Thursday, September 11, 2008

9-11 Anniversary Ceremony, Irvine Valley College


Part 1: to see the video, click on the arrow.

OC Sheriff urges vigilance and determination at Irvine 9/11 commemoration:

Orange County Sheriff Sandra Hutchens today delivered a message of vigilance and determination at Irvine Valley College's 9/11 Commemoration Ceremony, reflecting on a day she said would remain etched in the country's collective memory.

Standing on a sparse, darkly lit stage dominated by a large American flag backdrop and a single, brightly lit commemorative wreath, Hutchins spoke of the moment that she learned of the 9/11 attacks, in the morning hours after a night spent supervising a Los Angeles SWAT team serving high risk warrants.

"We must acknowledge that [terrorists] exist and their purpose is to eliminate our freedom and our democratic way of life," Hutchens said. "We will not let them prevail."

Several other speakers echoed Hutchens comments on balancing the threat of terrorism without compromising one's freedom. Irvine Police Chief David L. Maggard Jr. compared the impact of 9/11 on current generations to the impact of the Pearl Harbor bombing on an earlier generation.

"We woke as a nation knowing our lives would never be the same," Maggard said. "We realized the world is not as large as it seemed."

The college's ceremony was attended by a crowd of nearly 100, including a number of local and county leaders. This is the sixth year the college has commemorated 9/11….

Along with the solemn words and remembrances were spirited moments of patriotism, including performances of "America the Beautiful" and "God Bless America" by Irvine Valley College Choral Director Matthew Tresler, which bookended the speeches. During the closing moments of "God Bless America," Tresler invited the crowd to join him, their voices filling the college's performing arts center….

County honors those who died on 9-11:

[AND AT SADDLEBACK COLLEGE:]

At Saddleback College, campus Police Chief Harry Parmer, a Marine Corps veteran, led a ceremony that included speeches and the presentation of a memorial wreath.

"Our first responders showed true bravery and heroism on 9/11, and many made the ultimate sacrifice in their pursuit to save the lives of their fellow citizens," paramedic student Adam Miller, who served in Iraq, told the crowd.

"As a student in Saddleback College's paramedic program, it is an honor to follow in their footsteps so I too can help those in their greatest hours of need."

From Wednesday’s OC Register:

Irvine Valley College entices students with pipeless organ: Digital instrument with grandiose look, feel and sound of the real thing will make its debut Sunday.

Rebel Girl's Poetry Corner: For the historical ache

Rebel Girl isn't up to much these days, hence the light posting. (Some of you have asked.) She is sunk instead in a place, a soul kitchen of sorts, where she keeps measuring what all has been done for what result and, well, the sum distresses her, suggestive as it is of cool, conscious betrayal, pervasive corruption and a jaunty disregard. She is certain that there must be another way to weigh and measure, to count and figure but she hasn't found it. 2 plus 2 continues to equal four.

So, more poetry until her own words come back. This one is by Stephen Dunn.

To a Terrorist

For the historical ache, the ache passed down
which finds its circumstance and becomes
the present ache, I offer this poem

without hope, knowing there's nothing,
not even revenge, which alleviates
a life like yours. I offer it as one

might offer his father's ashes
to the wind, a gesture
when there's nothing else to do.

Still, I must say to you:
I hate your good reasons.
I hate the hatefulness that makes you fall

in love with death, your own included.
Perhaps you're hating me now,
I who own my own house

and live in a country so muscular,
so smug, it thinks its terror is meant
only to mean well, and to protect.

Christ turned his singular cheek,
one man's holiness another's absurdity.
Like you, the rest of us obey the sting,

the surge. I'm just speaking out loud
to cancel my silence. Consider it an old impulse,
doomed to become mere words.

The first poet probably spoke to thunder
and, for a while, believed
thunder had an ear and a choice.

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...