Thursday, February 17, 2022

Pass the Trash? Or the Trash Stops Here: CSU Chancellor Castro resigns

 

Start spreading the news: 

CSU Chancellor Joseph Castro resigns amid scrutiny over handling of sexual misconduct case

Really, the only question is why it took so long. 

But we even know the answer to that, don't we?

Excerpt from the LA Times article:

Castro’s resignation comes amid widespread criticism after reports that as president of Fresno State in 2020, Castro quietly authorized a $260,000 payout and a retirement package for former Vice President of Student Affairs Frank Lamas, who was the subject of complaints of bullying and sexual harassment that began in 2014. Castro also provided a glowing letter of recommendation to Lamas without disclosing university investigative findings supporting the allegations of sexual misconduct.

 Where have we seen that before? The article goes on:


“I think it’s the right move,” said Katherine Fobear, an assistant professor in Women’s Gender and Sexuality Studies who was hired in 2017 when Castro and Lamas were at the university.

She said that the Lamas case underscores a wider problem across the 23-campus university in which underfunded and understaffed campus offices are unable to properly investigate numerous complaints that are filed.

“I hope that people really don’t stop at what Castro did,” Fobear said. “The bigger problem is how our Fresno state failed to follow and support proper Title IX process.”

Former Fresno State professor Cristina Herrera left the university last year after repeatedly reporting to top administrators, including Castro, that human relations and faculty affairs officials had not investigated repeated harassment complaints she had filed against a former faculty member, according to emails reviewed by The Times.

Retreat rights?

Lamas was hired as vice president of student affairs in May 2014. According to his hiring letter, he reported directly to Castro and held so-called retreat rights that would have allowed him to move into a faculty position should he be terminated from his position of leadership. As part of Lamas’ hiring agreement, he could have become an assistant professor with the university’s Department of Educational Research and Administration.

Castro said a settlement was the only way to cut ties with Lamas permanently and keep him from returning to the Cal State system.

Fresno State said it has since eliminated the “retreat rights” from hiring negotiations for employees.

How does this happen?

Castro’s handling of the Lamas case highlights the wide latitude that senior administrators hold in interpreting when a complaint should be investigated, according to Fresno State professor Kathryn Forbes, an expert in sexual harassment and employment discrimination. She said senior administrators in the Cal State system are more interested in preventing potential legal problems than in rooting out suspected harassment, intimidation and retaliation.


 

Tuesday, February 8, 2022

Pass/No Pass


Rebel Girl has been thinking about how we might have done things better during the pandemic so we can be prepared for the next one - ha ha HA. 

But seriously, instead of full steam ahead, perhaps: smaller classes? fewer classes required for a full load? (9 units instead of 12?) And yes, as this recent LA Times article suggests, Pass/No Pass instead of letter grades. Check out this recent Board of Governors acton to make the policy more widely available:

Can ‘pass/no pass’ grading stem huge declines in California Community College enrollment? by Colleen Shalby.

excerpt:
At a time of plummeting enrollment at California Community Colleges — brought on in part by pandemic hardships that forced students to get a job instead of an education — the system has moved to permanently adopt a more forgiving pass/no pass grading system — a transcript lifeline of sorts designed to prevent students from dropping out.

Students will have until the last day of instruction before finals to decide whether they want a letter grade or a pass/no pass credit to protect their GPA. In addition, they can opt for an “excused withdrawal” for coronavirus-related hardships to avoid a transcript penalty.

But the generous timeline and grade options, approved last week by the Board of Governors, comes with considerable risk to the transfer process at universities, including many in the University of California and California State University systems, which require letter grades in core subjects.

Rebel Girl was strategic in her Pass/No Pass selections as an undergrad. She recalls perhaps taking that option twice, both times for classes in which she anticipated great struggles. She was right to do so.

As a teacher, she has certainly given out her share of P/NP grades, sometimes with relief, other times surprise and a little regret as students who excelled feared they wouldn't and instead of receiving the well-earned A, received a P instead.

Monday, February 7, 2022

A world gone mad: the Wokesters are once again ignoring the use/mention distinction and my head will soon pop


The Absurdity of the Backlash Against Joe Rogan
Does anybody really think Joe Rogan is a racist?

From the American Spectator

Excerpt:

...Does anybody really think Joe Rogan is a racist? Of course not. But because, in the thousands of podcast hours he’s archived, he’s used the N-word a few dozen times, he’s a juicy target for the cancel-culture commandos. Never mind that he’s used the word consistently in discussions of the word itself — discussions, that is, of why it’s a bad word

Yes, the N-word has a very fraught history in American culture. Joseph Conrad, one of the great novelists in English, used it in the title of one of his novels. Flannery O’Connor, perhaps the most distinguished American short-story writer of the 20th century, used it in the title of one of her best stories. The black comedian and activist Dick Gregory used the N-word as the title of his 1964 autobiography. 

