Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Nexus

Red Emma and crew read aloud words that some wish to suppress


Sometimes, things come together in surprising ways. For instance, today, DtB contributor and former Irvine Valley College adjunct Red Emma was among the organizers of a read-a-thon at UC Irvine to celebrate National Banned Books Week.

What’s that? Well, it’s “an event aimed at raising awareness about the importance of ensuring availability of those often unpopular books targeted for bans at many public and private schools.” Or so said the OC Reg (O.C. observes Banned Books Week).

As it turns out, OC is a book-banning hotspot! The Reg describes the many Neanderthalic episodes of book bannery (or near book bannery) in OC in recent years, including this incident in 2001:
[A] Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustee wanted to bar high school students in Advanced Placement English classes from reading David Guterson's "Snow Falling on Cedars" and Isabel Allende's "Of Love and Shadows." Trustee Wendy Leece said they contained graphic sexual scenes; the award-winning novels were later OK'd in a 5-2 vote.
Wendy Leece? Why, that would be one of the hosts of Don Wagner’s “kick-off” campaign event tonight at the Balboa Bay Club! Don, the President of the SOCCCD board of trustees, is running for State Assembly. Don is the peevish fellow who, a few years ago, led the SOCCCD board in ending the colleges’ memberships in the American Library Association (ALA). They were, he said, a bunch of “liberal busybodies.”

But wait! Isn’t the ALA the very organization that is closely associated with National Banned Book Week? Yessireebob! Indeed, the Reg helpfully notes that “The American Library Association keeps … statistics of book challenges each year.”

All these connections! What do they mean? Not a goddam thing, I’m sure.

Red, aka Andrew, was interviewed by the Reg:
"A lot of these books appear on these 'hit parades' because they have naughty words or ideas many people don't like," said Andrew Tonkovich…. Tonkovich read from "The Bell Jar" from author Sylvia Plath.

"We just want to help people resist the foolishness of censorship and bans for many of these books," he said.
That’s our Red. Naughty words indeed.

Matt Coker on Don and Tom

The "Ronald Reagan Board Room"? What the F***?!

Looks like the OC Weekly’s Matt Coker has rediscovered our boy Don Wagner:

Don Wagner Kicks Off Assembly Bid With a Little Help From His Far-Out, Far-Right Friends.

And he ain’t happy.

Writes Matt,
Irvine's Don Wagner, the hard-core conservative president of the South Orange County Community College District Board of Trustees, kicks off his bid for state Assembly this evening with the help from one of the other hard-core conservatives on the college board's dais, "Chairman Emeritus of the Orange County Republican Party Central Committee" Tom Fuentes.

Wagner hopes to win the GOP nomination for the 2010 race for the Assembly seat currently filled by Chuck DeVore (R-Irvine)….

Among the conservative heavy hitters the Wagner campaign lists as supporters are: Chapman University law school dean John Eastman; Orange County Board of Education president Ken Williams; Williams' fellow trustee Alexandria Coronado; Irvine Values Coalition president Scott Peotter; and frequent state/municipal campaigner, OC Young Republican for life and newspaper columnist Jim Righeimer.

But it is Fuentes, the "Don Wagner for Assembly Campaign Kick-Off Party special guest and master of ceremonies," who will be tonight's star attraction.

After wreaking havoc for years as head honcho of the OC GOP, the dapper fancyman of Lake Forest was relieved of his command in favor of former Assemblyman Scott "Slime" Baugh. Fuentes landed an appointment to the South County college board when suspected Nazi sympathizer Steven J. Frogue resigned in 2000.



Less controversial than Frogue, who managed not only to bring out the worst in people but the worst people period, Fuentes has managed to rile several on the college district's two campuses, Saddleback and Irvine Valley community colleges.



He tried to stop the Spain study abroad program in 2005 after the European country's leaders withdrew soliders from the Bush Administration's Iraq War. Fuentes has also openly damned from his board seat faculty academic senates, campus worker unions and the college accreditation process.



Close board watchers say he has pledged undying support to divisive Chancellor and board toadie Raghu Mathur. Oh, and "the Lord," who former monastery enrollee and onetime Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange spokesman Fuentes frequently cites in quasi-sectarian board prayers and invocations. Wagner also referenced "the Lord" at the most recent board meeting. 


Can we get an amen from the chemistry lab?



Both Fuentes boy toys—that would be the Christ and the chancellor—got a run for their tidings during the Chancellor's Opening Session in August, when Mathur showed a video of images accompanied by the tune "God Bless the U.S.A." The collage ended with the words, "Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you—Jesus Christ and the American Soldier. One died for your soul, the other for your freedom."


The chancellor of what is ostensibly a public institution welcoming all faiths (or none at all) defended showing the video at the subsequent board meeting, and Fuentes and Wagner said nothing to indicate they were displeased with the spectacle.


Though generally more polished, sophisticated and affable than Fuentes, Wagner's run on the board since 1998 has also included some controversial moments, such as when he attacked the American Library Association as "liberal busybodies." The practicing attorney successfully persuaded his fellow board members to cease the colleges' memberships in the ALA.



Though the Wagner campaign website boasts about the candidate's courtroom acumen, he didn't display legal smarts after faculty members complained at a board meeting that Mathur and other trustees were violating their rights when Wagner essentially said, "So sue us." They did—and won in court.



Of course, that was taxpayer money Wagner was playing with, not a client's, so his campaign doesn't have to count it against him.

Speaking of non-brilliant plays, Wagner at first joined Fuentes in criticizing the college accrediting agency to the point where the district nearly lost accreditation, something that would have proved devastating for students attending schools aimed at feeding major colleges and universities. "To his credit, he regretted this and worked hard to satisfy the accreds in the end," a board watchdog said of Wagner. [That would be me. -RB]

By the by, you read that correctly above the photo of Wagner that began this post. What's supposedly a nonpartisan panel meets in something they've dubbed the "Ronald Reagan Board of Trustees Room." Amazing.

Wagner's Assembly campaign website says he decided to run after becoming "frustrated" like so many Californians watching California's elected leaders "recklessly" commit the state "to spending programs we can't afford while ignoring badly needed reforms in the management of fiscal affairs."

"But rather than sitting on the sidelines, and with the encouragement of friends and neighbors, Don has decided to do something about it," the site explains. "That is why Don Wagner is running to serve in the California State Assembly."

Sacramento needs the type of "conservative, fiscally responsible leadership" Wagner has demonstrated on the school board, boasts his site. Um . . . yeah.

His Assembly kick-off party is scheduled from 6 to 7:30 p.m. on the patio at Duke's Place within the Balboa Bay Club in Newport Beach. Business attire, slicked-back hair and the tightest of underwear only, puh-leese.

And don't forget to pray. To the Lord! Sounds like we'd all better get used to that.

More on Don Wagner’s BBC “kick-off” event

Marcia, Dave, John, and Bill come out to support ASSEMBLY candidate DON!

Yesterday, Allan Bartlett of Red County reported on the 70th Assembly District race.

Evidently, early on, Tustin’s Jerry Amante announced his plan to run for the 70th AD (which includes Irvine and environs), but his efforts to raise money have been disappointing.

Republicans like Don Wagner and Irvine businessman Shawn Black saw their chance. But, according to Bartlett, Wagner “has the momentum … with his endorsement recently by the [OC Young Republicans], Atlas PAC, Tom Fuentes, and many other notable conservative activists in OC.”

In yesterday's post, Bartlett mention’s tonight’s event at the Balboa Bay Club with Tom Fuentes as MC. He adds a list of “hosts”:
Family Action PAC, O.C.Y.R’s, Mark Bucher, Tammy Bullard, Dr. Alexandria Coronado, John Dodd, John Eastman, Jeremy Gray, Matt Harper, Bill Hewitt, David Lang, Hon. Wendy Leece, Lee Lowrey, Hon. Mike McGill, Marcia Milchiker, Kevin Muldoon, Scott Peotter, Atlas Pac, Jim Righeimer, Larry Smith, Serge Tomassian, Tim Whitacre, Hon. John Williams, Dr. Ken Williams, Phil Yarbrough
As you know, SOCCCD Trustee Bill Jay announced his support for Don at the September board meeting. Judging by the above list, trustees Marcia Milchiker, John Williams, and Dave Lang are on board, too.

And Bill Hewitt.

Admission is free. —“Hosted Cigars, No-Host Bar, and Music”

Note:

Back in 1993, Mark Bucher and Jim Righeimer (along with Frank Ury) fought for a school voucher initiative, which failed. After that, with money from Howard Ahmanson, Jr., the three founded Tustin's Education Alliance, a conservative "back to basics" group. In 1998, Ury, Righeimer, and Bucher authored the so-called “campaign reform initiative." You’ll recall that Proposition 226 would have required “all labor unions to obtain annual written permission from union members before allocating any dues for political action or political education efforts” (Cosmo Garvin).

Not long ago, at a board meeting, several trustees reported their attendance of an EA event. Don Wagner, evidently, is on EA's board.

Bill Hewitt, an IVC counselor, is an officer of the SOCCCD faculty union (Faculty Association/CCA/CTA).

Watch "silver tongue" Don in action

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Hand sanitizer. Right.

Today, members of the campus community (at Irvine Valley College) received an email. It included a brief letter from IVC Police Chief Will Glen.

In the letter, Chief Glen reminds us that the college is drafting a plan to prepare for an outbreak of the Swine Flu. He offers some prevention advice from the CDC—cover your mouth, wash your hands, stay home if you’re ill—which, he explains, is displayed on posters all over campus.

