1966: Arthur Lee's LOVE, "My Little Red Book"
The SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT — "[The] blog he developed was something that made the district better." - Tim Jemal, SOCCCD BoT President, 7/24/23
Friday, December 31, 2021
1966: nearly forgotten, disquieting, vatic gems!
Wednesday, December 29, 2021
I wild night up here in the mountains
No passage for now. The oak tree is bigger than it looks! |
We're having a wild night here in Lambrose Canyon (Trabuco Cyn. area just above O'Neill Park). Officials are evacuating residents of nearby neighborhoods: Silverado Cyn., Modjeska Cyn., etc. The weather people are warning that we might get 5-7 inches of rain tonight! (That's a frightening thought.)
Already, a large tree has fallen and has blocked our exit from Lambrose Canyon. Anni sent me a pic. (See.)
Evidently, there was a construction worker at the rental (on our property) who discovered late this afternoon that he was no longer able to drive out (i.e., to drive home). Anni got on the horn to try to get help with moving the tree; she didn't get far; after a while she sought the guy out but could find neither him nor his pickup. But the tree's still blocking the road! Huh?
I suggested taking a look up Lambrose in the other direction: the road peters out into non-existence and mud as it goes up a box canyon (back in the early 70s, it was still passable but it has steadily deteriorated). But Anni couldn't find him there, nor is there any indication anyone had driven up that way.
So it's a mystery.
Sounds like one of our neighbors has arranged for help with the tree in the morning. So there's that.
We'll be all right, I'm sure, though we may experience some flooding tonight (especially down at the studio, which flooded a week or two ago during a relatively moderate storm).
And boy is it cold—about 49 degrees already! (My place doesn't have heat, 'ceptin for one or two space heaters.) Sheesh!
As always, Teddy says "hey!"
Voice of OC photo |
Now your Daddy don't mind
Fred Paris and the boys: 1956 |
1961 |
Rosie and the Originals: 1961 hit. One of John Lennon's all-time favorites |
Tuesday, December 28, 2021
Major campuses will start January Online
7 U of California Campuses Will Start January Online
Inside Higher Ed
So will Loyola Marymount, Oakland and McDaniel as fear of the Omicron variant of COVID-19 and its impact spreads.
Seven University of California campuses announced Monday that they will start instruction online in January in response to the Omicron variant of COVID-19.
The campuses are at Davis, Irvine, Los Angeles, San Diego, Santa Barbara, Santa Cruz and Riverside. UC Santa Barbara announced on its website that “Given the uncertainties around the Omicron variant, UC Santa Barbara will begin winter quarter with two weeks of remote instruction. The quarter will begin as scheduled Monday, Jan. 3, and in-person instruction will resume Tuesday, Jan. 18, following the Martin Luther King, Jr. Day holiday, subject to reassessment of the situation early in the quarter. The decision to delay in-person teaching is related to supporting students and instructors, particularly those who either test positive over winter break and cannot travel back to campus on time, or who test positive upon arrival and need to isolate.”…
COVID-19 Changes Plans for Next Semester
Inside Higher Ed
DePaul, Harvard and Stanford students won’t have in-person classes the first weeks of the semester; Penn State, UCLA and U of Southern California are considering such a move; Cornell has surge in infections; Bowie State, Towson and Tufts move finals online.
COVID-19 is leading some colleges to alter their plans for the next semester, even as it continues to impact the semester that is finishing up. The concern is the Omicron variant of the virus, which transmits much more quickly than other versions and appears to infect some people who are vaccinated.
In most cases thus far, the Omicron variant does not cause vaccinated individuals to experience anything but mild symptoms, according to public health experts. But college officials are still worried. .Stanford University announced that it will start the winter quarter online, from Jan. 3 until Jan. 18….
More Colleges Announce Changes for January
Inside Higher Ed
Wednesday, December 22, 2021
Lately overheard in Mayfair
Walking through the streets of SoHo in the rain
He was looking for the place called Lee Ho Fook's
Gonna get a big dish of beef chow mein
Tuesday, December 21, 2021
Lockerbie, 33 years on
Solstice. The shortest day of a long year. We begin to turn back to the sun today. The days grow longer. Rebel Girl is ususally on her way to Mexico about this time of the year but this year, like last year, she is staying put. This morning is cold. Another storm arrives tomorrow. This morning's headlines are all about the new variant, the ease of its transmission.
33 years ago, Lockerbie Scotland, Pan Am 103, Cipper Maid of the Seas.
