Saturday, December 21, 2019

Remembering a Student


The contingent from the little college in the orange groves numbered five. We joined a group already gathering in the chapel room off Alicia Parkway in Laguna Hills on Saturday afternoon. The world beyond was bustling, for it was, after all, the weekend before Christmas, two days before Hanukkah. We stepped away from that bustle for a couple hours to remember a student, dead at 26, a young man who had faced formidable odds and made such progress, a genuinely warm and cheerful soul, someone Beth Sanchez would call one of our "special friends." He'd been a student at the college for several years and was well known and loved. That afternoon we learned more about him - his family history, his particular challenges, his triumphs. We hugged his weeping mother, shook the strong proud hand of his stepfather. We heard from those like us who helped him live and learn. We were reminded of all that our students carry that we might not always see and what a privilege it is to be a part of their lives. Good things to remember as this year comes to a close.



Beth spoke with a full heart.


Tony loved the Backstreet Boys.

Wednesday, December 18, 2019

And finally—a disheartening beginning for the new IVC?


Wed, Dec 18, 2019 1:50 pm
     The Faculty Association and IVC Academic Senate Presidents, in collaboration with one another and in sounding the IVC faculty at large, are pleased to announce the two faculty members serving on the IVC President Search Committee: [PS, a counselor] (F[aculty]A[ssociation]) [union] and [CK, a member of the Business faculty] (A[cademic]S[enate]).
. . .
     Bringing their knowledge, experience, diversity, and integrity to evaluating and advancing outstanding Presidential candidates, [P] and [C] will serve our faculty and college most admirably.

Respectfully Yours, 
Kurt Meyer,
Faculty Association President 
June McLaughlin,
IVC Academic Senate President

Wed, Dec 18, 2019 3:04 pm
     One thing is clear: after over twenty years of administrative oppression of academics, we now need to hire an actual academic as president.
     And so what do we do? For faculty to serve on the search committee, we select individuals from the least academic areas on campus.
     Just F-ing great.
     Very, very disappointed. 
—Roy Bauer

13th Annual Cookiemas


Cookiemas - what began as a way for faculty and staff to lighten the end of the year burdens 13 years ago in the dank and mold-ridden A-200 building has continued to be celebrated in the light and airy lounge of the LA building across the A-quad. An ecumenical and slightly pagan affair which also shows off the baking talents of many, Cookiemas brought together many yesterday to sip cider, share stories and eat cookies. Once again, our presiding spirit, Mother Fretz, offered trays of her own home baked treat as she has done form the very first Cookiemas.










Photos by Rebel Girl and Beatrice Tseng (The best photos are by Beatrice!).

See you next year.
*

Saturday, December 7, 2019

‘It Just Isn’t Working’: PISA Test Scores Cast Doubt on U.S. Education Efforts 
New York Times
An international exam shows that American 15-year-olds are stagnant in reading and math even though the country has spent billions to close gaps with the rest of the world.

