINS
Fountain Valley City Manager Ray Kromer has been thumbing through books,
driving around the county and looking at fountains everywhere he travels,
trying to get ideas for the city’s new fountain. This search for the
perfect fountain has even crept into his leisure time at home.
“It’s gotten to the point that when I watch TV and I see a fountain, I
sometimes wish I had a videotape in,” Kromer said.
BETTER SAFE THAN SORRY
School board members are encouraged to attend conferences that deal with
educational matters -- it enriches their knowledge and experience of
public education. Bilingual education, special education and how to
augment your science instruction in class are typical topics covered in
educational conferences.
But Huntington Beach Union High School District trustee Michael Simons
wants to cover all the bases in his conference dates. He attended a
conference on the city’s preparedness in the case of nuclear or
biological warfare.
“You’d be surprised how well prepared we are,” Simons said with a smile.
“Everybody at the conference wanted to move to Huntington Beach.”
-- Compiled by Eron Ben-Yehuda, Angelique Flores and Andrew Wainer
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