Monday, December 18, 2017

Cookiemas 2017!

Cookiemas!
Today marked the 11th annual Cookiemas celebration, the second one held in the swanky LA second floor lounge. You know you've done something right if you end up at Cookiemas, whether by intention or through accident. Today's celebrants were rewarded with hot apple cider, Beatrice's amazing bundt cakes, cookies galore and more.

According to Dissent records, the first Cookiemas was held in 2006 in the deary but serviceable A-200 lounge. Here's a photo:

Ugly table covered by OC Weeklys. Ho ho ho.
Plus our intermittent coverage through the years

2006: Chestnuts Roasting.

2008: A Delightful Cookie Soiree

2014: Cookie Mas & Cuban Cigars

Today's celebration may have been the best ever.


There was so much to talk about and so many questions to ask, and answer. When would the semester finally end? Why did it seem like one-third of the campus had already left for the holidays? How did that square with the new edict that one should not even take a second sick day during the semester without arranging for a substitute teacher? Do the last two weeks of the semester really count? Or only for those teaching in Humanities and Languages? What happened to Weekend College? Remember Weekend College? When would the # Me Too movement arrive at the little college in the orange groves? Will they still "auction" off the opportunity to coach the women sand volleyball team this year?

In between teaching, eating cookies and pressing replay on the beat box which was cranking our Vince Guaraldi's Peanuts soundtrackRebel Girl kept quoting Rebecca Taister to whoever would listen:
"Women’s access to work and to power within their workplaces is curtailed, often via the very same mechanisms that promote, protect, and forgive men, the systems that give them double, triple chances to advance, and to abuse those around them, over and over again.”
And, from this past week's NY Times Sunday Magazine spread, Janna Wortham's opening salvo:
"'Revolution will come in a form we cannot yet imagine,' the critical theorists Fred Moten and Stefano Harney wrote in their 2013 essay “The Undercommons,” about the need to radically upend hierarchical institutions. I thought of their prophecy in October, when a private document listing allegations of sexual harassment and abuse by dozens of men in publishing and media surfaced online."

Thanks for showing up and making the season bright.

*

Richard Sneed dies

c. 1965
     At 2:22 this afternoon, we received this email from Jennie McCue at the district:
We are very saddened to share that Dr. Richard J. Sneed, Chancellor of the South Orange County Community College District from 1986 to 1993, passed away at his home on Saturday morning after a long illness.    
     Minimalism, I guess.

     Near as I can tell, Sneed was about 88 years old.
     In July of 1986, Sneed replaced the troublesome (—er, disastrous)  Larry Stevens, who presided over (—er, caused) three and a half years of strife and turmoil at the Saddleback Community College District — thanks, in part, to the usual idiotic double-downing of a clueless board that mucked up the original hire. The Faculty Association had successfully targetted trustees who supported Stevens in the election of '85. The new board pressured Stevens to resign, which he did, January 8, 1986.
     Sneed was widely respected and brought peace and professionalism back to the Chancellor's office. He was, as they say, both a scholar and a gentleman.
     He will be warmly remembered.
     I do believe his full name was Richard Joseph Sneed. I found this reference to his dissertation:
That's Richard Sneed, far right, c. 1988
(IVC President Ron Kong at center.)
Richard J. Sneed “The Kingdom’s Coming: Luke, 17, 20-21” STD dissertation, Catholic University of America, 1962
From Chancellor to Retire From Saddleback, LA Times, August 28, 1993
1989
     …Just this week, Sneed, who retires Monday after a sometimes stormy relationship with his faculty, returned from a conference in Sacramento sponsored by community college students seeking to preserve educational opportunities, lobbied for state money for new buildings at Saddleback and Irvine Valley colleges, and worked on the district's 1994-95 budget.
     What's more, Sneed has presented five notebooks of facts and personal observations to his interim successor, Anna McFarlin, president of Irvine Valley College.
     Although many challenges remain, Sneed said he's optimistic about the future of the district, which he believes will continue to grow and someday include a third campus.
He's also confident that administrators will have the energy and political know-how to unite students and faculty in the name of persuading state legislators about the importance of community college education.
     "They just can't let us down," Sneed said about the legislators in charge of allocating money to community colleges. "There's too much at stake. (Education) is such an important investment."
     After seven years as chancellor of the Saddleback Community College District, Sneed, 64, announced last spring he would retire because it was time for a new generation of leaders.
     "Saddleback is a terrific district," Sneed said. "I've enjoyed being here. Even when the times are tough, the job is exciting."
     In typical fashion, Sneed's retirement plans aren't looking much like retirement at all.
     Between traveling and volunteer work, Sneed said, he'll try his hand at fiction writing. He's also considering work as a consultant and may someday return to the classroom. A former priest, Sneed started his career as a scholar of Near East studies and a student of 11 languages.
c. 1965
   "I've always been sort of overcommitted," he joked.
     In his years as an administrator, which has included posts at Rancho Santiago College and Chapman University, Sneed saw the end of free education for community college students. They now pay $13 per unit, or $50 if they already hold a baccalaureate degree.
     Despite the increasingly difficult financial times for all state community college districts, Sneed is credited for leading the two Saddleback campuses, with a combined student population of about 32,000, through a period of rapid growth.
     In the period since Sneed became chancellor in 1986, officials have hired more than 100 full-time professors and added buildings and facilities worth about $50 million to both campuses.
     During his tenure, Irvine Valley College also received full accreditation and the district entered into a partnership with Cal State Fullerton, opening the CSUF-Mission Viejo campus at Saddleback College.
     In the past two years, however, he found himself in the middle of sometimes hostile contract negotiations with the district faculty association. Last year, the Saddleback College Academic Senate took a vote of "no confidence" in the chancellor, citing inadequate communication….
From Sneed New Chancellor of Saddleback District, LA Times, June 20, 1986
     ...Sneed, of Santa Ana, has been with Rancho Santiago Community College District since 1971 and has been its vice chancellor for academic affairs since 1973. Before coming to Rancho Santiago, Sneed was an administrator at Chapman College in Orange. He was president of St. Gregory's College in Shawnee, Okla., from 1964 to 1969.
     Sneed received his doctorate in 1962 from Catholic University of America....
St. Gregory's College

See also

      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...