Published Dec. 3, 2019Updated Dec. 5, 2019
     The performance of American teenagers in reading and math has been stagnant since 2000, according to the latest results of a rigorous international exam, despite a decades-long effort to raise standards and help students compete with peers across the globe.
     And the achievement gap in reading between high and low performers is widening. Although the top quarter of American students have improved their performance on the exam since 2012, the bottom 10th percentile lost ground, according to an analysis by the National Center for Education Statistics, a federal agency.
     The disappointing results from the exam, the Program for International Student Assessment, were announced on Tuesday and follow those from the National Assessment of Educational Progress, an American test that recently showed that two-thirds of children were not proficient readers.
     Over all, American 15-year-olds who took the PISA test scored slightly above students from peer nations in reading but below the middle of the pack in math.
. .
     About a fifth of American 15-year-olds scored so low on the PISA test that it appeared they had not mastered reading skills expected of a 10-year-old, according to Andreas Schleicher, director of education and skills at the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, which administers the exam.
     Those students, he said, face “pretty grim prospects” on the job market.
Daniel Koretz, an expert on testing and a professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, said recent test results showed that “it’s really time to rethink the entire drift of policy reform because it just isn’t working.”
     Because the United States lacks a centralized system for teacher training or distributing quality instructional materials to schools, Professor Koretz said, states and districts did not always effectively carry out the Common Core or other initiatives.
. . .
     The most recent PISA test was given in 2018 to 600,000 15-year-olds in 79 education systems around the world, and included both public and private school students. In the United States, a demographically representative sample of 4,800 students from 215 schools took the test, which is given every three years.
     Although math and science were also tested, about half of the questions were devoted to reading, the focus of the 2018 exam. Students were asked to determine when written evidence supported a particular claim and to distinguish between fact and opinion, among other tasks.
     The top performers in reading were four provinces of China — Beijing, Shanghai, Jiangsu and Zhejiang. Also outperforming the United States were Singapore, Macau, Hong Kong, Estonia, Canada, Finland and Ireland. The United Kingdom, Japan and Australia performed similarly to the United States….

Thursday, December 5, 2019

Red Emma Rocks On

In good company at the New York Historical Museum. Photo by Louis Tonkovich. 

Red has been spotted around town lately, with and without his post-brain surgery beret.  Some may have seen him at UCI, others at IVC where this week he joined the denizens of the LA building in celebrating the imminent arrival of somebody's twins.  Lots to celebrate lately. It's all good as the kids say. Huzzah! Rock on.

When we last took note of Red on the blog, it was to note UCI's capitulation to his demand for paid leave and benefits. (Thanks for all the signatures, cards, letters, etc. Solidarity forever, baby.)  Now, a couple months later, here's the latest, courtesy of his union, CFT/AFT:

How one career lecturer’s medical crisis is helping others win paid sick leave

"The victory for Andrew,” she [Mia McIver] says, “immediately had wider effects and teaching faculty on other campuses in similar situations were able to secure paid medical leave. Much of the credit for the momentum goes to Andrew himself, who spent decades building relationships as a teacher and organizer. This shows that, when we put those relationships at the core of our union work, they can transform into positive changes.”

Telling, Not Being the Joke


Q: Tell me, how long have you been working here?
A: Ever since they threatened to fire me.
That old cornball joke still makes me laugh, 50 years after I read it in a kids magazine. I understood it then as honest if everyday acknowledgement by the presumably once-lazy worker of his or her required acquiescence to power, and of isolation. But its splendid trick syntax and on-the-nose calling out of the coercive relationship of management to labor suggested more, even to a 10-year-old: cognizance of at least the potential inherent power of the worker — all workers? — to apprehend, to subvert, to jest, however fatalistically, cynically or — my own favorite — insubordinately.
Rock on.

Wednesday, November 27, 2019

RIP: OC Weekly (1995-2019)

OC Weekly covered and often led the Sheriff "I'm a Crook" Carona story.
Carona landed in prison thanks in part to the Weekly's dogged reporting.
It sure wasn't the Register's.

Today the OC Weekly's publisher, the Duncan Mcintosh Company, announced the paper's demise and laid off the staff. 

from Los Angeles Magazine:

The Shuttering of OC Weekly Leaves a Gaping Hole in Orange County’s Media Landscape

From the Newport Beach Independent:

Ex-Newport Beach Harbor Commissioner Closes OC Weekly

The OC Weekly served the county of Orange for 24 years and we here at  Dissent couldn't have done what we do without a more than a little help from our friends: Gustavo Arellano, Matt Coker, R. Scott Moxley, Gabriel San Roman, Nick Schou and all the other weeklings who paid attention when others did not and help make this county better than it ever was, doing what good newspapers do: "afflict the comfortable and comfort the afflicted."

Thanks for the hell raising.