Then comes the fun part:
we are issuing individual bottles of ‘hand sanitizer’ to each employee as a reminder to wash your hands.
I checked my mailbox and, sure enough, it contained a bottle of hand sanitizer.

It would be ridiculous to suppose that one can combat Swine Flu with bottles of hand sanitizer. But it is not ridiculous, I suppose, to offer these tokens as a reminder.

I guess.

I asked one of our scientists if the hand sanitizer works. “Yes,” she said, “but you’ve pretty much got to keep using it every time you touch anything.”

Oh.

Yeah, but it’s a reminder, a reminder to keep washing your hands. As I understand it, you’ve pretty much gotta keep doing that all day to do any good.

Hand-washing. I bet it would be more effective to wear a button that said, “Screw Swine Flu.”

Why always the silly gestures? I don't mean IVC and Swine Flu. I mean us, always, all the time.


“We cut 'em in half with a machine gun and give 'em a Band-Aid.”

"Nazi youth rally" at the Balboa Bay Club

Earlier today, I received an email from a reporter informing me that he had just received a press release concerning Don Wagner and Tom Fuentes. He joked that, according to the release, Fuentes is “hosting a ‘Wagner for Assembly’ Nazi youth rally at the Balboa Bay Club on Wednesday night.”
He asked me for some background on these two.

I mentioned all of this to Rebel Girl, who then found the following “upcoming event” listed at the OC Republican Party’s website:
Wednesday, 9/30/09
5:30 PM
Special Event

Campaign Kick-off Party For Don Wagner for Assembly
Featuring Special Guest Tom Fuentes, Chairman Emeritus, Republican Party Of Orange County
Where: Balboa Bay Club & Resort, Newport Beach
You are cordially invited to a campaign kick-off party for Don Wagner, candidate for State Assembly, with special guest and Master of Ceremonies Tom Fuentes, Chairman Emeritus of the Republican Party of Orange County. Reception will be held on Wednesday, September 30, 2009 at 5:30pm at the Balboa Bay Club on the patio at Duke's. To RSVP or if you have any questions, please feel free to contact Desiree at 949-794-7204 or desiree@dezandassociates.com.

This, of course, is further evidence that Don Wagner has sold his soul to the devil, aka Tom Fuentes. Nothing good can come of it. Frogs will soon fill the sky, pumpkin juice will replace the seas.

Rebel Girl also found this announcement:


Friday, 10/16/09
5:00 PM
Special Event
A Poolside Birthday Party Smoker
In Honor Of Tom Fuentes

Where: The Radisson Hotel, Newport Beach

You Are Cordially Invited To


A Poolside Birthday Party Smoker


In Honor Of


TOM FUENTES
Chairman Emeritus of the Republican Party of Orange County

Senior Fellow, The Claremont Institute


With Special Guests


BRUCE HERSCHENSOHN
Former California Republican Nominee for the United States Senate


And


SIR ELDON GRIFFITHS

Former Conservative Party Member of the House of Commons of the British Parliament


At The Opening Night Of The

2009 Western Conservative Political Action Conference 

...


The Radisson Hotel
...

Complimentary Cigars

No Host Bar

Music 

Regnery Books Door Prizes 

...

Attire: Business Casual


RSVP: conservative@westernCPAC.com

Rebel Girl's Poetry Corner: "burning the world to live in it is wrong"

If Rebel Girl were teaching this semester, rather than sabbatical-ing, she would probably share this poem in a creative writing class and fashion an assignment inspired from it, using a speech as the form and premise.

From the September 28 edition of The New Yorker:



A Speech to the Garden Club of America
by Wendell Berry

(With thanks to Wes Jackson and in memory of Sir Albert Howard and Stan Rowe.)

Thank you. I’m glad to know we’re friends, of course;
There are so many outcomes that are worse.
But I must add I’m sorry for getting here
By a sustained explosion through the air,
Burning the world in fact to rise much higher
Than we should go. The world may end in fire
As prophesied—our world! We speak of it
As “fuel” while we burn it in our fit
Of temporary progress, digging up
An antique dark-held luster to corrupt
The present light with smokes and smudges, poison
To outlast time and shatter comprehension.
Burning the world to live in it is wrong,
As wrong as to make war to get along
And be at peace, to falsify the land
By sciences of greed, or by demand
For food that’s fast or cheap to falsify
The body’s health and pleasure—don’t ask why.
But why not play it cool? Why not survive
By Nature’s laws that still keep us alive?
Let us enlighten, then, our earthly burdens
By going back to school, this time in gardens
That burn no hotter than the summer day.
By birth and growth, ripeness, death and decay,
By goods that bind us to all living things,
Life of our life, the garden lives and sings.
The Wheel of Life, delight, the fact of wonder,
Contemporary light, work, sweat, and hunger
Bring food to table, food to cellar shelves.
A creature of the surface, like ourselves,
The garden lives by the immortal Wheel
That turns in place, year after year, to heal
It whole. Unlike our economic pyre
That draws from ancient rock a fossil fire,
An anti-life of radiance and fume
That burns as power and remains as doom,
The garden delves no deeper than its roots
And lifts no higher than its leaves and fruits.
~

Monday, September 28, 2009

In-Goo we trust


Evidently, the Reg’s Gary Robbins is paid by the word. Tonight, he asks: Is it wise for Chapman to recruit aging star professors?
About two years ago, Chapman University recruited Vernon Smith, who’d won the Nobel Prize in economics. Last year, Chapman hired Yakir Aharonov, who has been named by Thomson Reuters as one of the seven most likely people to win the Nobel in physics this year….

Smith, 82, and Aharonov, 76, are still active, but they’re in the twilight of their long careers. Major research schools, like UC Irvine, rarely hire eminent figures who are over the age of 60….

We’d like to know what you think of Chapman’s recruiting practices.
Really? You wanna know?

Inside Higher Ed has a story today about political correctness: A Tale of Two Posters.
At Tufts University, … Two weeks ago, In-Goo Kwak, a freshman studying international relations and an immigrant from South Korea, put up a series of posters around his dormitory parodying the campaign poster of Alice Pang, another freshman of Asian descent who was running for the Tufts Community Union Senate. Kwak was not actually running for a student government position, but posted the parody next to Pang’s at the encouragement of his dorm mates….

Pang’s poster included the campaign slogan, “small person, big ideas,” with the exclamation “hurrah!” next to her portrait. Kwak’s parody poster looks strikingly similar in design to Pang’s and includes the slogan “squinty eyes, big vision.” Next to Kwak’s portrait is the word "kimchi!" – a traditional Korean dish. Additionally, where Pang's poster read "vote on Thursday," Kwak's said, “Prease vote me! I work reary hard!” in deliberately broken English….

“Though this was a satire of [Pang’s] poster, this was not a personal insult in any way,” Kwak said. “I thought it would be funny to satire the oppressive environment of political correctness at Tufts. I think it’s unhealthy that people feel afraid to express their views. One of the Asians on my hall saw the poster and showed it all over campus and eventually the director of the Asian American Center contacted me, but not one of the students who found this offensive contacted me directly. Instead, they had someone else do it.”

Linell Yugawa… did send an e-mail to the entire Tufts community denouncing Kwak's parody, which she called “racist.”

“Many Asian/Asian Americans and individuals of other racial backgrounds have been angered, hurt, and offended by these posters,” Yugawa wrote in a letter co-signed by directors of other groups at the university, such as the Latino Center and the LGBT Center. “The posters not only mocked an authorized campaign poster, but used negative and racist stereotypes that correlate with the discrimination and dehumanization of Asians. These posters go beyond affecting one individual or group, but offend all who have an understanding of how racist stereotypes impact our lives.

The Tufts administration had a more reserved response to the matter, preferring to let student groups facilitate the discussion Kwak’s poster has stirred.

Kwak … said that he has since apologized to Pang, explaining the purpose behind his poster, and that she graciously accepted his apology. Pang did not respond to requests for comment.
...
“People are so afraid to talk about this or to express their support of my poster because they’re afraid of getting in trouble with one of the groups on campus,” Kwak said. “And this is happening on a college campus, where people should be comfortable sharing their views. I mean, I was [comfortable]. I put my name on the poster in big letters. There’s this taboo against the discussion of racial issues. I’m not going to be afraid to talk about them, and I’m not going to back down.”….

Sunday, September 27, 2009

The consolation of cats



TigerAnn late this morning. She insisted on visiting. Then she insisted on going outside, where she hunted flying insects and lizards. I let that go on for a while.



TigerAnn is sitting nearly on my keyboard even as I type. She thinks she can wear me down. Not so. She can be bold. Occasionally, she places her paw upon my keyboard, wreaking digital havoc.


Max, nearly two years ago. He is now an adult and he's taken an interest in biology.



Max again. A close friend of Curious George, I'm told.

The title of this post is an allusion to Boethius' The Consolation of Philosophy





I really like the Glenn Beck impersonation. And Keith Morrison. Whoa!

Friday, September 25, 2009

Is there intelligence in America? Inconclusive

Physicist Bob Park is surging with peevitude again. “Last week,” he writes,
Senate hearings were held asking whether cell phones cause brain cancer. Brian Walsh, writing for Time, described the outcome as "inconclusive." A collective groan rose from the nation’s physicists.
A groan? Whence groanage?

Bob reminds us that, 17 years ago, a fellow named David Reynard appeared on Larry King Live, explaining that he was suing the cell phone industry for causing his wife’s fatal brain cancer. Naturally, Larry found Reynard’s complaint compelling.

