Monday, December 7, 2009

The board sets a record; Wagner continues as Prez; plus car chases

For the official story, see Tracy's Board Meeting Highlights

1. THE BOARD. A friend wrote me about tonight’s board meeting:
 [CORRECTION re administrative contracts: My source clarifies that all administrators (up for review) were granted 1-year contracts--shorter than expected. Here are the administrators listed on the agenda: Vice Chancellor, Technology and Learning Services ; Vice Chancellor, Human Resources; President/Saddleback College; Dean, Counseling Services, Irvine Valley College; Dean, Humanities & Languages/Social Science & Library Services, Irvine Valley College; Dean, PE, Kinesiology & Athletics, Saddleback College; Assistant Dean, Counseling Services/Special Programs, Saddleback College; Dean, Fine Arts, Business Sciences & College Online Education, Irvine Valley College; Provost/ATEP; Dean, Math, Science & Engineering, Irvine Valley College; Dean, Health Sciences, PE & Athletics, Irvine Valley College]

 Amazingly, the closed session, which started at 5:00 p.m., lasted until nearly 9 p.m.! Gosh, that must be a new record! What do you suppose that was about?

 Oddly, nothing was reported out of closed session.

 Don Wagner was elected (again) as the President of the board for the next year. Nancy Padberg is VP. Marcia Milchiker is Clerk. (Wagner is a major contender in a race for the 70th Assembly District. You'd think he'd devote his time to that. But what do I know.) (Photo: Tracy Daly)

 That seriously curious "prayer" resolution (prayer? Hell Yes! plus: thou shalt examine videos before showing them; Williams shalt avoid jokes condemning non-believers, etc.) was approved, despite Dave Lang's efforts to amend it. "Dave, you got snookered," said Wagner. (It is unlikely that trustees are all on the same page about the prayer and religion issue. Lang has been among those who've pushed back against the board/Mathur's in-your-face religiosity/sectarianism.)

 IVC's seriously odd and troublesome temporary full-time faculty positions were approved. Big money.

 Trustees opted not to discuss accred, owing to the lateness of the hour.
2. THE BORED (e.g., cylinders). The other day, in my Ethics class, whilst discussing John Stuart Mill’s distinction between the quality and the quantity of pleasures—Mill insisted that any puny amount of  "pleasure of the mind" trumps gobs of sensual delights—I found myself ridiculing popular contemporary movies, and that led to a thorough condemnation of car chase scenes and explosions. I was thinking of such movies as “The Fast and the Furious,” which, naturally, is shite.

But, in truth, I love a really good car chase scene, though they don’t seem to be done with as much flair as they used to be.

Here’s a good one. And an explosion, too. It’s from Bullitt (1968):



McQueen is driving a dark "Highland Green" 1968 Ford Mustang 390 CID Fastback. (See Shelby.) The hit men are in a "Tuxedo Black" 1968 Dodge Charger R/T 440 Magnum. (See Charger.)

The hit man driver is none other than the legendary Bill Hickman (1921–1986), who was involved in three of the greatest car chases in movie history (Bullitt 1968, The French Connection 1971, and The Seven-Ups 1973.)

Hickman was a pal of James Dean’s. According to Wikipedia,
Bill spent some of his earlier days as driver and friend to James Dean, driving Dean's Ford station wagon towing his famed 550 spyder nicknamed “Little Bastard”, and often helping and advising him with his driving technique, he was driving the Ford station wagon and trailer following Dean on the day of his fatal accident and was first on the scene….

[According to Hickman:] "In those final days, racing was what he cared about most. I had been teaching him things like how to put a car in a four-wheel drift, but he had plenty of skill of his own. If he had lived he might have become a champion driver. We had a running joke, I'd call him Little Bastard and he'd call me Big Bastard. I never stop thinking of those memories." In another interview with James Dean expert Warren Beath, Hickman is quoted as saying "We were about two or three minutes behind him. I pulled him out of the car, and he was in my arms when he died, his head fell over. I heard the air coming out of his lungs the last time. Didn’t sleep for five or six nights after that, just the sound of the air coming out of his lungs."
Typically, in explaining Mill’s distinction, I compare American muscle cars and European sports cars. You know: quantity versus quality.

But you’ve gotta love that Mustang and that Charger.


COMMENTS:

Anonymous said...
The four hour closed session was dedicated to celebrating Wagner's new title: the Sexiest Man in the World.
7:10 AM, December 08, 2009

Anonymous said...
Very strange last night.
9:17 AM

Anonymous said...
I still don't get the temporary full-time hire thing at all.

9 positions?!?

I thought there wasn't enough money anywhere for anything extra.

Where does it come from? 