From 2013:
Rebel Girl is a party girl and even though she does not ascribe to any particular faith, she enjoys this season of celebration with its stories of miracles and lights, pilgrimages and stars shining bright. She likes the solstice best and feels a sense of accomplishment on living through that day, the shortest one of the year. When she was a child learning of such things in a public elementary school classroom, Rebel Girl once imagined she could hear the gentle crack of the earth's axis as it tilted, once more, back toward the sun, toward light.The past 25 years have usually found Rebel Girl and her family hurtling south to Mexico on the Solstice. This year, they will be a little late. But every year on the Solstice, they remember that first year they drove south for the season: 1988. She first wrote about on the blog five years ago.
from December 22, 2008
It was 20 Years Ago Today:
Twenty years ago, Rebel Girl and Red Emma first headed south into Baja, borrowing a friend's car and another friend's travel guide (what friends!). They fell in love with a part of Mexico that many find unlovable (the desert! The Sea of Cortez!) and have returned every year except for this one. This year finds them at home, unnerved by the brutal violence along the border, unwilling to be Americans who drive past other people's tragedies on their way to their own good time.
They usually leave on Solstice, the shortest day of the year. Rebel Girl can't remember if that was true for that first trip twenty years ago. She expects it might be. All she knows is that when they left, they knew about the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland.
So they left on or shortly after December 21, 1988 and returned sometime after the new year, covered in dust and sunburnt. They hadn't followed the news very much, hadn't thought about the bombing except in the way that you do about such events, a distant awareness of someone else's heartbreak. So when they returned and found out that Liz Marek, fellow activist and friend had been on board the flight, there was shock. Liz was an activist of some standing in the LA area, a veteran of the so-called Great Peace March across that country and of many Nevada Test Site actions, a charismatic lead singer in a lesbian rock band and general all-round good person. Liz, working for a non-profit housing agency, had been instrumental in helping Red and Reb and their roommates obtain an apartment after their eviction from their home (long story).
Liz had once complimented Rebel Girl on her design of a banner for a Test Site demonstration even though Rebel Girl now understands that Liz was only being kind. Rebel Girl was on her knees painting it in the sanctuary of the Church in Ocean Park (some church!). Liz had stopped by on her way to a meeting. The banner was wincingly raw and earnest and the memory of it still possesses the power to embarrass Rebel Girl: "The Patriarchy Stops Here," it read, with an angry pregnant woman, her womb filled with a mushroom cloud, pushing back at the lettering.
Rebel Girl still remembers how Liz could belt out her band's version of "Devil in a Blue Dress" (she sang it as "Big Dyke in a Blue Dress"). Back then, she admired the courage, humor and vision of activists like Liz – they had fun at the same time they did good works. She wanted to be like them: gutsy, justice-loving good people.
Liz had been sitting in seat 36 C of the Pan Am flight, traveling with a friend, having got cheap seats for a holiday trip to England. She was 30 years old. The obituaries all identified her as an actress and peace activist.
Later, when Liz's memorial was held at the Church in Ocean Park, Rebel Girl couldn't look into the faces of Liz's family, of her mother; their grief was too stark. She concentrated instead on repairing the cake which had suffered some damage in transit. It was white frosting with blue cursive lettering spelling out Liz's name and some other message Rebel Girl can no longer remember, just as she can no longer remember the witty name of Liz's band.
So, while people gave eulogies and sang songs, told stories and wept, Rebel Girl repaired the sky blue letters, rejoining the links, restoring the integrity of the final loops of the lowercase "k." She smoothed the frosting, white as a cloud.
*
The original post inspired a few comments from other friends of Liz who found it via the web:
Anonymous said...
I was on the great peace march and searched out Liz's name today in memory of her great funny human self. I think [her] band was the Diet Cherry Cokes.
Anonymous said...
I knew Liz on the GPM and deeply appreciated her intelligence, wit and humanity. Thanks for your remembrance of her.
Dear Rebel,
I was at the memorial for Liz at Ocean Park and I visited the Pan Am Memorial in Arlington National Cemetery every year until I left DC in late 1999.
Her family was very kind to me at a time when they were grieving and I'll never forget how gracious they were/are. Especially when I told them about the couple of times I'd be so darned frustrated with knocking on the porta pottie doors and hoping folks would knock back so I could feel the vibration and not accidentally open the door and expose them. When Liz was around and saw me she'd grab my hand and pull me down the line of porta potties and would knock and knock until she found an empty porta potty for me. Her actions saved me a lot of time and she needn't've done it but did because she "got it" that I'm deaf and sometimes a helping hand helps just that much to make one's day a bit brighter. Just for this not so little kindness she's aces in my book.