Larry, albeit likable and a snappy dresser, is a knucklehead. Reynard was plainly committing a fallacy, an old chestnut called “post hoc ergo propter hoc.” In Reynard’s unmicrowaved mind, his wife held that phone against her head and then got cancer. So there you go.

“That’s logic!”

Bob points out, however, that

all known cancer agents act by breaking chemical bonds, producing mutant strands of DNA. It would be like suing me for hitting someone with a rock thrown across the Potomac River. …[M]icrowave photons can't break chemical bonds. Not until you get up to the near ultraviolet, about 10,000 times more energetic than microwaves, are photons capable of causing cancer.
Bob links us to an old editorial of his (Cellular Telephones and Cancer (2001)) in which he reported that
A beautifully designed, nationwide, epidemiologic study of cell phone use and cancer has been carried out in Denmark. … The study included all of the nearly half a million users of cellular telephones in Denmark during the period from 1982 through 1995. .... The results "do not support the hypothesis of an association between use of these telephones and tumors of the brain or salivary gland, leukemia, or other cancers." Other recent epidemiologic studies of cellular telephone use and cancer … although less powerful, report similar findings.

OK, so here’s the thing. Cell phones suck, they really do. And people should stop yapping on them while driving.

But there’s no reason whatsoever to think they cause brain cancer. There is no mechanism to explain why they would cause cancer. Heck, there isn’t even any epidemiological evidence that they cause cancer.

Nevertheless, last week, there were Senate hearings about cell phones and cancer.

Idjits.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

So Damn Happy (Red Emma)

(POSTED by Rebel Girl but WRITTEN by Red Emma!)


The title of today’s Red Emma post is the name of a favorite Loudon Wainwright song. You should hear it. Maybe Chunk or Rebel Girl can teach me how to link to songs on this here blog.


Because I didn’t want to risk getting too happy about today’s walk-out, strike, picket line and joyous labor demonstrations at UC Irvine, I purposely tuned in — as I occasionally do to make sure that I stay with the equilibrium of constant anger and predictable disappointment — to the odious “Frank Pastore Show” on right-wing religious radio station and all-purpose huckster headquarters KKLA 99.5 FM. The silly topic was Frank’s usual fare, this time about how the answer to too much pernicious premarital sex among Christians, especially young men and women (go figure) was to revisit the marriage trend. Stay with it. Here it comes: Frank, brilliant thinker that he is, suggested that, yes, Christians just get married earlier so that, you know, they can make the beast with two backs in the perfect sight of Yahweh.


Perfect, indeed, and I was almost where I need to be, recalibration-wise. I waited for the other shoe to drop, because of course he’d have to bring up dowries and old men buying young girls and marriage as a vehicle of tribal property ownership, right? But soon arrived an advertisement — these always better than the show itself — and, reliably, I got my necessary dose of sobering real-life socio-existential realignment. Frank invited all of us listeners to a “prison ministries” event featuring felon (“obstruction of justice”) and shitbag Chuck Colson, Nixon’s hatchet man. The event is co-sponsored by, yes, just what I was waiting for, Christian Lawyers of America. That did it. Those four words, and I was fine again. Suddenly all was back where it needed to be, everything right (wing) with the world, and so I switched over to public radio KPCC just in time to hear Adolfo Guzman-Lopez’s reporting from the events at UCI.

Now I felt better. And by that I mean worse. Hooray.

Disorientation
At the rally between the flag poles (California Bear Republic, Stars and Stripes) on the steps adjacent the Chancellor’s rose garden, I was thrilled to distribute buttons and union literature and pass around to friends and colleagues, political comrades and a few students brand-new copies of the Radical Student Union’s (RSU) nifty anti-manual, the UCI Disorientation Guide. And, yes, friends, there is now a Radical Student Union at UC Irvine. This is to my knowledge the first such guide available on campus, and certainly the first radical anything in some time. You should get a copy. It’s fun.

I was also thrilled that so many students, faculty, staff turned out to support the UPTE strike. I was thrilled that the UPTE strikers marched around and yelled. I was thrilled that my own Lecturers and Librarians unit was well-represented in our spokesperson, who offered a righteous piece. Maybe I am easily thrilled. (See above, for regular antidote to unwelcome thrillingness.)

More Disorientation
Anyway, I chatted briefly with Law School Dean Erwin the C. He took a union button and continued being surrounded by young, handsome, smart, apparently progressive first-year young women and men law students at the new law school that Bren built. I reminded all of them to attend next week’s American Library Association Banned Books Week “Read-Out” at the Student Center Terrace. The rally started. The nut started yelling. There is a mentally ill man who shows up for every event I seem to have something to do with. Maybe we should agree, for everybody’s sake. I, Red Emma, will cease organizing events if you, Crazy Dude, will not come to them. I am not sure if he is even a student. Today he stood and shouted “No unions,” which is a weird thing to yell at a bunch of people in unions except that he wasn’t making a statement about their existence but, naturally, against their existence. Everybody knows this because he also yelled, helpfully, “Cut taxes,” so that maybe he was less insane than just your average Libertarian Fox News-loving OC Republican. Same thing, right? Ha, ha.

The Actual Rally
I missed most of it, as I had to run to class at 12:15. Reports from others attending suggest the numbers swelled to seven or eight hundred. On my way down Ring Road I counted at least five different so-called Christian groups, everything from Campus Crusade to Christian Koreans. I am an asshole, so I stopped and gave them all fliers for Banned Books Week “Read-Out.” I stopped, briefly, at a fraternity booth, all the young men dressed in their matching t-shirts and standing in front of the scary letters with their arms crossed as, a hundred yards away, actual real life was occurring. Did I mention I am an asshole? I went up to each of them and asked if their fraternity, Hubba Bubba Rubba if I read it right, would be interested in endorsing the event and would they consider reading out loud from one of the historically banned, censored, challenged books, say, The Catcher in the Rye or Beloved?

I think it was the great, late Utah Phillips, activist and Golden Voice of the Great Southwest who said, famously, “You’ve got to mess with people.”

In today’s paper Gary Robbins of the Register so underestimates the size of the crowd today — who was marching, and who they were — that I suspect he might have been at an altogether different event, perhaps the rally by Hubba Bubba Rubba and the other “Greeks” in favor of intellectual freedom, civic literacy and mutual aid.  - RE



(photo by Adolfo Guzman-Lopez of KPCC)

The September meeting of the SOCCCD board of trustees—LIVE from the Ronnie Reagan room!


6:22

[Video now available here.] Hey, it's 6:22, and the September meeting of the SOCCCD board of trustees is about to begin. Yup, I see Raghu: he's confabbin' with the student trustee. Her name is Bi'Anca. She's chirpy! (See Tracy's Board Meeting Highlights.)

Don's scratchin' his head. Tom is wandering around like a geezer at an old folks home. Now he's playin' with one of the twelve or so flags up there. One of the ten (yup, I counted 'em) U.S. flags isn't straight enough for 'im. Tug. He's fixed it!

John Williams looks as pleased as punch. Don't know why. God, he's stupid.

Gotta go! They've commenced legislatin'!

6:27

So, Mr. Clerk, what actions were taken in the closed session?

“We’ve accomplished nothing,” reported Tom.

"And he means that," muttered Don. Laughter.

6:32


Fuentes is yammering about the Part-Time prof of the year..... Big applause.

They love these awards and resolutions... This is gonna take a while. Later!
...
Did I mention that, during his invocation, Don told the Lord that ours is the "freest nation on the planet"? Our soldiers, he told the Godster, are “doing Your work in spreading liberty and freedom.” Really. He actually said that.

Bill Jay got all excited about Don's run for Assembly. He's supporting Don! Don got all teary-eyed. (Well, no.)

Tom Fuentes gave his report. At one point, he noted that "Bill Hewitt even gave me a hug!" Wow.

Once again, Williams had no report. That's a great strategy, John: when in doubt, shuddup. Marcia went on and on about some waterfall. I don't know what she was saying. Good hair though.

Chancellor Raghu P. Mathur seemed to love a 9-11 speech that Bob Cosgrove had given. He even went to lunch with Bob. Gosh. What's going on?

7:19

Nancy Padberg pulled item 5.16 from the consent calendar. It's a request for the Orlando, FL conference. (No doubt, the request was made by Orlando Boy--John Williams.) Nancy explained that she raises this objection every year concerning this conference. It is very expensive, and she plans to vote "no."

That generated no discussion at all. In the end, only Nancy voted against the Orlando request.

What's the matter with these people?



7:22

Item 6.4 concerned some board policies, including those governing smoking. Don got all bent out of shape about restricting adults and their smoking. (He was having one of his Libertarian spasms.) We should restrict adults no more than is required by the law, he declared.

Dave Lang expressed his desire that our colleges be no-smoke zones. Tom said something about making exceptions for cigars. Har har.

Man, they sure went through items fast! The basic aid thing went through without comment (IVC was upped to $1.7 million, I think, when we weren't lookin').

Reports from governance groups, etc., were unremarkable.

Lisa Davis Allen reported for the first time as the IVC Academic Senate Prez. That went well.

Bob C recognized Wendy G for her years of service. Bob was pleased that, owing to our squirreling away so much basic aid moola, we can do some super-cool hiring. A real opportunity, he said.

Haggerty of faculty union: blah, blah, blah...

Sheesh, the meeting was over by 7:40! I'm outa here!