In honor of the OC Weekly's nearly quarter century of work, Rebel Girl and her comrades will compile a "Best of " below. So keep checking back.

And for those of you who are new to the college or new to the district, enjoy the history lesson. It's been one wild ride.

In no particular order:

THE EVIL OF FROGUENSTEIN (MATT COKER) 

(Cover story!)

OC Weekly - April 10, 1998

NOT-SO-SECRET-SERVICE: TONKOVICH OFFERS SECURITY SERVICES TO MATHUR 

(Red Emma offers to be IVC President Mathur's security guard!) 

OC WEEKLY - STAFF | POSTED ON DECEMBER 23, 1999


Connecting Donald Trump Dots with OC's Steve Frogue and John G. Schmitz (2017)


A NIXON-HATER RECONSIDERS TRICKY DICK IN THE AGE OF TRUMP AT THE REBOOTED NIXON LIBRARY  (2016)

by Andrew Tonkovich (aka Red Emma, duh) and featuring a cameo by Dr. Brittany Adams, IVC professor of history. 


OC WEEKLY - STAFF | POSTED ON OCTOBER 21, 1999

Vol. 3

SADDLEBACK COLLEGE’S MRAP MAKES IT TO OC WEEKLY’S “OC’S SCARIEST” LIST (2014)


WACKY IVC SCULPTURE IS HONORED BY OC WEEKLY (2010)




WHY DOES SADDLEBACK COLLEGE HAVE AN MRAP ARMORED VEHICLE?
GABRIEL SAN ROMÁN | POSTED ONSEPTEMBER 12, 2014

OC's Scariest People 2014! Scary People to Avoid in the Dark!
15. SADDLEBACK COLLEGE'S MRAP
     Terrorists and lone-wolf school shooters beware: Saddleback College is ready for you! Thanks to a federal program that allows local police departments to get military hand-me-downs, the Mission Viejo community college snagged itself a mine-resistant, ambush-protected (MRAP) vehicle better suited to fighting jihadis than sixth-year communication majors. It's the only campus police force in the nation with less than 10 full-time cops to have one, which is only used to wow dumb high school kids. No word yet if the MRAP is equipped to protect students from exploding textbook costs and tuition fees, though.
     Mitigating Factor: Just waiting for a Gaucho to take it for a joy ride on Alicia Parkway.
THE UNABAUER MANIFESTO,
MATT COKER | POSTED ON APRIL 8, 1999

FRANK MICKADEIT, OC REGISTER COLUMNIST, SLAMS COLLEGE PROFESSOR ON BEHALF OF LATE TOM FUENTES
MATT COKER | POSTED ON JUNE 28, 2012

Vol. 5

TANGLED WEB OF HATE WEAVED BY CARTO, VON BRUNN N CO.
MATT COKER | POSTED ON JUNE 20, 2009

....South Orange County Community College District rabble-rousers, whose efforts have resulted in the district’s imbecilic board of trustees being ordered by an Orange County Superior Court judge to tape-record its closed-door meetings for two years due to persistent violations of the state’s open-meeting law. Also thanks to the dissenters, an accrediting panel this year denounced the way the district’s Saddleback and Irvine Valley colleges have been governed during the past two years....The most publicized South Orange County Community College District rabble-rouser, Irvine Valley College philosophy professor Roy Bauer.  Besides being a constant thorn in the board’s side at public gatherings for the past few years, Bauer has churned out--with the help of anonymous correspondents--two muckraking newsletters: Dissent, which covers the district, and The Vine, which covers IVC. Besides hilariously clever clip-and-crop graphics, a recent Dissent included a mock advice column that looked as if it were penned by board president Dorothy Fortune. One not-really-Fortune response to a not-real reader: “Ours was the only community college in the nation to take the day off when President [Richard] Nixon died. Our district has a board member who thinks Israel and space monkeys killed JFK. Our board includes two members of the Christian Coalition, too.”