Just so you know, I was shown kindness by every Marcher while I was on the 9-month walk. This made a huge impact on me. Huge. It still does to this day.
Jules
Peace Marcher
Liz's mother still lives in Brookfield, Connecticut.
Rebel Girl found an article from Tuesday August 29, 1989: "Mother Makes Somber Visit to Lockerbie" which is exactly what its title suggests. The online version of the article features a tiny black and white headshot of Liz; it is not the best photo and the online scan of it fragments it even more but there's something there still in Liz's eyes that Reb likes to see. Her direct gaze. It's Liz all right. The article appeared in the Connecticut newspaper The Day.
Immediately to the right is another article: "Black, white African leaders meet: Kaunda, de Klerk talk in Zambia" and a larger photo of de Klerk, Botha (remember him?) and a skeptical Kaunda who is described as "a relentless critic of apartheid."
*
In 2015, Jonathan K Cohen said…
I sang at the funeral of a college classmate who perished in Pan Am 103. I was pretty numb, but I got through it. It had been arranged by my college, and the mourners thought I was much closer to Andrew than was actually the case, but I was filled with horror. Someone whom I liked and had had conversations with had been blown up and scattered over Scotland. It got to me in a way that not even 9/11 did.
9:29 AM, December 20, 2015
In 2017 Zippy said…
Liz was my babysitter back in brookfield. I have fond memories of the Mareks, their home, and their kids. Liz was sweet and kind to me.
And finally Liz's mother Adelaide passed away in 2016 at the age of 86 on October 27, days before the election. Her obituary recommends: "In lieu of flowers, VOTE."
*
Saturday, December 18, 2021
Wednesday, December 15, 2021
Unsurprised. Unsupervised. Where’s Don? —By Red Emma
Unsurprised. Unsupervised. Where’s Don?
By Red Emma
Reading an advance copy of the forthcoming A People’s Guide to Orange County (UC Press, January 2022), co-written by my former OC Weekly editor, a CSUF professor and a UCI library archivist, I was pleased to be reminded of a defining moment in the political career of Supervisor Don Wagner, just now facing uncertainty as a result of likely redistricting changes. On page 130, you’ll find reference to one singularly over-the-top Wagnerian moment under the otherwise benign heading “Silverado Elementary School / Library of the Canyons.” The terrific and essential new guide organizes an alternative political, cultural, ethnographic, and popular history of the County through visits to actual locales, this one being especially familiar. I was a parent who fought against closure of the small school but, after its closure, embraced and celebrated the new Library of the Canyons, OCPL branch, which replaced it after thoughtful and gorgeous renovation, which you’d sort of think Don would’ve heard about. Todd Spitzer was there, as were our late, great County librarian Helen Fried, firefighters, law enforcement, Boy Scouts, and community members.
DonQuest
The episode recalled in this chapter either Wagner’s failure to do basic Google research or only his purposeful dissembling. After all, MapQuest alerts even a casual researcher to the existence of the new library, so that pretending to propose a homeless shelter at this address seems a pretty obvious, clumsy Wagnerian distraction if ultimately one which bought time for him – albeit pissing off canyonites and earning Don some media attention of the “no press is bad press” variety. Except when it is bad indeed! As then-spokesperson for a group of mayors of twelve South County cities, or perhaps only the fall guy, Wagner and their honors had to come up with something, anything, back in spring of 2018 to answer U.S. District Judge David O. Carter’s requirement to house homeless people. It worked, sort of, for a few weeks.
Turning Point, USA, USA, USA!
So that when I shared reports of Wagner’s Saturday morning, December 6, appearance at an anti-vaccine mandate rally hosted by the far-right creeps from Turning Point, USA’s local UC Irvine and CSU Fullerton chapters with a friend, she responded that she was not surprised. We joked that Don might need help finding the location, but of course he worked at Irvine’s City Hall after time wasted in the state legislature, and for those of you with a long, disturbing memory, as a member of the SOCCCD board too.
Don with pal Joe Arpaio |
She didn’t.
A second ringy dingy got me to the Deputy Chief of Staff, who also plead ignorance of Don’s attendance. He endured a few further questions from Red before affirming his boss’s position that mandates were government overreach, then transferred me to the Chief of Staff herself. The rally was also news to her, of course. Hmmm.
