Thursday, May 30, 2013

Roquemore's curious email


     President Roquemore just emailed the campus community with this curious message:
Colleagues,
     I am very proud of the Irvine Valley College 2013 Commencement Ceremony. I have received multiple positive comments from students, faculty, district administration, college administration, classified staff, board members, and the community. I would like to recognize and thank our highly talented teams that made this event successful....
     He goes on to list the 19 members of the Commencement Planning Task Force, the 16 members of the Commencement Speaker Task Force, 3 members of the Student Speaker Task Force, the Speech and Debate Faculty and Students, and the 13 Commencement Support Teams.
     Roquemore fails, however, to mention the multiple negative comments about IVC Commencement and his handling of it.
     There was a time when the Commencement Speaker group genuinely sought the input of faculty and other groups. In recent years, Roquemore, as is his habit, put one of his functionaries (DO) in charge of the group, whereupon it commenced discarding hard-won traditions and practices designed to maximize thoughtfulness and to avoid folly and embarrassment. (Remember last year’s cheerfully plagiarizing keynote speaker? Yeah, he was Roquemore’s choice.)
     The committee’s recent efforts at identifying potential speakers involved a preposterous process that threw every conceivable kind of proposal—including pipe dreams of inviting Hillary Clinton and Tom Hanks—into a huge, amorphous pile. When we heard that the group was once again straying from reason and past practice, some of us managed to get placed on the committee, but the key meeting was scheduled during teaching prime time (as always) when several of us (including me) were unavailable. (Phony Roquemorian inclusiveness. We've complained about this many times before, but always to no avail.)
Uncle Tonoose
     And, don’t forget, this committee is charged, not with selecting the speaker, but with sending up a roster of choices from which Roquemore makes the final selection.
     Yeah, Roquemore, the rock guy. The guy who deals with crises by dropping out of airplanes.
     Hence the recent speechifyin' Disney characters.
     When, not so long ago, the process was more thoughtful, we managed to invite such speakers as writer/editor Marty Smith, UCI’s Sharon V. Salinger, MacArthur Fellowship recipient Rueben Martinez, and novelist Maxine Hong Kingston. Now, we get Disney executives and the other usual suspects.
     When, recently, an (untenured) faculty member dared question the wisdom of the new & unproved "amorphous pile" "process," a certain administrator on the committee (KS) brutishly dismissed her concerns, leaving many in attendance horrified.
     Just today, I ran across faculty—beyond the many with whom I have already spoken—who expressed their reservations or objections about one element of IVC commencement: prayer, and, in particular, references to Jesus. One instructor, a faculty leader and a non-Christian, noted that the student speaker’s final remarks (about Jesus) “certainly made [her] pretty uncomfortable.”
     Another recently offered his concerns to the Academic Senate President:
     I just have the perennial concern about the "Jesus" prayers. It just seems really rude to pray at commencement. Has IVC ever had a Rabbi, Imam, Buddhist Monk or Hindu Priest do this religious ritual in the middle of our commencement? Perhaps individual religious clubs could organize their own baccalaureate services on campus to celebrate, in a religious way, their achievement, but to impose this on all of us, including our incredibly diverse student body, year after year, seems the height of cultural insensitivity. We talk a lot about celebrating diversity, but then we "do Jesus" every year at commencement.
     Many faculty (and others) who object to these elements are theists. Identifying this criticism with atheism is, as always, a fallacy.
     Glenn Roquemore only hears who he wants to hear.
     Still, some seek ways to make their objections heard. Toward that end, I should point out that, as things now stand, the decision to include prayer is made by the Commencement Planning Committee (or “task force”), a product of recent litigation against the district of which I was a part.
     According to the settlement of Westphal v. Wagner, reached in May of 2011, invocations would cease at Chancellor opening sessions and at Scholarship awards ceremonies. Further:
The decision on whether to select a speaker to deliver personal remarks in the form of an invocation, moment of silence, or opening and/or closing message, not to exceed two minutes, at important District and college events [e.g., commencement] shall rest within the sole discretion of the event planners, whether they be students, faculty, administrators, classified employees of the District, or a combination thereof. (From the board’s resolution; see at end of this post)
Professor Irwin Corey
     (Of course, this hasn’t prevented Saddleback College President Tod Burnett from exploiting an alleged looplhole in the agreement [see Saddleback Prez imposes prayer at commencement].)
     Next year, some of us should make damned sure that we make our way onto the relevant committee, namely, the “Commencement Planning Task Force.” According to Roquemore’s email, that task force presently comprises the following folks: Gillian Ashton, Sandra Malagon, James Bettencourt, Shanna Moorhouse, Will Crawford III, Diane Oaks, Christina Dickinson, Nikki Puliyanda, John Edwards, Patric Taylor, Linda Fontanilla, Candice Yacono, Will Glen, Andrew Yirak, Ruben Guzman, David Young, Helen Locke, Mark Zandonella, and Angela O. Mahaney.
     —Naturally, this crew only includes people who directly or indirectly answer to Roquemore.
     I'm shocked, shocked!
     You'd better know the facts. Here is the "resolution" (brought in accordance with the settlement of "Westphal v. Wagner"), approved by the board at its April 2011 meeting (click on graphics to enlarge them; skim down to the "therefore"):

