Tuesday, January 28, 2020

That goofy correspondence school makes it official: Roquemore is Chance

CSU: conveniently located across from Hooters

     It's official. California Southern University—an "online" for-profit situated across from Hooters and IKEA in Costa Mesa—issued a press release today announcing Glenn Roquemore’s appointment as Chancellor:

"Thought leader."
California Southern University Fills New Chancellor Position 
Jan 28, 2020 by CalSouthern Communications

COSTA MESA, Calif. (Jan 28, 2020) – Setting the stage for a period of anticipated growth, California Southern University has appointed Glenn Roquemore, Ph.D., to the newly created position of university chancellor. A 28-year veteran of higher education, he previously served as president of Irvine Valley College (IVC) in Irvine, Calif. from 2002 to 2019.
     Today’s announcement by J. Ramon Villanueva, chairman of the CalSouthern board of directors, makes Dr. Roquemore the new academic face and thought leader of the 42-year-old, 100% online university.
     Reporting to CalSouthern President Gwen Finestone, Ph.D., Roquemore will work closely with Provost Lasharnda Beckwith, Ph.D., and others to ensure academic program quality and effectiveness; a culture of compliance; full resource utilization in accordance with federal, state and local regulations; and university and sponsoring agency policies, procedures and accreditation requirements.
     He will also assist the president and CalSouthern deans, academic and institutional officers in academic policy, planning and business affairs; faculty, student and staff affairs; legislative policy; institutional research; legal affairs; capital planning; and university and community relations and development.      

  “A passionate educator offering a rare blend teaching paired with academic and educational management experience, Dr. Roquemore will prove instrumental to our efforts to take California Southern University to the next academic level in the new decade,” said Villanueva. “He combines a grounding in all facets of educational leadership from his time at Irvine Valley College, one of the region’s most respected community colleges, with an impressive record as a faculty member at some of the most diverse University of California and California State University campuses. This background will help us build the university’s academic reputation both locally and internationally.”
     Echoing Villlanueva’s sentiments, Dr. Finestone cited Roquemore’s executive leadership experience, both as a president and board member. “He is especially adept at establishing budgets and orchestrating financial management in a collaborative manner that facilitates open dialogue among constituent groups, faculty and staff. That level of transparency is important at CalSouthern.”....
You can read the rest of this blather here.

CSU tag line: "100% online!"
"Global headquarters"

Monday, January 27, 2020

So it's true: Roquemore's the new Chance at "California Southern University" on Harbor

Chancellor, Harbor
Correspondence School
     The following appears to be in today's OC Reg:
     Dr. Glenn Roquemore has been appointed to the newly created position of University Chancellor at California Southern University in Costa Mesa.
     Roquemore is married and lives with his wife and son in Irvine. He will be based at CalSouthern’s global headquarters in Costa Mesa.
     The online university continues to search for a new president.
     Owing to the Reg's ungenerous policies, it won't grant me access to the article, unless I pay for it, and that ain't gonna happen. I got the above verbiage (evidently from today's Reg business section) indirectly from Daily Gaming World.
     I still can't find any mention of any of this on the CSU website, but they're kind of a rinky dink operation, so there's that.
     Previously, we reported that CSU doesn't seem to have a chancellor.
     Here's what Wikipedia has to say about California Southern U:
The university was established in California on December 27, 1978, by Dr. Donald Hecht as a traditional correspondence school, and received its initial approval to offer degree programs from the California Department of Education. It originally offered associate level programs, then expanded to bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees. During the 1990s, the university added distance learning programs in the fields of business, psychology and law. The University is now recognized as an online degree granting institution.
     I do hope Glenn takes that stupid "Astounding Inventions" side show with him.



Sunday, January 26, 2020

IVC alum in the news

Sarah at  Libromobile. (Kevin Chang / LAT Staff Photographer)
IVC alum Sarah Rafael García got some well-deserved attention in today's Sunday Los Angeles Times in an article titled "LibroMobile may be O.C.’s smallest bookstore but it’s also a symbol of growing diversity" by Namrata Poddar. 

excerpt:
...I remember walking with her down Calle Cuatro to a stairwell, where she stored crates full of books on either side, and then watching her push a bookcart out from the space below the stairs.
Now, LibroMobile is a bookstore in a warehouse in a back alley off 4th and Spurgeon streets, but for its first nine months, it existed on that book-laden staircase and through the mobile cart inspired by the paleteros, iconic fruit vendor carts often seen in Santa Ana.
While its ever-expanding inventory has moved from the staircase to the warehouse, the book cart continues to travel throughout the city and surrounding areas to promote literacy...
Historical note: Sarah was enrolled in the first class Rebel Girl ever taught at IVC.