Nobody knew or could confirm that Don the W had ever even been to the event. Helpfully (I thought) I read to her from a CSUF Daily Titan news article, with photos, including one of Don, with exaggerated numbers of attendees, and some pretty clueless reporting. There he was, unchaperoned by staffers it seems, at a rally sponsored by an outfit (Turning Point) identified by the Anti-Defamation League, Right Wing Watch, The Guardian and almost everybody as batshit crazy. Of special interest to instructors, TP (as I like to call it) sponsors the Professor Watch List – “Unmasking Radical Professors” – where Yours Redly has been featured, go figure. So I guess they have a longstanding position on masks, hardy har.
From the article:
Wagner said that vaccination should be to each person’s own discretion and not mandated by the government. He added that the government should not use science as a means to force policy, but should use the outcomes of science to help guide the formation of policy in an educated way.
“You’re the sovereign. You get to make the decision,” he said.
“He just says the first thing that comes to his mind” |
I’ll exercise my own sovereign power here. The photos suggest that there were considerably fewer possessors of supreme political power than reported. The portrait of Don suggests that, well, yes, he was of course there, and likely uttered the above remarks, or something like them. Maybe that’s all or most of what he said, which, absent an available transcript, means that I, your humble and devoted constituent of his Third District, have here provided a modest public service, if you can stand it, and for free and unmandated.
Don, Meet Brandon
As I write this on Monday evening, the OC Health Care Agency reports nine new COVID deaths, with 196 COVID patients in County hospitals. Sigh. Helpfully, the County of Orange, with or without our Sup, has responded to the State mask mandate (my emphasis) that beginning Wednesday, all residents must wear masks when going to indoor public places as the Omicron COVID-19 variant raises concerns from public health experts who predict a winter surge.
“… the California Department of Public Health (CDPH) is requiring masks to be worn in all indoor public settings, irrespective of vaccine status, for the next four weeks (December 15, 2021 through January 15, 2022).”
Here’s one of Don’s constituents parked in a shopping mall in Mission Viejo today, living the dream. No doubt he’ll cast a vote for the Supervisor who stands for sovereignty, wherever he is or isn’t on a Saturday.
My whole life
My whole life
Looked like a picture of a sunny day
I don't want to let you down
Plead your cause
I don't want to let you down
Wednesday, December 8, 2021
“I think it’s the hill to die on.”
Supervisor Don Wagner speaks at Turning Point USA rally. (Kassandra Vasquez / Daily Titan)
Rebel Girl couldn't make last Saturday's Turning Point USA rally at Irvine City Hall and so has been on the look out for coverage of the event.
It was a big story in the CSU Fullerton's The Daily Titan but that's about it, at least so far, in terms of coverage.
The article, "Opponents rally for vaccine mandate in Irvine" was written by Kassandra Vasquez.
Some highights:"Wagner said that vaccination should be to each person’s own discretion and not mandated by the government. He added that the government should not use science as a means to force policy, but should use the outcomes of science to help guide the formation of policy in an educated way.
'You’re the sovereign. You get to make the decision,' he said.
...
Deputy District Attorney Ernby spent her speech drawing parallels between the 1960s and present day. She said that in the 1960s, people faced losing freedoms to socialist ideas. Ernby added that the people were able to rally together to create change and protect threatened freedom.
...
Turning Point representative, Jacob Ornelas, said that hyper local solutions will be the way to solve the problems facing society today. Ornelas said the rally served as a way to initiate engagement from the religious community.
He added that he is pro-liberty and found a way to put his faith into action in this way.
“I think it’s the hill to die on,” Ornelas said about fighting for the freedom to choose to get vaccinated. He added that giving up the right to choose what is injected into your body gives away all other freedoms in the future.
To read the article in its entirety, click here.
Monday, December 6, 2021
Assemblymember "considers legal changes to prevent educator sexual misconduct from getting ‘swept under the rug’"
Rebel Girl has been following developments in Berkeley and Sacramento in light of recent investigations into sexual misconduct allegations regarding an educator.
Porposed changes to the California Public Records Act and Education Code might be able to "amend Public Records Act law to mandate disclosure of records in cases of substantiated sexual harassment allegations."
Your can read all about it here and here.
According to Ally Markovich reporting in Berekelyside about the Berkeley Unified case: "Under the separation agreement, [the educator] agreed not to sue, to go on paid leave immediately and to resign quietly at the end of the school year. In return, the district agreed to stay silent about his alleged misconduct to potential employers conducting reference checks, promising to only disclose his basic employment information, which can be a red flag for future hires."The apt term "pass the trash" was new to Rebel Girl but a quick inquiry revealed it is, sadly, in use.
Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"
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