Greed is not good


Check out Matt Coker’s preview of the UCI “walkout” today: UC Irvine Faculty, Students, Staff to Teach In, Turn On, Walk Out Today.

Ah, yes, then there’s Manohla Dargis’ review of Michael Moore’s new movie, Capitalism: a Love Story (Greed Is Good? He Begs to Differ):

As it happens, the most galvanizing words in the movie come not from the current president but from [Franklin D.] Roosevelt, who in 1944 called for a “second bill of rights,” asserting that “true individual freedom cannot exist without economic security and independence.” The image of this visibly frail president, who died the next year, appealing to our collective conscience — and mapping out an American future that remains elusive — is moving beyond words. And chilling: “People who are hungry and out of a job are the stuff of which dictatorships are made.” It’s a brilliant moment of cinema both for the man delivering the speech and for Mr. Moore, who smartly realized that he’d found one other voice that needed to be as loud as his own.
Don’t forget: board meeting tonight.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Odd exits, jeering louts, sunny days

Religious protesters sometimes bring out the worst in students (Photo by 13 Stoploss)

Here are a couple of curious stories about one-time SOCCCD denizens.

KATHIE HODGE:


The Fullerton College Hornet reports today that “Dr. Sam Schauerman was approved at last night’s NOCCCD Board of Trustees meeting to become the interim president of Fullerton College….” (Former administrator makes return to FC.)

He’ll be taking over the job from current President Kathleen Hodge—who, you’ll recall, was the Chancellor of the SOCCCD during a stormy period eight or nine years ago.

According to the Hornet, “Hodge will be relieved from her duties as president and will start her new career of Vice Chancellor of Instruction of the NOCCCD to work on the development of a new Education and Facilities Master Plan after the six years she served as FC president.”

Gosh, they make it sound like a death sentence.

JESS CRAIG:

Meanwhile, over at Orange Coast College, Jess Craig, the VP of Student Services—he used to do that at IVC—was placed on paid administrative leave by the Coast Community College District board. That happened last week. (Jess Craig put on leave.)

What’s that all about? Didn’t Craig recently announce his plans to retire at the end of the year? Yup.

It gets worse. According to yesterday’s Coast Report,
In addition to the administrative leave, sources said the district has launched an investigation into complaints about Craig apparently voiced by students. Those complaints were sent to the district board but the exact reason for the investigation hasn’t been released.
There’ve been lots of strange exits going on over there in the past year or so. Have any of them been explained? Don't think so.

UNPOPULAR RELIGIOUS PROTESTS:



FULLERTON COLLEGE:

Earnest right-wing religious protesters are making the rounds these days. According to today's Fullerton College Hornet, “Members of the non-profit group, Survivors of the Abortion Holocaust, appeared once again on … campus on Monday.” (Removed group repeats its ranting)

They brought their big posters—you know, the ones with graphic photos. And, as their moniker implies, they make a big point of comparing abortions in this country to the Holocaust.

Naturally, this pisses some people off.

SADDLEBACK COLLEGE:

A right-wing, sign-wielding regular has been showing up at our colleges (in the SOCCCD) again (Students clash with religious demonstrator). According to the Saddleback College Lariat, in-your-face demonstrator Paul Mitchell is back with his obnoxious sign (“girly-men” are going to hell, sex is bad) and bombastic rants, instigating unfortunate scenes:
A crowd surrounded Mitchell as he stood on the quad. Several students began heckling Mitchell as he spoke, interrupting his speech on how alcohol and sexual relations were sinful. At one point a student, Jeff Deppe, 20, undecided, jumped up beside Mitchell and held up his binder, which featured a large photograph of marijuana on the cover. … The crowd continued to jeer Mitchell and cheer Deppe as Deppe shouted, “smoke weed!”
I love the detail: “undecided.”

But something tells me that Deppe and his friends are, well, louts.

IVC:

A similar scene unfolded today at IVC. At about noon, I walked near the vast grassy zone in front of the Student Services Building and spotted Mitchell, his big nasty sign, and a crowd of jeering students.

It didn’t feel right. I walked over and witnessed a semi-ugly scene of students jeering and taunting the guy. Pretty soon, students were jumping up next to him for photographs. I gave 'em a death stare.

I talked to an administrator hoping to get a cop out there to keep things cool. I don’t know what happened next.

I've gotta say, the slightly mob-like quality of the student crowd was much uglier than Mitchell’s buffoonish routine. (I know: some of these kids just want to counter Mitchell's rhetoric, and perhaps they don't realize how dicey these confrontations can be.)

Hey, even Mitchell has a right to tell us what really matters to him. These kids don’t seem to understand that.

That’s not good. That's not good at all.

All photos by 13 Stoploss/Jason, Sept. '08. For more, see Paul at IVC and Paul at PCC



I'll take liberty, please.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Orders from on high


Must be great bein’ the king.
Gary Robbins reports that Chapman U’s ubiquitous (and annoying) President James Doti has “asked his faculty to make their classes tougher after alumni said in a survey that they wished that some of their course work had been more challenging.” (Chapman president: Make courses tougher.)

This happened at a faculty retreat last month. Or so said the student newspaper.

Chapman routinely surveys its alumni (reports Gary). Graduates rate how challenging their courses have been, and the score has slid from 3.98 (out of 5) in 2001 to 3.9 in 2007.

Doti notes that Chapman is more selective than it used to be, student-wise, and these new and improved students want tougher classes.

The President was asked what faculty might do:
Doti said faculty could do such things as “assign more papers and expect better work in those papers.” In areas like economics, a teacher might “go from general questions about how the Federal Reserve works to asking how the fed would react in a specific setting if certain things happened. The students would have to do a lot more digging for information.”
No word on how Chapman’s faculty feel about all this.

I don’t know about Chapman, but, in general, standards have been sliding in higher ed for a long time. Recently, I noted recent reports on grade inflation and the curious factoid that, at many colleges (including those of the SOCCCD), Bs are more commonly awarded than C’s.

At our colleges, by far the most common grade awarded is an A.

Saddleback College’s PE division seems to give away A’s like M&Ms. I think a student in a Saddleback PE class has to show up to classes with a six-pack of Bud and then go sleep in the grass to get a C. If they just show up with the six-pack, that’s a B.

I’m just guessin’.

I’m all in favor of faculty recognizing the Great A Giveaway issue and then developing solutions. But it would piss me off if, suddenly, the college president (or, say, some old guy from the alumni association with a stack of survey forms) showed up and said, “Faculty, you need to get tougher. Go do that.”

There’s a right way and a wrong way to do these things. Orders from on high are almost always a bad idea.

I remember the spring of 2003, here at IVC. We learned that, according to the college’s Vice President of Instruction (a very wealthy fellow these days, it seems), faculty were to cease discussing the war in Iraq.

Just like that.

Later, we asked the VPI for clarification of the administration’s policy concerning discussion of the war. The VPI paused. He then advised us not to pursue clarification, for we might not like what we’d get.

He couldn't have given a worse answer.

Rebel Girl's Poetry Corner: "call it our life"

Here's a poem for the change in season and for other things too. The Santa Anas came back today, rising quickly this morning as if someone had simply found the switch and turned the wind on, hot and high. Leaves are falling from the trees that have held them all year, branches too. Summer's over. The Fire Watch folks are out in force in the canyons, with their orange vests and radios, binoculars slung about their necks. After all, the arsonist of October 2007 is still at large.

Here's a poem by Philip Levine, who lives and works in Fresno. Rebel Girl addressed an envelope to him the other day. He should be receiving it right about now.


Our Valley

We don't see the ocean, not ever, but in July and August
when the worst heat seems to rise from the hard clay
of this valley, you could be walking through a fig orchard
when suddenly the wind cools and for a moment
you get a whiff of salt, and in that moment you can almost
believe something is waiting beyond the Pacheco Pass,
something massive, irrational, and so powerful even
the mountains that rise east of here have no word for it.


You probably think I'm nuts saying the mountains
have no word for ocean, but if you live here
you begin to believe they know everything.
They maintain that huge silence we think of as divine,
a silence that grows in autumn when snow falls
slowly between the pines and the wind dies
to less than a whisper and you can barely catch
your breath because you're thrilled and terrified.


You have to remember this isn't your land.
It belongs to no one, like the sea you once lived beside
and thought was yours. Remember the small boats
that bobbed out as the waves rode in, and the men
who carved a living from it only to find themselves
carved down to nothing. Now you say this is home,
so go ahead, worship the mountains as they dissolve in dust,
wait on the wind, catch a scent of salt, call it our life.


We're going to hell in a handbasket

Tom DeLay is the world’s biggest a**hole


Homosexuality is inflicted on people!

Monday, September 21, 2009

Orlando Boy strikes again

I briefly perused the agenda for Thursday’s meeting of the SOCCCD board of trustees.

Item 5.16 caught my eye. It is “trustees’ requests for attending conferences.”

What with the economy tanking, you'd think these people would minimize conference plane travel in order to reduce costs. It does appear that most trustees have done exactly that.

But there is one request. It concerns the following conference:
Association of Governing Boards, ORLANDO, FLORIDA (3/19-3/23)
Naturally, the “Chancellor recommends that the BOT approve/ratify the Trustees’ requests….”

No information is provided concerning which trustee or trustees requested funds for the Orlando conference. The estimated cost: $2,000 per person.

