Saturday, November 7, 2009

Marvelously succinct!

When I was a child people simply looked about them and were moderately happy; today they peer beyond the seven seas, bury themselves waist deep in tidings, and by and large what they see and hear makes them unutterably sad.
—E.B. White

Today, Angus Johnston's Student Activism (Southwestern College: Unanswered Questions) provides a marvelously succinct update on the Southwestern scandal:
The three faculty members suspended from Southwestern College after a budget protest two weeks ago returned to their jobs on Thursday, but the situation is far from resolved.

Earlier this week college officials floated the possibility that the profs might face criminal charges as a result of their actions, though police at the scene of the protest made no arrests and the only detailed eyewitness report available indicates that the entire event was peaceful and uneventful.

And yesterday the local blog Save Our Southwestern College reported that formal letters of reprimand are to be placed in each suspended professor’s file.

As SOSC notes, SWC has yet to provide any coherent public account of its seemingly erratic actions in the wake of the protest.

Meanwhile SWC president Raj Chopra, who went on vacation just hours after the suspensions were handed down, remains absent and incommunicado.
I think I’ll have my students read this. E.B. White would be proud. —BT

Pictured: White with mutt

Chapman U: from selflessness to selfishness

Do something for somebody every day for which you do not get paid.
—Albert Schweitzer
Chapman president earns more than U.S. president

That’s right. The OC Reg’s Gary Robbins has been reading the Chronicle of Higher Ed, where he learned that the obnoxiously omnipresent Mr. James Doti, Chapman’s Prez, makes, well, a buttload of money ($467,516)—and that doesn’t even include the “5,000 square-foot home in Villa Park that’s provided by the university.”

A couple of days ago, Robbins reported that Chapman was about to dedicate Ayn Rand's bust (Chapman dedicating statue of Ayn Rand today).

Robbins provided a summary of the philosopher's views from the New York Times:
“In Rand’s view, selfishness was good and altruism was evil, and the welfare of society was always subordinate to the self-interest of individuals, especially superior ones. In some ways, Objectivism is an extreme form of laissez-faire capitalism, a view that Rand came to naturally.”
That sounds about right.

According to Robbins, Rand’s “basic beliefs have recently enjoyed a resurgence of interest on many college campuses and among more Conservative and Libertarian thinkers.”

Jeez, before Doti came along, Chapman’s grounds were punctuated with tributes to Albert Schweitzer, the humanitarian.

My recommendation: have a Schweitzer/Rand Celebrity Deathmatch.



And now for something completely different...


Hot late 60s live performance—Lee

"Chicks were born to give you fever, whether Fahrenheit of Centigrade."

Now, if you don't like that—well, first off, if you don't like that, you're some kinda tin-eared asshole—but if you don't like it, you're bound to like this old nugget from the Beastie Boys c. 1992. They're channelin' the great Jimi H. Oldsters, pay attention to the bass line. Work up from there. —BT



* * * * *
Let's ask Arellano (Lariat)

Oops, missed this one: ”Gustavo Arellano will be a Guest speaker at Saddleback College on Nov., 3, from 12 p.m. to 1p.m. in room 212 of the Student Services Center.”

Oops #2:

I just noticed this at CSU Fullerton, News and Info:

Evidently, there was an event this morning at Cal State Fullerton, honoring Iraq and Afghanistan War Veterans.

The CSUF announcement, evidently posted on the 29th of Oct., said:
Retired Lt. Gen. Ricardo S. Sanchez, former commander of coalition forces in Iraq, will deliver the keynote address at the 13th annual Veterans Day celebration at Cal State Fullerton. This year’s event will pay tribute to Mexican American veterans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan.

“For the last 12 years, Latino Advocates for Education, in association with Cal State Fullerton, has saluted our Mexican American veterans,” said Orange County Superior Court Judge Frederick P. Aguirre, president of Latino Advocates for Education….

Sanchez, commander of coalition forces in Iraq from 2003-04, was in charge of the forces that captured Saddam Hussein during Operation Red Dawn….
Sanchez’s memoir, “Wiser in Battle: A Soldier’s Story,” published last year by HarperCollins, presents his own critique of the Iraq War, including an insider’s account of the Abu Ghraib prison scandal.
Photo depicts a still youthful and impressionable B. Traven

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...