The RESOLUTION:

Presidential Malaise
Recent Commencement Schweinerei:

• "Too Political" - Disney hacks (and corrupt OC Sheriffs) aren’t political, evidently, but Arellano is
• Plagiarism is a form of theft, Glenn - we got ‘im dead to rights
• That's some leadership, that leadership à la Roquemore - the curious manner in which Commencement Speaker Rhodes was selected

13 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm sure people say nice things to Glenn's face. That's what he hired them to do. That's why they keep their jobs. For a few of them, that is part of their job description.

A true leader, one secure in her or his skills, also offers an opportunities to address longstanding concerns and new ones so that even thing that go well enough can go better. Glenn seldom does that.

One of these days the students or their families will mount an objection to some elements of the ceremony. In some ways because of the nature of the ceremony - it happens ONCE for most students - such opposition may be muted.

Regarding the speaker from Disney - she was fine - not like the plagiarist from last year (Glenn's choice!) - but again, a predictable choice.

The process of choosing a speaker has been really compromised the last couple years which is why Glenn goes ahead and makes his own choices since the committee can't function. The notable bully on this year's committee should really be made to apologize.

What are they so afraid of?

Back to grading.

Anonymous said...

Really Glenn? The comments were positive? And multiple?
Wow.
You're an embarrassment.

Anonymous said...

Why don't things get better? - whether it is Early College, Scholarship or Commencement? Because there isn't ever anything other than pure self-celebration coming from Glenn's office. A failure to think critically. As if to do so is to admit failure itself.

Anonymous said...

I do not know if you heard, but this year at Saddleback Tod Burnett replaced the invocation with something called a "Community Reflection." The community reflection was given by a Methodist minister, but it was not a prayer. Instead, she offered up a moment of silence.

Roy Bauer said...

11:43, thanks for the info. I'll look into it.

Anonymous said...

Success! Really? I kept hearing an annoying ringing sound. With all those committees and planning one would expect such problems to be worked out well in advance.

Anonymous said...

Todd did that because he's on the job market and understands what an intolerant fool he looks like with his other position. Believe me, the faulty and staff at those other campuses know too. Ha. Glenn - well, I think someone else said it better awhile back; it's not like these people are reverent practicing Christians - it's something else. A real Christian wouldn't demand this kind of thing in a public education institution with a clear multicultural student body. Glenn is still trying to impress Tom Fuentes.

Anonymous said...

Some of us actually appreciate Roquemore. He has not forced anybody to do the prayer and if they do not wish to take part in it they don't have to. All I hear is whining again and again. This all just seems so childish whats next ban all the American flags. Oh Wait! that's right they have all ready tried that.

Anonymous said...

When did we try to ban American flags at commencement? Do tell.

Roy Bauer said...

Never happened.

Anonymous said...

Umm, 11:04, if it's a public gathering and a prayer is being given, everyone there is "taking part in it," like it or not.

Imagine your being at a meeting, and someone offered a request to all in attendance that only facts and documented matters be introduced; you'll certainly hate that, as it would include you in such a proposition--see?

Anonymous said...

KS & CJ are a tag team, donchaknow.

Anonymous said...

If you go back a little farther in time, you will find that we had journalist Robert Scheer as speaker one year.

The word from inside the committee is that Rocky worked and continues to work the student services chain of command so that the students on the committee are directed to endorse his preconceived choice for commencement speaker, and to oppose the nominees put forth by the faculty.

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...