Trustee John Williams, who has family in Florida, has attended several district-paid-for conferences in Florida--usually in Orlando.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

SOCCCD's six-figure pension club

Runyan and Heffernan take home the big bucks
Perhaps you saw it: the article in Friday’s Reg about the thousands of “educators” who receive six-figure pensions (3,000 retired educators take home six-figure pensions).
I guess we’re supposed to be horrified.

Naturally, the Reg zeroes in on former Capistrano Unified School District Superintendent James A. Fleming, who will be going to court soon concerning all sorts of alleged misconduct. Fleming, we’re told, “collects $141,331 a year in California state teacher retirement funds, on top of the $64,068 pension he collects from working 27 years in Florida.”

Even if convicted, he’ll be getting those checks.

Turns out Fleming is “one of 3,090 educators in the California State Teachers' Retirement System who make at least $100,000 a year in taxpayer-guaranteed public pensions….”

Meanwhile, the “average STRS pension is just $36,252….” Fewer than 1.6 percent receive six-figure money, but “they account for 5 percent of the $8 billion yearly payout.”

Why is this a problem? Because
Like the California Public Employees’ Retirement System, the teachers’ retirement system is running into trouble as workers retire to larger pensions that are increasingly difficult to fund. … Officials calculate that the system will face a $23 billion funding gap by 2039.
Well, you can read all about it, if you like. Prepare to get pissed off.

The Reg provides a link to the list of $100K club members per district: Which educators are in the $100k pension club?

I looked up the SOCCCD and found 18 names, including various retired administrators and some retired faculty.

Here’s the list:
WHITE, DENNIS W - $193,129.92
MCCULLOUGH, RICHARD D - $188,592.96
MACDOUGALL, ALLAN B - $156,314.16
BREWER, EVERETT L - $151,722.24
BUSCHE, DONALD L - $132,634.56
CORUM, SUSAN L - $130,564.08
BULLOCK, DIXIE L - $122,747.76
RUNYAN, MICHAEL G - $118,759.56
BRUMMEL, WILLIAM C - $116,683.44
ARNTSON, LEONA J - $112,998.60
CUNERTY, WILLIAM J - $112,701.36
HEFFERNAN, WILLIAM A - $110,381.40
MEYER, THOMAS S - $109,684.92
YATES, JAMES D - $107,233.44
NELSON, CALVIN L - $106,680.72
LOMBARDI, ROBERT A - $104,901.00
OTTA, WILLIAM E - $103,367.76
CALKINS, KEITH D - $100,601.76

Some of these people are known for their excellence. Some, however, are known for their incompetence or worse. Sheesh.


Note: I couldn't find a picture of Mike Runyan, so I searched the internet for someone who looks just like him. Runyan was a major player, along with the likes of IVC's Raghu Mathur, in the secretive and unscrupulous union "old guard" group that brought us the 1996 "board majority" of Frogue, Williams, Fortune, and Lorch. (The union had supported Frogue and Williams in '92; Lorch, with union support, was appointed a year or two later to replace a trustee who had died.)

In the election of '96, the union had supplied the notorious homophobic "same sex" fliers that secured the victory of Republicans Frogue, Williams, and Fortune (Lorch was not yet up for reelection).

This was one among several outrageous actions performed by union leadership at the time, including very misleading charges of misconduct against retiring trustee Harriett Walther.

After the '96 election, many faculty sought to reform the union, but Mr. Heffernan (see above) steadfastly defended Runyan and his group. If you see Bill, be sure to thank him for me.

Not long after the '96 election, some of the key old guard players secured administrative positions. Mathur, of course, became IVC's President. Ken Woodward became the dean of Saddleback's Liberal Arts division. Runyan became a Vice Chancellor.

Interestingly, during the election, Old Guard leadership repeatedly accused their faculty foes (including me) of hating teaching and seeking administrative positions.

Saturday, September 19, 2009

This time tomorrow



Sometimes, I feel as though I’m in a whirlwind. Don’t know what’s up, what’s down. Feeling a lot like that lately. Sheesh.

Before he became, well, uninspired, Ray Davies of the British band The Kinks wrote great songs. Among my favorites: “This Time Tomorrow,” which is about the road and feelings of confusion, isolation, and whirlwindery:

This time tomorrow, where will we be?
On a spaceship somewhere, sailing across an empty sea?
This time tomorrow, what will we know?
Will we still be here watching an in-flight movie show?

I’ll leave the sun behind me and
watch the clouds as they sadly pass me by
Seven miles below me
I can see the world and it ain’t so big at all

This time tomorrow, what will we see?
Fields full of houses, endless rows of crowded streets?

I don’t know where I’m going, I don’t want to see
I feel the world below me, looking up at me

Leave the sun behind me, and
watch the clouds as they sadly pass me by
And I’m in perpetual motion and
the world below doesn’t matter much to me

This time tomorrow, where will we be?
On a spaceship somewhere, sailing across an empty sea?

This time tomorrow, this time tomorrow….

Those are great lyrics, man. And don’t you love brother Dave’s harmonies? Dang!

Dave Davies was the band’s guitarist. He’s sometimes credited with inventing “heavy metal,” thanks to the tone he achieved—he cut his amplifier speaker with a razor blade—on 1964’s “You Really Got Me,” another classic, and other hard-rocking hits from '64-'65. (That song's "feel," though not its guitar sound, derived from the Kingsmen's "Louie Louie." Compare the guitar solos!)

I think Dave was a better singer than Ray, too. Check out Dave's "Death of a Clown" (Dave)



The two have never gotten along. They’ve split many times. And they've reuinited as often. (They seem terribly attached to their sister--several of their songs are about her.)

Ray and Dave and the other band members were pretty rowdy in the early days--often got into drunken fights on stage. In 1965, the Kinks had so offended the authorities in the U.S. that they were banned from touring here for several years.

That’s too bad. They made their best music during their “exile” (1965-1969). It was also the period in which they sold fewer and fewer records. By 1970, it looked like the end for the band, despite endless critical praise for their influential albums.

The album that includes “This Time Tomorrow”—Lola versus Powerman and the Money-go-round, Part One (1970)—changed all that. It had hits, including “Apeman”—and at least one enduring masterpiece, the great “Lola.”


The guy "singing" here was actually the drummer for the recording. His mom owned the rights to the "Kingsmen," and so he just took over vocals, causing the actual singer, Jack Ely, to quit
Evidently, Ray, taking his father's advice, very deliberately crafted Lola to be a hit. (It was not the kind of song he liked to write.) He needed a hit to save the band. Well, Lola was huge.

(Reminds me of a story about the Turtles, a great American band once produced by Ray. The label was frustrated that the band hadn't had a hit to equal "Happy Together." So the band's singer, Howard Kaylan, went to his hotel room and wrote what he took to be a mocking regurgitation of "Happy Together," namely, the hilarious and unique "Elenore." He thought it was crap. Elenore, of course, became a big hit. The thing is, it was a better song than "Happy Together"!)

"Lola" seemed to be the last gasp of greatness for the band. (Some identify their next album—Muswell Hillbillies—as the last of the great Kinks albums. Maybe.)

So, if you don’t know about the Kinks, check out their stuff up through about 1972. There’s some great music there. (Live early performance of "A Well Respected Man"; Last of the Steam-Powered Trains (1969); Waterloo Sunset; 1972 TV special; Victoria!; Dead End Street (Original Video); Berkley Mews.))

1966 ~ Face to Face
1967 ~ Something Else
1968 ~ The Village Green Preservation Society
1969 ~ Arthur
1970 ~ Lola
1971 ~ Muswell Hillbillies


Once again, brother Dave's harmonies are perfect.


Listen to the original recording with Dave on vocals. (It was written by Ray for the Animals, but they turned it down! Would have been perfect for 'em.)

Friday, September 18, 2009

Borlaug: "two opposing forces"

In his Friday Newsletter (What’s New), physicist Bob Parks notes the passing of Norman Borlaug, a “brilliant scientist” whose “work in agronomy led to the Green Revolution and saved perhaps 1 billion lives.”

Park quotes from Borlaug’s 1970 Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech:
"We are dealing with two opposing forces, the scientific power of food production and the biologic power of human reproduction. . . Man also has acquired the means to reduce the rate of human reproduction, effectively and humanely . . . but has not yet used this potential adequately. There can be no permanent progress in the battle against hunger until food production and population control unite in a common effort."

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Tom Fuentes, Caspers' "bagman"?

 
Was Tom Fuentes "Caspers' Bagman"?

     Yesterday, I noted Gustavo Arellano’s description of a 1972 incident involving former OC Supervisor Ronald Casperswho died mysteriously in a boating incident in 1974.
     Included among Caspers’ employees was one Thomas Fuentes—the future Chair of the OC GOP (from 1984-2004) and SOCCCD trustee (2000-present).
     Caspers’ curious death is the subject of rumors and theories and, according to Gustavo (I contacted him), no new light has been shed on it in recent years. One theory—I heard about it from a certain prominent OC political writer—is pretty hair-raising.
     Given Mr. Fuentes’ Karl Rovian reputation, I have always wanted to learn more about his mentor, Mr. Caspers. Evidently, he was the sort who would call Mexican Americans "banditos." Tsk Tsk.
     In the past, I have Googled Caspers’ name but have found little information about him. I briefly tried again today and did come across this obscure LA Times article from May 20, 1986:


     The article, written by political writer Lanie Jones, describes a half-hour show on KOCE featuring a debate by candidates for a congressional seat then held by five-term incumbent Robert E. Badham (Newport Beach). 

