Wednesday, October 3, 2007

160 roses, in Irvine

THE ENTREPENEURIAL SPIRIT lives in Irvine. Or it once did. In this morning’s OC Register: Three women arrested in Irvine prostitution ring:
The three women who were arrested Tuesday for allegedly setting up a prostitution ring via Craigslist.org advertised sex for $160 on the Web site, according to the Orange County District Attorney’s office.

…One of the two ads related to the charges includes nude and erotic photos, a phone number and the words “Hottie Asian Girls waiting for you” who will give a “good time” for one hour between 11 a.m. and 2 a.m. for 160 roses. Police have said that “roses” is commonly used in online ads to refer to dollars.

… The charges come one week after Irvine for the third time was ranked as the safest big city in the nation, according to FBI data.

… Craig Newmark, who started craigslist in San Francisco in 1995, has said the site aims to make it easier for people to get everyday chores done….

Incidental factoids

"FACULTY AND STAFF" of the SOCCCD received an email today from Chancellor Raghu Mathur and Board President Dave Lang. The email notes (1) the Trustees’ recent inclusion of the “District/Board of Trustees Response in the Colleges [sic] Mid-term Accreditation Reports” and (2) faculty opposition to the inclusion. (Actually, faculty objected more to the manner of the inclusion than to the inclusion.)

The email then refers to “continuing advice of the Accrediting Commission” that, allegedly, approves of the inclusion, faculty to the contrary notwithstanding.

But here’s the problem, Dissent readers. Mathur and Co. asked ACCJC officials whether the district’s response may be included in the report. Naturally, the answer they received was “yes.”

But, in asking the question, do you suppose that Mathur and crew mentioned such circumstantial factoids as that the inclusion occurred outside approved processes and that among the included elements are false, inflammatory, and undocumented assertions?


Guess!

But it looks like at least some of these circumstances might be communicated to the ACCJC after all. So desperate are Lang and Mathur to entice the faculty senate presidents to sign these reports—the senates have directed them not to—that they have invited the colleges to add “any comments” about the inclusion:

At this point, the colleges are encouraged to add any comments about the inclusion of the District/Board of Trustees Response and make other minor changes in their reports, as deemed appropriate, particularly if such additions would enable the accreditation chairs to appropriately include their signatures on the reports.

My guess is that Mathur will get his signatures. But the price he’ll pay are Accreditation reports that make clear what he has struggled to obscure.

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...