'NO ENTIENDO' [TRUSTEE FUENTES VS. SPAIN]
OC WEEKLY - STAFF | POSTED ON MARCH 10, 2005

As the chair of Orange County's Republican Party from 1984 until last year, Tom Fuentes distinguished himself by waging vindicative, sometimes bizarre campaigns against enemies real and perceived. As a trustee for the South Orange County Community College District (SOCCCD), Fuentes continues his GOP battle plan by launching a campaign against . . . Spain?!

OC WEEKLY FOLLOWS UP ON OUR "HOLOCAUST MUSEUM SHOOTER" STORY  (2009)




by Lisa Alvarez (aka Rebel Girl) (2004)
Education Secretary Rod Paige's characterization of the nation's largest teachers' union as a “terrorist organization” compels me, a professor and member of the National Education Association, to come clean.
It began in Girl Scouts. Newspaper-collection drives funded field trips to summer camp, where uniformed girls sat in the firelight, singing anthems penned by, yes, blacklisted folksingers. Hearing Pete Seeger's “Where Have All the Flowers Gone” still causes me, Manchurian Candidate-style, to repeat the Scout motto and march to the cupboard for graham crackers and marshmallows.
Brainwashing as a result of this guerrilla training (not to mention selling cookies and calendars for the revolution) did its evil work. My nascent feminism, encouraged by strong female role models, accounts for my later support of the National Organization for Women and its doomed revolutionary ploy, the Equal Rights Amendment....
OC Weekly covered the "Great Park," and the "El Toro Airport" story before it

LA? No Way? College district blocks student trips to Los Angeles (2001)
Hot on the heels of its recent vote to disallow a student trip to Cuba, South Orange County Community College District (SOCCCD) trustees on Monday night voted to block all student outings to Los Angeles County. "The trustees have serious concerns about allowing district-sponsored travel to Los Angeles," said a district spokesperson. "It’s far away and dangerous. Plus, students might get lost."

OC WEEKLY CONSULTS REBEL GIRL (2008) 


and takes a nice pic!
RAGHU MATHUR OUT AS SOCCCD CHANCELLOR?
MATT COKER | POSTED ON JANUARY 26, 2010

READ ALL ABOUT IT
MATT COKER | POSTED ONDECEMBER 2, 1999
Illustration by Bob Aul — South Orange County Community College District trustees on Nov. 22 decided to appeal a court ruling favorable to Roy Bauer. The Irvine Valley College (IVC) professor publishes rabble-rousing newsletters that hilariously lampoon a board and administration that does a damn fine job of hilariously lampooning itself (Nazi sympathizers attending board meetings, homophobic political mailers in trustee elections, faculty fuckheads willing to sell their souls for coin—such a hoot!). Bauer's bosses tried to force him to seek therapy because, they alleged, his Vineand Dissent newsletters were filled with violence and hatred. Bauer sued on First Amendment grounds. The district countersued, claiming employees had been threatened physically in what friends and foes affectionately refer to as the “Unabauer Manifesto.” But the judge sided with Bauer—in humorous fashion. When the district tried to make hay out of a comment in one newsletter that stated the author wanted to drop “a 2-ton slate of polished granite” on the IVC president's head, the judge dismissed it as pure hyperbole, noting, “Think of the logistics!” So now the not-so-appealing district is appealing, even though Bauer's court record against them is a solid 3-0. Two other cases involved the board's cavalier violations of the state's open-meetings law (we forgot to include those with the “District Lampooning Itself” examples). Defending the appeal motion, Chancellor Cedric Sampson says he wants to defuse workplace hostilities in an era when not only postal workers go postal. Subliminal message to Bauer: ixnay on the ackblay enchcoattray.
ANOTHER FINE MESS
MATT COKER | POSTED ON JULY 8, 1999
     Photo by Keith May -- Clockwork asked Irvine Valley College (IVC) philosophy and ethics professor Roy Bauer the other day: Roy Bauer, you just won a $98,000 decision against the South Orange County Community College District. What are you going to do now?
     “Why, I'm going to Disneyland,” he shot back. “There's a fella there, and the trustees hope to appoint him president of Saddleback College. His name's Goofy.”….