 McWhorter: "This business of not attending to the difference
between using [the word] and referring to it is childish."

Soon enough, and for very good reasons, that sort of thing became a no-no. Still, in the classic NBC sitcom Sanford and Son (1972-77), Redd Foxx used the N-word as part of at least one hilarious gag that I still recall vividly half a century later. Richard Pryor, one of the top comics of all time, put the word in the titles of no fewer than three of his comedy albums, in 1974, 1976, and 1982. As late as 1996, Chris Rock, another all-time great stand-up, used the word — or, rather, the form of it that ends with an “a” — as the centerpiece of a 12-minute monologue that is one of anyone’s funniest bits ever. Other brilliant stand-ups, not all of them black, have used the N-word to terrific comedic effect. 

But Rogan isn’t even being accused of doing that. The video compilation posted by online this weekend by India Arie, an R&B singer whom I’d never heard of, consisted of 23 clips, no more than a second or two long apiece, of Rogan saying the N-word. The word itself is bleeped every time. The contexts are not all clear, although in several cases you can hear enough of the conversation to recognize that he’s discussing the word as a word. Arie seems to acknowledge this. She doesn’t care. That’s not good enough. “Don’t even say the word, under any context,” she demands. “Don’t say it.”….

[Continue reading HERE.]

SEE ALSO:

Philosopher Roy Bauer in Dissent the Blog, August 13, 2010

Linguist Bill Poser, January 25, 2008

Computer Scientist Douglas Moran, Jul 21, 2018


JOHN MCWHORTER: “[Rogan] was using [the n-word] in quotation marks … He wasn’t lobbing the word; he was—he was referring to the word or imitating people who use the word the way, until ten minutes ago, many white kids would chant their hip-hop lyrics. To me, there’s a huge difference between the two [things?] and, as I’ve said and written often, I think it’s absurd that we’ve gotten to the point that we’re treating it as a taboo sequence of sounds as if we were worshipping some sun god … and [what Rogan's done] should have no effect on his career. Maybe he wouldn’t choose to [say] those things now but, frankly, when he was doing it then, he wasn’t hurting anybody, and this business of not attending to the difference between using it and referring to it is childish, and … we don’t need it. I don’t see why [universally condemning saying the word is] necessary, although there’s a certain kind of black person who claims to be deeply injured every time that sequence of sounds is uttered for any reason. I think it’s a pose. I don’t like this [outcry] at all.”

Sunday, February 6, 2022

Mel Mermelstein, Holocaust survivor who fought the Institute for Historical Review and won, dies



Mel Mermelstein has died. The local Holocaust survivor who, according to various headlines around the world:

Washington Post: "challenged Holocaust deniers"

LA Times: "took on Holocaust deniers and won"

NY Times:"Holocaust Survivor who sued deniers"

Jerusalem Post: "Holocaust Survivor who won case against deniers"

The Forward: "who fought Holocaust deniers"

And then here's our own local Register's headline: "who legally proved the Holocaust happened" which, to Rebel Girl's sensibility, lands a little oddly as if, before this, despite say, the historical record and, say the Nuremburg trials, some doubt remained until this 1981 legal decision. But Rebel Girl is so touchy lately, living as she is in these days of science denial and, dare she say it, historical revisionism. 

Sigh.

Mel Mermelstein arrived at the little college in the orange groves a few years after Rebel Girl did, in the mid-90s, as an occasional special guest and speaker in a Humanities class, Understanding the Holocaust, taught by Dr. Richard Prystowsky. Those visits, the topic of Prystowsky's popular course and Prystowsky's ties to the ADL soon became part of the great struggle on campus. The class came under fire by college trustee Steven J. Frogue, who also taught history (or a version of history) at Foothill High School. Frogue's proposed seminar on the JFK assassination scheduled for Saddelback's campus and featuring a speaker tied to the Insititute for Historical Review, the Holocaust denial group successfully sued years earlier by Mermelstein, brought national attention to the district. Soon college board meetings were besieged by neo-Nazis who supported Frogue along with his critics. The meetings went on for hours. Recall efforts were launched twice and failed twice. Frogue eventually resigned in 2001. Frogue seems to remain active in a local Sons of Confederate Veterans. Of course. His son served as Trump's senior health advisor in 2016. Right.


Benjamin Hubbard, a professor of Comparative Religion at Cal State Fullerton, weighed in on the crisis at the college district with his essay, "The Truth Must Be Shown When the Holocaust Is Denied."  Published in the LA Times in 1996, the article begins: "If someone denies the Holocaust, is it better to ignore the insult or to respond vigorously? Recent events at Saddleback College have shifted the question from the theoretical realm to the practical." He points out that "While Frogue may not deny the Holocaust outright, he appears to have swallowed the revisionist line of the so-called Institute for Historical Review, now based in Newport Beach, which raises questions, for example, about whether Jews were actually gassed at Auschwitz." 

