“Sometimes we call our citizens, in a...
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“Sometimes we call our citizens, in a nice way, high-maintenance.
They expect a lot for their money, so Mark [Harmon] is used to
working in a community that expects a lot for their money.”
-- Dave Kiff, Newport Beach Assistant City Manager, on the hiring
of Mark Harmon as the city’s new general services director.
“It was the coolest inflatable penguin, and everybody just loved
it. It’s just really neat seeing something out of the ordinary once
in a while.”
-- Julie Mattson, a Newport Beach resident who noticed the penguin
above the Lido Theatre and later saw the movie, before the city made
the theater take the inflatable creature down because it violated
Newport’s sign ordinance.
“Avocados were a difficult one. People don’t always like to eat
them plain, so we couldn’t have eating contests. I thought, ‘They are
fairly round; you can throw them; you can catch them.’ I had to use
my imagination.”
-- Erin Koenig, coordinator of the Orange County Fair’s Kids Park,
on the difficulty of incorporating avocados, this year’s agricultural
theme, into her part of the fair.
“I realized that these weren’t just bodies. These were bodies of
Jewish people. I was Jewish, and these might have been some of my
relatives.”
-- Leigh Steinberg, Newport-based sports agent, at conference for
teenagers, recalling a moment from when he was in grade school and he
came upon a group of boys laughing at a book containing pictures of
Holocaust victims.
“We view it as an opportunity to be supportive of a community
where we are one of the major employers. We wouldn’t pay that kind of
money for exposure in Newport Beach. It wouldn’t be a very good
investment.”
-- Michael Stephens, outgoing Hoag Hospital chief executive, on
the hospital’s $100,000 donation to Newport Beach’s centennial
celebration.
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