LAW AND ODOR
MATT COKER | POSTED ON MARCH 9, 2000


MATT COKER | POSTED ON FEBRUARY 7, 2002
“GOD'S LAWYER” AIDS COLLEGE DISTRICT IN PRAYER SUIT
MATT COKER | POSTED ON NOVEMBER 24, 2009

COLLEGE DISTRICT BOARD'S BATTLE CRY: SEND LAWYERS, HIRED GUNS AND MONEY
MATT COKER | POSTED ON MARCH 25, 2010

FROM KOBE BRYANT'S RAP ALBUM TO GWEN STEFANI'S CHOLA, OC'S 7 MOST LEGENDARY HOLY GRAILS
GUSTAVO ARELLANO | POSTED ON NOVEMBER 27, 2013
[Countdow to #1]
4. Ronald Caspers or His Boat
. . .
1. The Newspaper Clippings That Show Former GOP Chair Tom Fuentes was Caught in a Gay Sex Sting By Cops

Friday, November 22, 2019

The IVC faculty do not support the veterans' memorial clock tower project


     AS WE REPORTED Nov 9 (Another one of Glenn Roquemore’s hobbyhorses), the issue of construction of a veterans’ memorial clock tower has come up again at the college (IVC).
     The college once featured a “beloved” clock tower—a tribute, not to veterans, but to time, or maybe wood—inside its original central quadrangle, but it was torn down in 2006 owing to the structure's deterioration. Soon thereafter, the college indicated that a “new clock tower” was planned (Register, 2006). By 2008 and 2009, district (SOCCCD) documents referred to plans for a “Veterans Tribute Tower” at IVC. An IVC “Veterans Memorial Clock Tower project” was discussed in 2010, and a “Foundation Veterans Memorial Clock Tower Project” was referred to (by the President’s office) in 2013.
     More recently, an “IVC Veterans Tribute Tower Project” is referred to in district documents that indicate that a call for bids for construction has gone out. (That period is now over.)
     But, really, who wants this thing?
     Now that Glenn Roquemore has resigned from the IVC Presidency ("Woohoo!"), planned college expenditures seem to be under review, and this “million dollar” tower project has quickly come under scrutiny.

A tribute to time, and wood
     Item L of yesterday’s Academic Senate meeting was the planned clock tower. According to the meeting’s agenda, “recent administrative change ha[ve] led to a review of the plan to build a clock tower at IVC for over a million dollars.” The question before the group is: “[Do] IVC faculty want to go forward with the plan to build a clock tower?”
     During discussion of this item, I asked whether community groups or other groups would be disappointed (or worse) should the project be cancelled. Evidently, the answer is “no.” I was told that campus veterans were consulted and they indicated that they had no desire for the construction of this memorial.
     One wag noted that architectural renderings of the proposed tower seem to depict something that looked like a massive "guillotine."
     We all stared at the rendering.
     Senate VP Jeff told us that plans for a new student services complex are underway, and there is no reason why some sort of clock couldn't be included as part of that project, when the time comes to plan the dang thing.
     That was reassuring to fans of big timepieces.
     It became clear, too, that cancellation of the current "clock tower" project would free up the money, that hasn't been spent, for other campus projects.
     With such factoids before them, the Senators resoundingly defeated the agenda item.
     For what that's worth.
* * *
     IN OTHER NEWS: widely detested IVC administrator Linda Fontanilla (Vice President for Student Services) recently received a new contract, but it was only for a single year. Most other administrators and managers received 2-year contracts.
     I attended last week's meeting of the School of Humanities. During the meeting, we were treated to a presentation by one of the college's chemists, who was there to discuss ongoing efforts to compose "learning objectives." Since he was a chemist, and since he asked if we had any questions, I said, "Is it true that  Kiana Tabibzadeh will be returning to IVC?"
     Kiana, you see, used to teach Chemistry around here. And she's Glenn Roquemore's wife.
     The question seemed to throw the fellow a bit. Then he said, "at yesterday's department meeting, we were told that that might happen." —Something like that.
     You'll recall that, after years and years of nepotistism-based Kianistic high-handedness and abuse over in the B200 Building, our Kiana was sent packing to the other college, Saddleback. But now hubby has resigned the IVC Presidency, and he'll be returning, in the Fall, not to IVC, but to Saddleback. (Why there? Dunno.)
     So I guess that led to Kiana's direction to go north.
     —Or maybe these events are unrelated.
     Dunno.
     Question: why did Glenn resign and not serve out the rest of his contract? What was that about?
     And: is he getting paid in the Spring (while he enjoys home life)? Even though he resigned?


