Friday, June 11, 2010

Funeral

Hundreds attend funeral for Assembly candidate's son (OC Reg)

     They remembered Paul Wagner as a charismatic young man who lived life in the moment and was a light for his family and friends.
     Hundreds paid tribute to the 20-year-old son of state Assembly candidate Don Wagner at a funeral Mass at St. Thomas More Catholic Church in Irvine Friday morning.
     Clutching his wife Megan, the elder Wagner walked behind his son's casket as it was wheeled into the church for the funeral mass. Paul Wagner, who was found dead in his car Saturday, reportedly had a severely enlarged heart.
     The Rev. George Blais said Paul Wagner had lived "a short life but a life filled with love and concern for his family, for his friends, for his university and for his sports."
     Wagner was home for the summer after finishing up his sophomore year at Purdue University. He was helping out with his father's run for state Assembly.
     Family members previously said Wagner used various medications to cope with bi-polar disorder. A coroner's autopsy early this week was ruled inconclusive and more tests were planned; Don Wagner has said the heart condition could have interacted with the medication.
     During the Mass, Paul's older sister Kate, 23, and younger sister Stephanie, 16, reflected on some humorous memories of their brother and drew laughs and tears in the church.
     Paul Wagner knew all of the words to Bonnie Tyler's "Total Eclipse of the Heart" and was known for buying gifts related to Purdue University for Christmas and birthdays. He loved passionately and hugged everyone, his sisters said, though he disliked the Lakers and eating pickles.
     Stephanie Wagner recalled when her older brother, under the guise of their father "Mr. Wagner," called her out of school to go to Disneyland. He also had a knack for using his big blue eyes to get into trouble and often out of trouble, his sister said.
     According to his former baseball teammates and buddies, Paul Wagner was a gentle guy who never fought with anyone.
     "He had a big heart," said Spencer Hammond, 20, of Irvine, who attended Northwood High School and played on school's baseball team with Wagner. "He would do anything for his friends."
     At the end of the Mass, friends and family – including his girlfriend of two years Kristine Allen –escorted the casket out of the church singing along to "Hail Purdue," the university's fight song.
     A burial service at El Toro Memorial Park in Lake Forest followed. A memorial commemorating Paul's life will be held at 11 a.m. Sunday at the Irvine Valley College Performing Arts Center. The memorial is open to the public.

We won't have Chris Norby to kick lobbyist reform around anymore; Mike Schroeder experiencing painful power subluxations

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New law would shine light on OC lobbyists (OC Reg)

     “Money talks,” the grand jury said, “and the lobbying industry speaks with a large megaphone that drowns out the voices of the electorate.”
     Strong words! We told you yesterday that the Orange County Grand Jury slammed county government for failing to force lobbyists to disclose who hires them, how much they’re paid, and which officials they lobby. With an operating budget of more than $4.4 billion, Orange County is the largest local government entity in California without a program to monitor and report lobbying activities, the grand jury said in its ominously-titled report “Lobbying: The Shadow Government.”
     Evidently, state Senator Joe Dunn and others had urged the county to do something about lobbyists earlier in the year. But the Supes, especially Chris Norby (who is no longer on the board; he replaced Scandal Boy in the state Assembly in January), said nope. “I don’t favor regulation of free speech,” Norby said.

     Government reform advocate Shirley Grindle has said that lobbyists have long exerted unfair influence in Orange County, and for decades, she fought for change. There’s a tendency for supervisors to try to protect lobbyists’ income, Grindle said, because many of the lobbyists are former aides of the supervisors. Or former supervisors themselves.

Moderate Republicans get a big win in conservative Orange County (LA Times)

     The election victory of Orange County Sheriff Sandra Hutchens is being viewed by some political watchers as something of an electoral sea change.. . .
     Fred Smoller, who directs a public administration program at Brandman/Chapman University, said Tuesday's election suggests that the county Republican Party's more moderate flank may be gaining power over a conservative cabal that has long enjoyed a chummy relationship with county leaders.
     "Sandra was not particularly loved by the Mike Schroeders and the traditional power brokers, and she was able to win,'' said Smoller, referring to the former president of the state Republican Party who was an advisor to Carona. "It's not so much a revolution from the bottom as a split within factions of the Republican Party."

     Is Smoller referring to Tea Partiers?  Some think those people shook things up Tuesday--e.g., in OC Republican Central Committee elections, where seventeen incumbents lost and were replaced by at least 10 Tea people.

     Earlier today, Vern Nelson of OJ Blog had this to say about the efficacy of the Tea Partiers and others who seek to overcome the "establishment":

     [C]ould [Hunt’s defeat] augur badly in November for candidates who try to get their votes by appealing to racial resentment?....
     That was a nice thought, but it may be more realistic to remind ourselves that Hunt was beat by an incumbent with strong establishment support, and mediocre establishment-supported incumbents triumphed all over the OC against principled opponents – John Williams, Tom Daly, Ken Calvert, and Gary Miller, just to name a few – this is still much more the rule than the exception.
     I think there are two lessons, one encouraging and one discouraging:
     • Anti-immigrant positions and rhetoric aren’t enough to win you an election even in these dark days (and that just happens to be all Allan Mansoor, for one, has!)
     • It’s as hard as ever to defeat an establishment incumbent, or to make any meaningful political change at all really. While our gun-nut Fringer friends were up in Fullerton waving Hunt signs on the freeway, we pro-democracy activists were Freeway Blogging on the 405 for Prop 15, and both of us failed dismally in our quixotic hopes for anti-establishment change. It is a Sisyphean slog. I’m saying, it’s HARRD WORK!

Only a third of the "online" institutions he’s taught for grant academic freedom

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Another Kind of Academic Career Path (Inside Higher Ed)

     Some people think they’re qualified to teach online courses because they know how to use e-mail, but there's a lot more instructors need to master to run a Web classroom, a longtime trainer of new instructors said Thursday in a presentation at the American Association of University Professors conference meeting here this week. ¶ “They don’t know how to use Word, they don’t know how to use Excel,” said Bob Barrett, a professor at the American Public University System who has trained online instructors at several institutions. “Statistics on a computer? ‘No, I’ve always done them on paper.' "
     As many brick-and-mortar colleges shed untenured teaching staff, and online programs – especially those run by for-profit institutions – continue to hire, teaching in a virtual setting is becoming the new reality for many more academics. Thursday's presentation was one of several on online education at this year's AAUP meeting.. . .
     Barrett acknowledged that some instructors are irritated by the regimentation, but audience members pushed harder. Protecting academic freedom is, after all, one of the AAUP’s core missions. “How do you observe academic freedom for someone who’s teaching online?” one woman asked.
     Barrett said that only a third of the online institutions he’s taught for grant instructors academic freedom. “The rest are, you go by the instruction modules that are given, do not deviate from them. They have people who will come in and look at what you’re doing, will look at what you’re introducing, will comment on things that are a little bit different.” A few attendees shook their head in dismay.

Gosh, I think I see the future, and it ain't good.

High-School Graduation Rates Dip Slightly for Second Straight Year

     An annual report, published today by Education Week and the Editorial Projects in Education Research Center, shows that high-school graduation rates dipped slightly for the Class of 2007. Only 68.8 percent of students who started as ninth graders in the 2003-4 academic year had graduated four years later, according to the report, "Diplomas Count 2010: Graduation by the Numbers -- Putting Data to Work for Student Success." That's down slightly from 69.2 percent for the previous high-school class and marks the second year of decline in the national graduation rate.

OK, this cannot be good!

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...