     Badham’s challengers appearing on the program included fellow Republican Nathan Rosenberg.* Presumably, Rosenberg new his way around the OC Republican scene:

     Early in the show there were angry exchanges between Badham and Rosenberg, with Rosenberg attacking Badham for allegedly missing votes and spending campaign funds improperly. Badham meanwhile defended his performance and his ties to President Reagan….
     At one point, Rosenberg, 33, a former Young Republicans president making his first bid for elective office, also took a swipe at Orange County Republican Chairman Thomas A. Fuentes, calling him "a bagman" for former county Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers.
     That remark came as KOCE host Jim Cooper asked Rosenberg about a Friday night incident that Fuentes had dubbed "Rosengate," in which a Rosenberg campaign worker, using a fictitious name, was discovered at a Badham campaign meeting.
     Rosenberg said his campaign worker "went on his own" to Badham headquarters, but then added, referring to Fuentes' term "Rosengate": "Coming from Ron Caspers' bagman, I don't feel bad about Mr. Fuentes' comment."     (From 1970 to 1974, Fuentes served as executive assistant to former Supervisor Caspers, who was lost at sea in a boating accident.)
     Asked later what he meant by "bagman," Rosenberg said. "I don't mean anything. It means exactly what it means. Look it up in Webster's dictionary. I said what I said."
     Told of Rosenberg's comment, Fuentes laughed, "I guess as we get closer to June 3, the heat is turned up in campaigns and people get more and more excited." Fuentes, who has been angry at Rosenberg since March for challenging a Republican incumbent, also called Rosenberg's remark "unfortunate."
Well, OK, Nate. I looked up “bagman” on my Mac’s dictionary. Here’s what I got:
bagman |ˈbagˌman; -mən|
noun ( pl. -men)
1
     Hmmm. Again, presumably, Rosenberg was very familiar with the (c. 1986) players of the OC Republican Party. So he would have known Fuentes and his, um, style. (By 1986, when this incident occurred, Fuentes would have been party chair for perhaps two years.)
     Caspers’ era would have ended a dozen years earlier, but, presumably, had Caspers been the sort who had use of a “bagman,” GOP players would be aware of that fact, especially if their new chairman was that very “bagman.”
     Ain’t politics fun?

     *NOTE:

     On the other hand, Mr. Rosenberg is est founder Werner Erhard's brother! See.

MORE ABOUT FUENTES:


BACK IN 1985:

     I came across this fascinating old Times article from January 07, 1985. Fuentes was about to start his gig as OC GOP chair:

[BELLY DANCERS?]
…Fuentes, occasionally dubbed the Prince of Orange for his exotic gourmet excursions that offer belly dancers and Broadway production numbers for dessert, is as much a part of the Orange County Republican Party as the familiar red, white and blue elephant on the party's letterhead.
[“I WORRY ABOUT HIM”]
"I admire Tom very, very much. Obviously I wish him well--and I worry about him," [four-term OC GOP Chair Lois] Lundberg said. "I don't mean this the way it sounds, but I think even my enemies would have to say that I did not lean, or let any segment take over or become dominant. I've had a 20-year history of politics in Orange County, where I've seen the right wing fight the left wing, and the moderates fight each of them, and they all fight each other, and the party go down the drain."
[OC: “ANCHOR TO THE RIGHT”]
[Fuentes:] "I see Orange County as an anchor to the right for the California ship of state, and winds gust from the left from West Los Angeles and San Francisco, and in our role as that anchor to the right, we have to be very vigilant about maintaining that [OC GOP] registration edge."

[FUENTES AND CASPERS]
Fuentes credits former Supervisor Ronald Caspers for much of his political rearing. He worked as an aide to Caspers for four years in the 1970s. Caspers' boat was lost at sea with 10 aboard--including Caspers --in 1974. (Fuentes would have been aboard the Shooting Star himself on the voyage to celebrate Caspers' reelection to a second term but decided against going at the last moment.) None of the 10 aboard was found.

Fuentes had hoped that he would be appointed to replace Caspers. When he discovered that there was a one-year residency requirement that he did not meet, he decided to carry out an earlier plan to enter a seminary and study for the priesthood.
A year later, Fuentes was back. "I found that the pace of seminary life and that monastic setting was just all too slow for me. I could never turn the motors off to slow down to that pace which is required to serve in the capacity of priesthood."
[FUENTES ♡ NIXON]
Memorabilia from Nixon's visit to the county in 1982 line the entire hallway outside his office. "I had the honor of being his host and master of ceremonies," he said. "He was so very gracious. I'll just read you this because it's my most treasured note. It says, 'Dear Tom, In the many years during which I have attended literally thousands of such affairs, I have never heard an emcee handle the occasion better. You were crisp, in charge, and inspirational. The party is fortunate to have your leadership, and I am greatful for your friendship. With warmest regards, R.N.'
Hit Man:

Guiding With an Iron Hand (LA Times) July 11, 1996

     Politics: Though he calls himself a cheerleader, Chairman Thomas A. Fuentes isn't afraid to play hardball.

REPUBLICAN REIGN. Orange County conservatives and the pursuit of power . LAST OF FIVE PARTS: A FIVE-DAY SERIES IN ORANGE COUNTY Sunday: 

     Orange County conservatives are spreading their influence throughout the state, providing muscle and money. Monday: A pair of Orange County millionaires are funding the conservative think tanks that are reshaping thought in Sacramento. Tuesday: Republican strategists are exploiting electoral apathy and mastering the science of electioneering, with swift and stunning results. Wednesday: Money for Orange County's GOP machinery no longer comes mostly from land developers but rather two ultraconservative businessmen drawn to politics by religious beliefs. Today: Orange County's leading Republican cheerleader knows how to play hardball.