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Friday, January 24, 2020

Fontanilla to retire

Received today:
Dear IVC community, 
Retreating residuum
     Last week I was informed by Dr. Linda Fontanilla [Vice President for Student Services] about her intent to retire from Irvine Valley College effective May 11, 2020. I am sending this announcement to be the very first to extend my personal gratitude, and that of the IVC Family to Dr. Fontanilla for her many years of dedication and commitment to IVC and to our students.
. . . .
     Now, on the brink of retirement, it is time for Linda to pursue the enrichment of her own life just as she has enriched countless other lives. We here at IVC and across the South Orange County Community College District have learned much from Linda’s modeling on campus through her strong work ethic and a passion for service. She will be greatly missed.
     Please join me in thanking Linda and wishing her the very best in her retirement.
Best regards,

Cindy Vyskocil, Ed.D.
Acting President
Irvine Valley College



Wednesday, January 22, 2020


The world is going to hell in a hand basket.
Meanwhile, I'm just watchin' old Weezer videos.


Saturday, January 18, 2020

TEDxIVC moves to Yost, launches Go Fund Me campaign



The TEDxIVC event originally slated to be held at IVC's PAC has been moved to Santa Ana's Yost Theater. 

The move has inspired a GoFundMe campaign to provide for free tickets to attendees.

In their appeal, the organizers explain the value of the program but also lodge a number of complaints about IVC:
TEDxIVC is a licensed TEDx event that's been in development since January, 2019, approved and supported by IVC President Glenn Roquemore. Unfortunately, the IVC Administration completely changed during the end of 2019, with directors and administrators being fired, of which included the IVC President. TEDxIVC received major push back from the new administration, losing us sponsors/partners, exploiting us with major costs that they kept adding with the venue, A/V equipment, and miscellaneous expenses that were previously free. We also had to deal with a lot of abuse coming from the director of the venue who disregarded this event for a prolonged period of time, treated us with contempt, and resorted to threats and intimidation tactics to subjugate us.
Yikes.

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Friday, January 10, 2020

Retired Saddleback prof helps organize exhibit at MOLAA

Ana Maria Cobos at the Museum of Latin America.  Photo by Gabriel San Roman. 

Gabriel San Román, writing in the Long Beach Post, catches up with Saddleback College's retired librarian Ana Maria Cobos and the exhibit she helped organize titled “Arte, Mujer y Memoria: Arpilleras From Chile 1973-1990” at the Museum of Latin American Art.

Read his article below (click to read it in its entirety) then go see the exhibit in Long Beach. It runs through March 29. Gabriel says that "taking it all in felt like a Stations of the Cross for Chilean democracy." So good to see Ana Maria continuing her good work in the community. So good to see Gabriel, formerly with the OC Weekly, finding new outlets for his important voice.


excerpt:
At first glance, dozens of Chilean arpilleras—patchwork portraits on burlap canvasses—appear hopeful on display at the Museum of Latin American Art. Often depicting a beaming sun emerging from Andean mountaintops, the cheerful colors of stitched cloth sharply contrast with images of life under a brutal dictatorship: a presidential palace engulfed in flames, leftist activists dumped into the Pacific Ocean from military helicopters, book burnings and a boot stamping out press freedom.
“It was dangerous for Chilean women to create arpilleras but they were always working in spaces considered safe havens,” says Ana Maria Cobos, a retired Saddleback College librarian who helped organize the “Arte, Mujer y Memoria: Arpilleras From Chile 1973-1990” exhibit. “It’s a remarkable form that allowed women to express something that, typically, they wouldn’t have had the opportunity to.”





Tuesday, January 7, 2020

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Roquemore evidently gets gig at local "online" for-profit — UPDATE


     UPDATE: as of this time (3:30 p.m., Sunday, January 5) the only page for Roquemore on Linked In describes him as “President at Irvine Valley College.” His page no longer describes him as Chancellor of CSU.

* * *
     January 1: A friend contacted me to tell me that Glenn Roquemore—recently sent packing from IVC after 17 years as college Prez—has been hired by a local for-profit as Chancellor.
     I looked up Roquemore's Linked-In page and found this:

2 months? How do you figure?
According to Wikipedia,
     California Southern University is a private, for-profit, university that began its operations in 1978. It offers associate's, bachelor's, master's and doctoral degree programs 100% online in psychology, business and management, risk management and regulatory compliance, criminal justice, nursing, and education. California Southern University is located in Costa Mesa, California. It is not to be confused with Southern California College in Costa Mesa, California, an independent comprehensive coed institution established in 1920 and affiliated with Assemblies of God.
     The university was established in California on December 27, 1978, by Dr. Donald Hecht as a traditional correspondence school, and received its initial approval to offer degree programs from the California Department of Education. It originally offered associate level programs, then expanded to bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees. During the 1990s, the university added distance learning programs in the fields of business, psychology and law. The University is now recognized as an online degree granting institution....
     CSU has not issued a press release or announcement about hiring a new chancellor. And nothing about Roquemore. The only indication I have found that Roquemore has been hired by CSU is the above content on his Linked In page.
     Perhaps it is to be announced at the Party Congress on Monday. As you know, the Premier loves surprises. (See below.)
     The CSU webpage refers to a "university president" and a "board of directors," but it does not refer to a university chancellor. Odd, that.
     Oddly, the OC Register reported, last Tuesday (Dec 31), that “Vaughn Hartunian, a Granada Hills resident, will be California Southern University’s fifth president, effective Jan. 7, 2020.” But it reported nothing about a new Chancellor.



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...