Why?
10:05 AM

Anonymous said...
How was Lang snookered? What was the nature of his proposed amendment? Inquring minds want to know.
10:22 AM

B. von Traven said...
I'm afraid I can't answer any detailed questions, since I wasn't at the board meeting, as per my resolution of a month or so ago. But I would guess that the trustees are not unanimous in their decision to entrench with a pro-prayer stance, which, naturally, will have implications for the current litigation. 
At IVC, it would seem that we have entered an era in which administrators are less than straight with us. Originally, we were told that there was some "extra money" that permitted the temp full-time hires. In truth (I believe), the district is attempting to avoid violation of the 50% law, which requires that at least half of expenditures be devoted to "instruction."
10:33 AM

Anonymous said...
Clearly, they spent those hours in prayer.
11:14 AM

Anonymous said...
You're into muscle cars? Really?
11:54 AM

Anonymous said...
of course he is - haven't you seen his ride?
12:59 PM

"Thou Shalt Destroy All Evidence That Might Get Your Pious Ass Sued"

An hour or so ago, OC Weekly’s Matt Coker reported about our trustees and their pious and unconstitutional ways: College Board Sued Over Prayers Weighs Prayer Policy Tonight:
Ever go to a school board meeting and have a tent revival break out?

Trustees who lord over the South Orange County Community College District … and are being sued over their frequent and apparently mandatory use of official prayers are scheduled tonight to consider a new policy concerning those moments of supposed intimate connection with a greater power.
Matt joins us here at DtB in noting the curious nature of tonight’s special 3-part “prayer ‘n’ videos” resolution. Remember the “Jesus Christ and the American G.I.” video?
The new policy, then, would seem to acknowledge that was bad--mmm-kay?--as a video like that would have to be pre-screened, and all religious images and inferences would be strip-mined out.

The bit in the third section about restricting one's personal religious comments seems to stem from district trustee and County of Orange Public Administrator John Williams introducing his prayer at an August board session by essentially telling those present who questioned Bible stories that they were going to hell.

Since the board videotapes its meetings, that footage apparently would have been edited out had the policy being considered tonight already been in place. Which brings us, brothers and sisters, to the 11th Commandment: Thou Shalt Destroy All Evidence That Might Get Your Pious Ass Sued.

Our Beno

Board meeting tonight, complete with Japanese sneak attack (agenda) — Trustees will resolve to check vids before showing them ~ $2,445 a person for Orlando junket ~ new Board President?

 A Rainbow of Patriots/Crazies Greet Nancy Pelosi in Irvine (OC Weekly) — Way crazy 9/11 truthers, Fuentesers, et al.

 U.S.A. All the Way Apologies to the cynics, but we’re on a roll. (The New York Times) — That's right, our French fries are still the best, and Apple rules

 Should you treat your children like dogs? Can dog-whisperering techniques used to control canines also work with children (The Guardian) — Sure, why not, and with students too; can we use treats?

AT A RECENT MEETING of the IVC Academic Senate, senators discussed “student learning outcomes” (SLOs) yet again. The discussion got seriously nuts. I listened in amazement. It appeared to me that, perhaps unknowingly, the college had constructed a “system” around the new planning and SLO requirements that was shot through with bad faith and, well, idiocy. I needed to say something.

“I feel that I am in a dystopian novel,” I announced. Most senators just stared. (I don’t think they know what “dystopian” means.)

It does not surprise me that this SLO garbage is being foisted upon us. What surprises me is the impulse to cheerfully accommodate these demands.

What’s the matter with people? Are they too far gone?

But, if you look, you can find plenty of non-cheerful accommodation (or cheerful or non-cheerful non-accommodation). For instance, in this morning’s Inside Higher Ed, Rob Weir declares that he is a “near-total skeptic on the ‘measured outcomes’ fad sweeping academe.” In parentheses, he says more: “Way too much of the latter is jargon-ridden gibberish fashioned by administrators who don’t teach to mollify demagogic politicians who don’t think!”

For us in the community colleges, much of this gibberish seems to originate (after the demagogic politicians, I mean) with accrediting officials. That ACCJC: it is, by itself, its own dystopian novel.

It’s headed by the remarkable "Babs" Beno. Remember when she arrived in the spring of '06 to declare that things in the district were just about, well, hunky-dory? She actually offered that assessment, more or less, immediately after having heard three faculty leaders explaining how remarkably unhunky and undory things really were.

She and Tom Fuentes were on the same page that day. Everything is just f*cking great, they said. They were on a soma holiday together. How wonderful.

I seem to recall that Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World describes life under “Our Ford.”

OK then.

Our Beno.



Dystopia c. 2006

1:20 Faculty speak the truth, to no avail
6:28 Babs Beno: “I’ve seen a lot of progress here, so good for you.”
6:50 Trustee Fuentes: “an infusion of good cheer”
7:35 Ian Walton: “Can I really truthfully stand up here and say it’s nice to be back? I’m not even gonna try to answer that question.”

Watch Ian Walton listen to Babs and the trustees and, well, find himself in a dystopian novel.

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...