DEXTER FILKINS | TIMES STAFF WRITER

     Tom Fuentes, chief of the Orange County Republican Party, is not Boss Tweed.
     He is not running Tammany Hall.
     He has no jobs for cronies. He doesn't fill potholes. And he can't make the building inspector leave you alone.
     In fact, Fuentes says, the big, bad political machine that has sandblasted just about every trace of the Democratic Party from Orange County is really not much of a machine at all.
     And he is no political boss.
     "I'm a cheerleader," said Fuentes with a shrug. "All I do is help ensure the victory of conservative political candidates."
     Now in his 12th year as chairman of the Orange County GOP, Thomas A. Fuentes, 47, has presided over a rout of his political opponents so total that it would spark feelings of envy among the grittiest of big city political bosses.
     Consider the numbers: With Fuentes at the wheel, the county GOP has increased its lead over the Democrats in registered voters to 232,000--a margin so large it can blunt the liberal strongholds of San Francisco and West Los Angeles in a statewide election.
     At the same time, the number of Democrats elected by Orange County voters to federal and state offices has dwindled to exactly zero. But for a few scattered judgeships still held by Democrats, the same would be true at the county level, where every office is held by a Republican.
     While the organization Fuentes presides over might not qualify as a full-blown political machine, it is a political phenomenon with few rivals. And while Fuentes is not the only force behind the movement, he is, as he says, its cheerleader.
     And its missionary, its public face and its hit man.
     "Tom Fuentes bleeds Republican-elephant blood," said Harvey Englander, a political consultant.
     "His goal in life is to serve the party."
     Attend a GOP fund-raiser almost any night of the week and you will likely find Fuentes at the podium, proposing a toast. Make your way to a meeting of any one of Orange County's 60-odd Republican clubs--the Huntington Harbour Republican Women Federated, the Iranian-American Republican Club--and you will, sooner or later, find Fuentes dropping by.
     Dan Quayle flying into town? Fuentes will greet him when he lands. Some precocious Republican upstart needs a talking to? Got a Democrat who needs a verbal thrashing? Fuentes is your man.
Not a cigar-chomping political boss, perhaps, but a smiling, irrepressible political animal.
     "Managing the Republican Party is like herding a bunch of cats," said Ken Khachigian, a former aide to Presidents Reagan and Bush who now heads the Bob Dole for President campaign in California.
     "Tom is the one who brings them all together."
     Yet success has not come without a price.
     Fuentes' hard-line conservative philosophy, and the rough, aggressive style in which he carries it out, has left a trail of disillusioned Republicans. And his practice of favoring some Republicans over others--before the voters have spoken--threatens to open a rift in the party he commands.
     "He's a black-and-white guy in his thoughts," said Orange County Clerk-Recorder Gary L. Granville, who has known Fuentes since the 1970s. "There's no grays."
*
     At the county GOP's monthly meeting at the Westin South Coast Plaza hotel in Costa Mesa, Garden Grove Councilman Mark Leyes, a candidate for county supervisor, is denouncing his former political party.
     "I used to be a Democrat," Leyes said. "Then the party was hijacked by the militant lesbians, the tree-hugging eco-terrorists and the neo-socialist opportunists!"
     The crowd cheers.
     Outside, a man peddles T-shirts displaying President Clinton and the first lady clad in bib overalls. The logo: "Hill-Billy Politics." Price: $10.
     Fuentes, a man in his element, steps up to the podium. He salutes the many survivors of the recent GOP primary, like Leyes, who have come to show him deference.
     Then he gets down to business.
     First, Fuentes reads the names of those donating $1,000 to the party locally. He announces the formation of a new GOP lawyers' committee. Then come the door prizes, donated by local businesses and raffled off at the monthly meetings.
     "We need door prizes to help us underwrite our costs," he says to the crowd. "Whatever you have, we need."
*
     Whether talking policy with elected officials or performing the most mundane of political chores, Fuentes is the omnipresent party symbol: ushering fund-raisers, jawing to reporters, stroking volunteers.
By his own reckoning, Fuentes has presided over two or three political gatherings a week for the last 12 years. He regularly visits each of about 60 local Republican clubs. He has hosted fund-raisers for Reagan and Bush, as well as Gov. Pete Wilson and House Speaker Newt Gingrich.
     Before Quayle flew in for a fund-raiser in late April, he called Fuentes. Fuentes called Newport Beach businessman John Crean. Quayle was greeted by a $1,000-per-couple affair at Crean's palatial home.
     Fuentes presided.
     "He is the toastmaster of Orange County," says Stan Oftelie, the director of the Orange County Transportation Authority who has known Fuentes since the 1970s. "Tom makes sure every event has a certain style."
     His reach extends not only upward and outward, but into the neighborhoods as well.
     As party chief, Fuentes sits atop a vast network of political volunteers, hundreds of neighborhood activists who form the backbone of the Republican cause.
     Fuentes, while not the tactical chief, is the spiritual leader.
     "He makes you feel like your efforts are appreciated," said Marcia Gilchrist, who started walking precincts for Republicans 34 years ago.
     A few years back, Fuentes invited Gilchrist to attend a reception for one of her political heroes, former GOP presidential nominee Barry Goldwater.
     At the reception, Goldwater thanked Gilchrist for her dedicated service and presented her a bouquet of roses.
     Fuentes set the whole thing up.
     Orange County's volunteer army also provides Fuentes with a ready pool of talent for aspiring GOP staffers and elected officials. The offices of Orange County's elected officials are dotted with Fuentes' proteges, like Greg Haskins, an aide to Rep. Christopher Cox (R-Newport Beach), or Bill Christiansen, the party's executive director.
     Chief among those who got their start under Fuentes is Assembly Speaker Curt Pringle (R-Garden Grove), who stacked chairs at Republican Central Committee meetings in the early 1980s.
     "Tom is the encourager," Pringle said. "He is always on the lookout for young people who want to serve Republican principles."
     But if Fuentes has one primary role as party chairman, it is to raise the money to keep the party going. This year, for instance, Fuentes tapped Crean--who hosted the Quayle fund-raiser--for $25,000.
     "I don't know why anybody takes my calls anymore," Fuentes says.
*
     Only half jokingly, Fuentes claims to be able to spot fellow Republicans just by looking at the way they keep their homes.
     "I can tell you the registration of the people in the house by observing the neatness of the lawn, what cars are in the driveway," Fuentes said. "And whether there is a leaky oil can in the driveway."
     Leaky oil can--that would be a Democrat.
     In speeches, Fuentes rails against the "Westside liberals" and the "San Francisco Democrats" as if they were a disease. He chides GOP volunteers for not sporting Republican bumper stickers on their cars. His office is a shrine to the cause, with photos and statues and autographs of Republican icons such as Bush, Reagan, Nixon and Goldwater.
     And he has almost always been that way. Fuentes walked his first precinct at age 12, passing out literature for Republican Rep. Gordon McDonough. He recalls being the only boy in his Catholic school who supported Nixon over Kennedy in 1960.
     "I wore my 'Nixon Now' button to class," he said.
     Two years later, Fuentes met his idol at the Orange County Fairgrounds.
     Fuentes was president of the Young Republicans at both Santa Ana and Chapman colleges and, at 22, won election to the county Central Committee.
     Nixon remained a guiding star.
     Years later, when the disgraced president returned to Orange County after his resignation, Fuentes greeted him when he landed at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station.
     To this day, Nixon's spirit seems to animate Fuentes. Close your eyes and listen to Fuentes, and you will hear precisely enunciated cadences of R.N.
     "He models himself after Richard Nixon," said Peer Swan, a Newport Beach businessman who has clashed with Fuentes. "He acts and talks like him, and has those big sweeping gestures like Richard Nixon."
     And politics consumes Fuentes with a Nixonian intensity.
     Crean, the Newport Beach businessman, recalls the times he and Fuentes have gone sailing to Mexico aboard his yacht.
     "We'll all be up on the deck, having a nice time, and Tom will be lying up in his bunk reading political tracts," Crean said. "Always nonfiction. Pretty dense stuff. Not for me."
     The only thing that rivals Fuentes' zeal for the GOP is, perhaps, his commitment to the Roman Catholic Church.
     A lifelong Catholic, Fuentes briefly studied to be a priest after the death of his boss, then-Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers, who drowned along with 10 others when his sailboat sank in 1974. Fuentes was supposed to be on that boat but canceled at the last minute.
     After six months in the seminary, Fuentes walked away. He says he missed too much the rough-and-tumble of the secular world. He is married with three children and lives in Lake Forest.
     But he did not quit the church. He is a founding member of the Food Distribution Center, a nonprofit enterprise run by the St. Vincent de Paul Society that hands out food to about 180,000 needy people. Each year, Fuentes organizes the No-Lunch Luncheon, a bare-bones fund-raiser for the center.
     And he carries necessities to poor families in Tijuana.
     Father Bryan Walsh, who roomed with Fuentes at St. Patrick's Seminary in Menlo Park, said Fuentes' motivations, whether expressed in church or politics, emanate from the same source.
     "He is motivated by a sense that what he is doing is making the world a better place," Walsh said. "Of course, you might not agree that he is, but that's his motivation."
*
     In the movie "Braveheart," the 13th-century Scottish leader William Wallace inspires a peasant army to rise against their English oppressors in the face of overwhelming odds. In the end, the rebellion fails. Wallace is drawn and quartered.
     "No one can understand what we are about as a movement until they see 'Braveheart,' " Fuentes told a room full of Republicans at breakfast recently. "If you see the movie, you will see what it is we are fighting for."
     To Fuentes, the comparison is not whimsical. Despite the overwhelming success of the GOP in Orange County, despite its lopsided lead in registration, Fuentes sees the GOP as an embattled minority, as a party under siege by a biased press and encroaching Democrats. The vision is key to Fuentes' success as party chairman: For 12 years, he has felt the liberals gaining ground, even as he pulled the party farther and farther ahead.
     "We may have the numbers, but it is a struggle day in and day out," Fuentes said. "We are the minority party in this state."
     The siege mentality is also the source of his all-or-nothing approach to politics that, to some, has poisoned public discourse.
     Fuentes' disdain for anyone to his left is nearly legendary, the examples legion:
  • On former Assemblyman Tom Umberg, a Democrat: "I have met few individuals with a greater naked ambition and lack of character."
  • On Doris Allen, the former Republican assemblywoman and speaker who compromised with the Democrats: "She demonstrated a level of incompetence equaled by few."
  • On the resignation of Orange County CEO William J. Popejoy, who did the job for free: "We the people got what we paid for."
  • On former Assemblyman Gil Ferguson's complaints that a "GOP mafia" was manipulating elections: "I feel very sad about Gil's deterioration through the years."
  • On Democratic voters he says are unaware of the "evils" their party has perpetrated: "It's a little like good Germans denying the existence of the Holocaust."
     The remark about the good Germans rankled some of Fuentes' superiors in the Catholic Church. At the time, Fuentes was the diocese's spokesman.
     "I am embarrassed by Fuentes' official connection with the Diocese of Orange," Msgr. Wilbur Davis said.
*
     In his drive to reduce the Democrats to political irrelevance, Fuentes has often taken on the role of GOP kingmaker.
     The list of people who accuse Fuentes of trying to arm-twist them into abandoning bids for public office includes a host of loyal Republicans: Assemblywoman Marilyn C. Brewer (R-Irvine), former Newport Beach Mayor Evelyn R. Hart, former Superior Court Judge Judith Ryan and management consultant Nathan Rosenberg.
     All of them, at one time or another, sought the Republican nomination for public office. None heeded Fuentes' advice, but only Brewer won the nomination.
     "He said my business would be ruined, and that my husband's business would be ruined," said Ryan, a challenger to U.S. Rep. Robert K. Dornan for his seat in 1992. "I was taken aback."
     Fuentes calls Ryan's charges "ridiculous," but he does not deny that he tries to dissuade people from running against GOP officeholders.
     "I am staunchly loyal to incumbents," Fuentes said. "I make no excuses for that."
     Fuentes' actions would seem to contradict his repeated assertions that the GOP hierarchy does not get involved in Republican races until after the party primary--an assertion that even a majority of county Republicans finds unbelievable, according to a Times Orange County Poll.
     "I told him I thought he was stepping out of his role," said Rosenberg, a founding member of the Orange County Young Republicans who challenged incumbent Robert E. Badham for Congress in 1988.
     Fuentes' explanation: Just because he offers advice to would-be candidates does not mean that the party is officially involved.
     "I try to be straight with candidates," he said. "If someone comes to me and tells me they want to run, and they don't have what it takes, I will tell them. It is important for me not to give them false hope."
     Probably the most notorious of Fuentes' political stunts involved the hiring of security guards to patrol predominantly Latino polling places in the Assembly district won by Curt Pringle in 1988.
     The action sparked nearly universal outrage and led to a lawsuit by a group of Latino voters who said the guards intimidated them from casting ballots.
     To this day, Fuentes, a sixth-generation son of Mexican immigrants, waves off the incident as little more than a minor error.
     "I look back on it as an effort that was entirely well-intentioned but mistakenly implemented," he said. "The only concern at the time was to preserve the sanctity of the ballot."
     Fuentes' hardball style and hard-line views have left some Republicans, including a number of prominent women, wondering if they have a place in the party. His chief critics are Republican women who support abortion rights. Many of them say Fuentes has banished them.
     "The party is run by a bunch of small-minded men without very high self-esteem," said Eileen Padberg, a Republican political consultant who has clashed often with the party chief. "Tom Fuentes is totally out of step."
     Says Hart, the former Newport Beach mayor who supports abortion rights: "The most conservative positions--that's the party platform. Tom Fuentes does a good job of voicing the party's philosophy. . . . But it's going to backfire."
*
     For Fuentes, politics has not always mixed easily with the other parts of his life. A longtime spokesman for the Diocese of Orange, Fuentes left shortly after the poll guards incident.
     Both church officials and Fuentes said the incident had nothing to do with his departure, but some church leaders said they had grown uncomfortable with Fuentes' dual role.
     "It made us become part of the party, which we weren't," Msgr. John Sammon said at the time.
Until last year, Fuentes served for nearly 20 years as vice president of Robert Bein William Frost and Associates, a large Orange County engineering firm.
     Fuentes performed mostly personnel work for the firm and sometimes lobbied public agencies for contracts. Fuentes had a trademark: a dozen long-stemmed roses for select local politicians.
     "Do elected officials take my phone calls because I am party chairman?" Fuentes asked. "Yes. But the overwhelming majority of my work was internal."
     Earlier last year, Fuentes left the firm. He said he did so because he had an opportunity to sell his large stake in the company at a good price.
     Company President Bob Kallenbaugh would not comment on the reasons for Fuentes' departure, but he said the firm and Fuentes are on good terms.
     Early last year, while still with the company, Fuentes lobbied members of the Anaheim City Council for the appointment of Tom Tait. Tait was appointed to the City Council in January 1995. Shortly afterward, in March 1995, Fuentes became a vice president at Tait and Associates, an Orange engineering firm where Tait is president.
     Both Fuentes and Tait insist there was no link between Tait's appointment to the council and Tait's hiring of Fuentes a month later.
     "I'm sensitive to what people might think," Tait said. "There was absolutely no connection."
*
     So far, Fuentes' tactics have yet to prompt a revolt within the party's leadership. His hold on the GOP chairmanship seems as secure as ever.
     It is Fuentes' willingness to take on so many necessary but thankless jobs--fund-raising, schmoozing, speechmaking--that ensures his regular reelection as the party chief.
     "When you think it might be time to get some fresh blood in there, you look around and there is just no one who would devote himself as effectively to the job as Tom," said John M.W. Moorlach, the county treasurer-tax collector and assistant treasurer for the party.
     Still, Fuentes says he probably won't stay in the job forever. The only thing that prevents him from stepping down, he says, is that no one else has stepped forward.
     Indeed, many of Fuentes' friends say what he really wants is to be appointed to public office. So far that hasn't happened, but Fuentes holds open the possibility that he might someday run.
     On this, Fuentes seems uncharacteristically unenthusiastic.
     "Any political office is just a brief moment in the sun," he said. "The cause goes on after the personality is gone."
 

