Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Inside out


INSIDE OUT. Above is a pic of Irvine Valley College’s once majestic A300 building, which is now surrounded by a chain link fence, perhaps in preparation for yet another round of remodeling. Years ago, one of Raghu Mathur’s favorite hires, Dean Howard Gensler, decided to turn the building inside out. (You’ll recall that Gensler was the “brains” behind the infamous “Howard Hilton” fiasco.) The building has been a wreck ever since. Now look at it.


RUIZ OFF TO NEW YORK ON CCC'S DIME. Allegedly, Frank Mickadeit has another column about Armando Ruiz (Colleges hurting; Ruiz off to Big Apple: The Trustee sticks to his travel plans, even as the budget tanks), but, when I go there, there ain’t no there there. I left a comment: “Hey dude, where’s your column?”


MADDOW VS. FRUM. Yesterday, National Review Online’s David Frum was a guest on Rachel Maddow’s (excellent) MSNBC show to discuss some recent remarks he had made about John McCain. For some reason, Frum seemed determined to put down Maddow and her new program, calling it childish. In the ensuing discussion, Maddow bested him, I think. Wadda creep.



JOHN McCAIN'S MAN PHIL GRAMM IS CULPRIT #7. Anderson Cooper continues his series on the “10 Most Wanted: Culprits of the Collapse.”

Tonight’s culprit is none other than former McCain chief economic advisor Phil Gramm:


Keith Olbermann hits the nail on the head today re McCain's scary/moronic followers:


The Morning Reading: the old lion

Christopher Hitchens has some things to say as he announces his endorsement of Obama in Slate:

"Anyone with eyes to see and ears to hear had to feel sorry for the old lion on his last outing and wish that he could be taken somewhere soothing and restful before the night was out. The train-wreck sentences, the whistlings in the pipes, the alarming and bewildered handhold phrases—"My friends"—to get him through the next 10 seconds. I haven't felt such pity for anyone since the late Adm. James Stockdale humiliated himself as Ross Perot's running mate. And I am sorry to have to say it, but Stockdale had also distinguished himself in America's most disastrous and shameful war, and it didn't qualify him then and it doesn't qualify McCain now.

The most insulting thing that a politician can do is to compel you to ask yourself: "What does he take me for?" Precisely this question is provoked by the selection of Gov. Sarah Palin. I wrote not long ago that it was not right to condescend to her just because of her provincial roots or her piety, let alone her slight flirtatiousness, but really her conduct since then has been a national disgrace. It turns out that none of her early claims to political courage was founded in fact, and it further turns out that some of the untested rumors about her—her vindictiveness in local quarrels, her bizarre religious and political affiliations—were very well-founded, indeed. Moreover, given the nasty and lowly task of stirring up the whack-job fringe of the party's right wing and of recycling patent falsehoods about Obama's position on Afghanistan, she has drawn upon the only talent that she apparently possesses.

It therefore seems to me that the Republican Party has invited not just defeat but discredit this year, and that both its nominees for the highest offices in the land should be decisively repudiated, along with any senators, congressmen, and governors who endorse them."

To read the rest, as Rebel Girl has given you only the heart as Marc Cooper called it, click here.

Why students lean left: peers

In this morning’s Inside Higher Ed:
Students get more liberal while they’re in college — but a new study suggests that their peers, not professors, seem to be the reason why, according to the Associated Press. The study, by the Higher Education Research Institute at the University of California at Los Angeles, finds evidence to back up the assertion that many students adopt more liberal positions on many issues from their freshman to their junior year. But the researchers attribute the shifts more to students’ exposure to left-leaning peer groups than to the views of their professors, the wire service reports.

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...