Sunday, November 17, 2019

IVC Alum is a Best American


Congratulations to IVC alum Jenn Alandy Trahan who has a story in this year's Best American Short Stories, edited by Pulitzer Prize winner Anthony Doerr

Jenn, who spent a couple years in between her BA and MFA in IVC's fiction workshop building her portfolio, is currently a Jones lecturer at Stanford, where she had previously been awarded a Stegner fellowship.


"They Told Us not to Say This" is an excerpt from her forthcoming book.


Dissent has previously covered Jenn's accomplishments here and here.


Jenn has some nice thing to say about her teachers.


Jenn fits the profile of a "returning student" who did not have a transfer plan because she had already completed her undergraduate work but clearly her time at IVC helped her achieve her impressive academic goals - all on her own timeline as an older returning student.  She makes us proud.

*



Wednesday, November 13, 2019

Meanwhile at Saddleback: "the hand of hate cannot compete "



This email was sent out to the Saddleback College community today:
Campus colleagues and students:
We are responding to a finding of hate vandalism on our campus. This morning we discovered that someone had written the “N” word in large, chalk letters on a concrete side wall of the LRC. It has been removed, but I share this finding with you so that you can hear the following directly from me:
We will not tolerate hate on this campus. No matter who you are, where you come from, the color of your skin, the shape of your nose or eyelid, who you love or how you’re different, you are part of our campus. You don’t just belong here; you are who we are and why we are here. Saddleback is Saddleback because of you.
The people who speak hate do not speak for others, as they sometimes think or suggest. Their views are not shared. They are alone, frightened and angry at a world that has moved beyond hate. The more we march forward, the more chalk we will see. But the hand of hate cannot compete with the 1400 employees and 26,000 students of Saddleback, cleaning rags in hand, ensuring that our love of mission and students will turn hate to dust. Every time.
1 hater. 27,000 to wipe away the hate.

Elliot
Dr. Elliot Stern
President, Saddleback College

A swift (and powerfully lyrical) response from President Stern.

Meanwhile, readers might remember former IVC President Glenn Roquemore's rather slow and vague response last year to various acts of vandalism, including the appearance of swastikas:

The Nothing that is Done: Swastikas Come to IVC

13 Days and Counting

Roquemore: A Failure to Lead

That was then, this is now.

Just today Rebel Girl was holding forth about the infamous "same-sex flier" of the 90s, sharing that instructive story with a relatively junior faculty member.

So Stern's inclusive rhetoric is especially welcome: "No matter who you are, where you come from, the color of your skin, the shape of your nose or eyelid, who you love or how you’re different, you are part of our campus."

What a difference 23 years - and new, brave, responsible leadership - make.

As the Saddleback colleague who shared Stern's letter remarked: "Refreshing."

Indeed.
*

The Reb on "front page" of HuffPost, protesting President Donald Shit-Weasel in New York over the weekend

We're so proud!