ORIGINAL POST:
 
If you can't believe a Boy Scout, who can you believe?

Yesterday, I noted Gustavo Arellano’s description of a 1972 incident involving former OC Supervisor Ronald Caspers, who died mysteriously in a boating incident in 1974.

Included among Caspers’ employees was one Thomas Fuentes—the future Chair of the OC GOP (from 1984-2004) and SOCCCD trustee (2000-present).

Caspers’ curious death is the subject of rumors and theories and, according to Gustavo (I contacted him), no new light has been shed on it in recent years. One theory—I heard about it from a certain prominent OC political writer—is pretty hair-raising.

Given Mr. Fuentes’ Karl Rovian reputation, I have always wanted to learn more about his mentor, Mr. Caspers. Evidently, he was the sort who would call Mexican Americans "banditos." Tsk Tsk.

In the past, I have Googled Caspers’ name but have found little information about him. I briefly tried again today and did come across this obscure LA Times article from May 20, 1986:

It's Hoffman vs. Sumner, Badham vs. Rosenberg at TV Taping - KOCE's May 29 Election Special Is Highly Charged

The article, written by political writer Lanie Jones, describes a half-hour show on KOCE featuring a debate by candidates for a congressional seat then held by five-term incumbent Robert E. Badham (Newport Beach).


Badham’s challengers appearing on the program included fellow Republican Nathan Rosenberg.* Presumably, Rosenberg new his way around the OC Republican scene:

Early in the show there were angry exchanges between Badham and Rosenberg, with Rosenberg attacking Badham for allegedly missing votes and spending campaign funds improperly. Badham meanwhile defended his performance and his ties to President Reagan….

At one point, Rosenberg, 33, a former Young Republicans president making his first bid for elective office, also took a swipe at Orange County Republican Chairman Thomas A. Fuentes, calling him "a bagman" for former county Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers.

That remark came as KOCE host Jim Cooper asked Rosenberg about a Friday night incident that Fuentes had dubbed "Rosengate," in which a Rosenberg campaign worker, using a fictitious name, was discovered at a Badham campaign meeting.

Rosenberg said his campaign worker "went on his own" to Badham headquarters, but then added, referring to Fuentes' term "Rosengate": "Coming from Ron Caspers' bagman, I don't feel bad about Mr. Fuentes' comment."

(From 1970 to 1974, Fuentes served as executive assistant to former Supervisor Caspers, who was lost at sea in a boating accident.)

Asked later what he meant by "bagman," Rosenberg said. "I don't mean anything. It means exactly what it means. Look it up in Webster's dictionary. I said what I said."

Told of Rosenberg's comment, Fuentes laughed, "I guess as we get closer to June 3, the heat is turned up in campaigns and people get more and more excited." Fuentes, who has been angry at Rosenberg since March for challenging a Republican incumbent, also called Rosenberg's remark "unfortunate."

Well, OK, Nate. I looked up “bagman” on my Mac’s dictionary. Here’s what I got:

bagman |ˈbagˌman; -mən|
noun ( pl. -men)
1 informal ~ an agent who collects or distributes the proceeds of illicit activities : one million dollars cash paid to the general's bagman.

Hmmm. Again, presumably, Rosenberg was very familiar with the (c. 1986) players of the OC Republican Party. So he would have known Fuentes and his, um, style. (By 1986, when this incident occurred, Fuentes would have been party chair for perhaps two years.)

Caspers’ era would have ended a dozen years earlier, but, presumably, had Caspers been the sort who had use of a “bagman,” GOP players would be aware of that fact, especially if their new chairman was that very “bagman.”

Ain’t politics fun?

*NOTE: In 1988, Mr. Rosenberg opposed Chris Cox in the 40th Congressional district Republican primary. Nowadays, Rosenberg is Chairman of the Board for the Orange County Council, Boy Scouts of America. (See.) He is a graduate of the United States Air Force Academy.

On the other hand, Mr. Rosenberg is est founder Werner Erhard's brother! See.

BACK IN 1985:

I came across this fascinating old Times article from January 07, 1985. Fuentes was about to start his gig as OC GOP chair:

Changing of the Guard for Orange County GOP - Incoming Chairman Sees Party's Role as 'Anchor to the Right' for State
[BELLY DANCERS?]
…Fuentes, occasionally dubbed the Prince of Orange for his exotic gourmet excursions that offer belly dancers and Broadway production numbers for dessert, is as much a part of the Orange County Republican Party as the familiar red, white and blue elephant on the party's letterhead.

[“I WORRY ABOUT HIM”]
"I admire Tom very, very much. Obviously I wish him well--and I worry about him," [four-term OC GOP Chair Lois] Lundberg said. "I don't mean this the way it sounds, but I think even my enemies would have to say that I did not lean, or let any segment take over or become dominant. I've had a 20-year history of politics in Orange County, where I've seen the right wing fight the left wing, and the moderates fight each of them, and they all fight each other, and the party go down the drain."

[OC: “ANCHOR TO THE RIGHT”]
[Fuentes:] "I see Orange County as an anchor to the right for the California ship of state, and winds gust from the left from West Los Angeles and San Francisco, and in our role as that anchor to the right, we have to be very vigilant about maintaining that [OC GOP] registration edge."

[FUENTES AND CASPERS]
Fuentes credits former Supervisor Ronald Caspers for much of his political rearing. He worked as an aide to Caspers for four years in the 1970s. Caspers' boat was lost at sea with 10 aboard--including Caspers --in 1974. (Fuentes would have been aboard the Shooting Star himself on the voyage to celebrate Caspers' reelection to a second term but decided against going at the last moment.) None of the 10 aboard was found.

Fuentes had hoped that he would be appointed to replace Caspers. When he discovered that there was a one-year residency requirement that he did not meet, he decided to carry out an earlier plan to enter a seminary and study for the priesthood.

A year later, Fuentes was back. "I found that the pace of seminary life and that monastic setting was just all too slow for me. I could never turn the motors off to slow down to that pace which is required to serve in the capacity of priesthood."

[FUENTES ♡ NIXON]
Memorabilia from Nixon's visit to the county in 1982 line the entire hallway outside his office. "I had the honor of being his host and master of ceremonies," he said. "He was so very gracious. I'll just read you this because it's my most treasured note. It says, 'Dear Tom, In the many years during which I have attended literally thousands of such affairs, I have never heard an emcee handle the occasion better. You were crisp, in charge, and inspirational. The party is fortunate to have your leadership, and I am greatful for your friendship. With warmest regards, R.N.'

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...