Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Inquiring minds wanna know


     OK, I'M OUT with a messed up back. Plus I’m on sabbatical.
     Did anyone attend the Chancellor’s opening session down at Saddleback College this morning? Let us know what happened, if anything. (Anything about ATEP? The two colleges are seriously at odds over that benighted facility.)
     And how did the Faculty Association (faculty union) luncheon/gabfest go? Any fireworks re the proposed faculty contract? Did Ray or Sharon or Sherry show up? Any St. John Knits? Did Sherry look like a traffic cone? Were there students on the lawn doing "Wicca" anthropology labs?)
     Any word about the State Chancellor’s “audit”? (Evidently, it was an electronic affair.)
     Did anybody show up at the IVC CAFÉ opening(s)? Any fireworks over the failure of the invite to mention adjuncts (or anyone else beyond administrators and full-timers)? Any clarity about what they're gonna do with that space?
     (I just remembered something: months ago, a friend reported to me that administrators visited the MRC and found that all of the students were on Facebook and YouTube. Ooooh. Maybe that did it.)
     Let us know what you saw, heard.
     Spill!

UPDATE (9:10 p.m.):
Sherry and some joker
     I suppose all (full-time) faculty got the email that I did—from Ray and the DOGs (disgruntled Old Guardsters). It says that "the SOCCCDFA leadership has decided to return to the negotiating table to address the inequities in the proposed contract."
     So, did something happen at the luncheon today?

UPDATE (9:25 p.m.):
Recent comments:

Anonymous 1 said...
OMG, faculty gone wild! FYI [who is “you”?] my students use Facebook and YouTube for assignments. Recommend you [again, who is “you”?] go to the New Media in the Classroom session during in service. IVC has a Facebook profile as well.
—7:23 PM, August 16, 2011
Anonymous 2 said...
You [“You” again] may be right. Let a student get away with viewing Facebook or YouTube and you have anarchy. Those darn students, always trying to bring their social media into our ivory castle. Off with their heads! That is almost as bad as blogging.
—8:35 PM, August 16, 2011
Anonymous 3 said...
I think that writing off the social media tools as having no place in the lab is a mistake. For one thing, this is how students are living now — those are the tools they use to communicate. Savvy teachers know this and take advantage of it to find another way to connect with their students. An old fart administrator walking by on a tour who hasn't been in the classroom in decades shouldn't be making decisions based on his mistaken belief that using social media is akin to goofing off. Embrace the new technology or lose the student to an institution that gets it. Time for an overhaul in admin.
—8:54 PM, August 16, 2011
Anonymous 4 said...
...and an old fart administrator lacking any knowledge or expertise in the programs he's meddling with, having spent his entire career within academia, but somehow believing he knows better than the faculty in all matters.
—9:09 PM, August 16, 2011
Two points:
1. Commenters are assuming rather much here. I was repeating a story from a reliable friend, but it is entirely possible that the “administrators” did more than simply notice that students were logged onto Facebook and YouTube. I have no details and neither do commenters (apparently).
2. Who is this “you” that some commenters are writing to? I can only assume that they are referring to me. But I (i.e., Roy Bauer) did not view the students on Facebook/YouTube, nor did I judge their activity to be a problem. I reported that (according to a story) some administrators were troubled by what they found. Good grief. This is a college blog. Read more carefully!

Tom gifts Frank with Tricky Dick wine

Tom, Frank, sombrero
     Frank Mickadeit of the OC Reg seems determined to portray the dying Tom Fuentes (a SOCCCD trustee) as a saint. Today, he posted this:

Scotch, wine, wisdom from Tom Fuentes
     Folks have been making the trek to say their goodbyes to the man who sat atop the O.C. Republican party during its Reagan-era glory years and beyond, and was friend and mentor to many who run the party today.
Mr. Frost's gift to RN
     Tom is home for good, done with chemo, just waiting for the cancer to take him. To remain alert, he has rejected morphine for now, taking Vicodin for pain. His wife, Jolene, sends groups of one or two upstairs, where Tom is propped up in their four-poster bed. Political mail strategist Jim Bieber and I were scheduled for 3:30 p.m. I thought we'd have 15 minutes. Jolene and the Lord gave us nearly two hours.
     We talked just a little about current politics. Tom was happy Rick Perry is in. "I met Perry a couple of weeks ago when he was in town. Sat next to his wife, Anita. I got a good feel for the first-lady quality. One of the gauges I have is to get to know the political wives. That tells you a lot. I still get notes from Barbara Bush." Vintage Fuentes on several levels.
     We talked about money and politics, his disdain for high-rollers who expected a quid-pro-quo for their donations. In all his years shifting money between people and conservative causes and candidates, he says, only one person ever blatantly asked for something in return. That person – now a candidate – may well win in 2012. If so, and if something unexpectedly, dare one say miraculously keeps that person from actually taking office? "That'll be me," Tom joked, pointing heavenward.
     But politics was not at the root of our talk. Rather, it was the human lessons one learns on the way – the good one does and the love one can spread through political connections. Jolene brought tumblers of Glenlivet and the real conversation began.
. . .
     Tom almost cheerily showed us the casket he's picked out – a $1,250 pine model made by Trappist monks in Iowa. "Dying is hard. But I'm not afraid of death." "You handle it with such grace," Bieber said. "Well," replied Tom, "what else are you going to do?"
. . .
Fuentes' idol—Dick Nixon
     Now it was time for Tom to give his final gifts – and they were hardly garage-sale material. "Jim, I want you to have my wristwatch," he said, passing his black Movado to Bieber, who was almost speechless. We talked some more, and then Tom stuck his hand in the bedcovers and came up with a bottle of wine. I couldn't read the label – not because of the tears, but because it was in Russian.
     The bottle was from a case Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev had given Richard Nixon during a state visit to Moscow in 1974. Nixon gave it to Tom in 1980 for helping him get back on his political feet after Watergate, along with a nice note. Over the years, Tom had given 11 special friends a bottle from the case. Tom knew I studied Nixon. "This is the last bottle," he said, handing it to me. He also gave me the Nixon note and the U.S. government manifest documenting the gift exchange between world leaders. It might legally belong to the people of the United States, but the G-Men will have to pry it from my cold, dead hands.
     Tom thinks those were his final gifts to us. I know better.

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...