SEE
Janet Gonzales, 85, said she has a long list of reasons why she came out to protest Trump on Monday, including his “upside down” foreign policy in the Middle East.
Asked what she would say to Trump if she met him, she said, “Fuck you.”

Saturday, November 9, 2019

Another One of Glenn Roquemore's Hobbyhorses: the Veterans Memorial Clock Tower

     OLDSTERS like the Reb and I will remember that Irvine Valley College once had a beloved landmark, namely, the ol’ “Clock Tower,” which was demolished by IVC Prez Glenn Roquemore in 2006.
     Evidently, the college had not done enough to maintain the structure (--um, why not?), and, according to Roquemore at the time, the continued presence of the Dang Thing became a safety issue. (Many of us were suspicious of such excuses. Roquemore had long revealed himself to be the kinda guy who'll cut down a tree—or an orange grove—at the drop of a hat.)
     So down it went.
     But, soon thereafter, there was talk of a replacement tower. The OC Register’s minimalist news item ("Irvine: Clock tower is gone," OC Reg, October 14, 2006) informed readers that “A new clock tower is proposed near the circle on campus or the student services center.”
     I believe that I served on the IVC Senate at the time. I don't recall the Academic Senate—i.e., the faculty—ever being consulted about this project.
     According to the SOCCCD Board Meeting Highlights, for the meeting of February 2008, the board approved the “concept of the Veterans Tribute Tower to be constructed at IVC.”
     The District Report of 2009 explains that
During the year our colleges … hold official veterans’ recognition ceremonies. Currently, there are projects to build distinctive campus memorials to the men and women who serve and have served our country so selflessly—a tribute clock tower at IVC and a memorial sculpture garden at Saddleback College.
     The latter, of course, was eventually built in 2010. (See here.)
     The district mentioned the IVC tribute tower again a year later:
Both Darryl [Cox] and Tom [Mathavorn] hope to raise the profile of veterans at IVC in the future. “We really need a place for vets to get together,” says Tom. … Other priorities for the future include ... funding and finishing the planned IVC Veterans Memorial Clock Tower project. (SOCCCD report to the community, 2010)
     For what it’s worth, the project was mentioned again in an obituary for Glenn’s father in 2013:
In lieu of flowers donations to the Irvine Valley College Foundation Veterans Memorial Clock Tower Project www.ivc.edu/foundation/Pages/default.aspx, or the Wounded Warrior Project, would be greatly appreciated by the family.
     The link to the Foundation no longer works. (Not for me, anyway.)


     I can find no mention of a “veterans’ clock tower” project in any of the available IVC Foundation reports (See).
     I did, however, find this very recent reference to a bidding opportunity, at SOCCCD, for constructing the IVC "Veterans Tribute Tower":

Construction Bid Source, 2019
IVC Veterans Tribute Tower Project, Irvine, CA
Orange County
Owner Reference: 351
10/28/2019
Past bid date
Pre-Bid: Login or create an account to see more project details. Basic membership is FREE
Estimate: $580,000.00
Trades: General Contractor
Licenses: B
The Contractor’s Work includes a Irvine Valley College Veterans Tribute Tower. Scope of work includes but is not limited to architectural, structural, electrical and site work, pursuant to work delineated in the attached Drawings by Perkins-Eastman Dougherty. Project duration is 165 days. Bonds required.
     (See also here.)
     During Thursday’s meeting of the IVC Academic Senate, the subject of the veterans' tower project came up. We were told that the price tag for the project was over $1 million and that over $100K had already been spent.
     A question arose: who wants this thing? Who’s been pushing for it? (Those on hand who'd seen the plans were decidedly unimpressed by them.)
     It soon became clear that the faculty senate of this college (IVC) was never consulted about the veterans’ tower project.
     And no one in the room seemed disposed to defend it.
     It was another one of Glenn’s “special” projects.
     Oh my.

From IVC's 1988 catalog

FURTHER READING:
Glenn's hero 

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...