It doesn't take long for Hubbard to note that "It is amazing that this pseudo-institute continues to question the gassing of Auschwitz inmates in light of the landmark 1985 case, Mel Mermelstein vs. Institute of Historical Review et al."

His conclusion refers to one of those raucous board meetings:

Holocaust denial/revisionism is a sickness, a form of anti-Semitic hatred of the most vile type. It is a suppression of the truth of one of the most exhaustively documented events in history...Frogue and some of the bigots who spoke on his behalf at the Jan. 20 public meeting of the college district would do well to talk to survivors or visit one of the museums. Or they might consider taking one of the fine courses on the Holocaust offered at UC Irvine, Cal State Fullerton or Chapman University, or Prystowsky’s at Irvine Valley College.

If the truth of the Holocaust is denied or minimized, then other unpleasant truths--about slavery, the treatment of Native Americans or the genocide of Bosnian Muslims, for example--might be next.

Over his lifetime, Mermelstein collected artifacts from the Holocuast which played a role in his famous lawsuit and were displayed in a museum he operated near his Long Beach home. The LA Times now reports that Newport Beach's Chabad's Center for Jewish Life will now house the collection. Huntington Beach High School English teacher Josh Anderson who worked with Mermelstein:

"recounted the story of how, when Mermelstein was a teenager in Auschwitz, his father told him and his brother they would have to split up, to increase the chances that one of them would make it out alive and live to tell the story of the Holocaust so the world would never forget.

'He did that, and he lived to 95,' Anderson said. 'Now, it’s Edie’s [Mermelstein's daughter] job, and my job, and the board’s job and all the teachers in Orange County’s job to tell his story.'

We've got a job to do. It's a good job. It's always been our job. Let's do it.

Mel Mermelstein died of COVID at age 95.




Moby Grape: a great forgotten band

A great Bay Area band, ca. late 60s

Moby Grape's career was a long, sad series of minor disasters, in which nearly anything that could have gone wrong did (poor handling by their record company, a variety of legal problems, a truly regrettable deal with their manager, creative and personal differences among the bandmembers, and the tragic breakdown of guitarist and songwriter Skip Spence), but their self-titled debut album was their one moment of unqualified triumph. Moby Grape is one of the finest (perhaps the finest) album to come out of the San Francisco psychedelic scene, brimming with great songs and fresh ideas while blessedly avoiding the pitfalls that pockmarked the work of their contemporaries -- no long, unfocused jams, no self-indulgent philosophy, and no attempts to sonically re-create the sound of an acid trip. Instead, Moby Grape built their sound around the brilliantly interwoven guitar work of Jerry MillerPeter Lewis, and Skip Spence, and the clear, bright harmonies of all five members (drummer Don Stevenson and bassist Bob Mosely sang just as well as they held down the backbeat). 
As songwriters, 
Moby Grape blended straight-ahead rock & roll, smart pop, blues, country, and folk accents into a flavorful brew that was all their own, with a clever melodic sense that reflected the lysergic energy surrounding them without drowning in it. And producer David Rubinson got it all on tape in a manner that captured the band's infectious energy and soaring melodies with uncluttered clarity, while subtly exploring the possibilities of the stereo mixing process. "Omaha," "Fall on You," "Hey Grandma," and "8:05" sound like obvious hits (and might have been if Columbia hadn't released them as singles all at once), but the truth is there isn't a dud track to be found here, and time has been extremely kind to this record. Moby Grape is as refreshing today as it was upon first release, and if fate prevented the group from making a follow-up that was as consistently strong, for one brief shining moment Moby Grape proved to the world they were one of America's great bands. While history remembers the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane as being more important, the truth is neither group ever made an album quite this good. (AllMusic Guide)

LISTEN MY FRIEND: I remember Mike Douglas. What an idiot. But he did have some great guests—e.g., John Lennon, Frank Zappa, Moby Grape.

1967, Monterey Pop: Tommy Smothers introduces the first act: Moby Grape. (Hear more from that concert here.)

Guitarist Jerry Miller remembers the band, and the loss of Skip Spence to LSD. (Both Spence and Mosely were eventually diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. LSD didn't help.)

A cover of the band's "Naked If I Want To" by Cat Power, one of my favorite singers


Would you let me walk down your street
Naked if I want to?
Can I pop fireworks on the fourth of every single July?
Can I buy an amplifier, oh, on time
My sweet time?

Well I ain't got no money
I will pay this time
And I ain't got no money
But I will pay you before I die


And would you let me walk down your street
Naked if I want to?
Can I pop fireworks on the fourth of every single July?
Can I buy an aeroplane while I'm high in all the sky?


And I got no mercy
I will pay this time
And I got no mercy
I will pay you before I die

(Jerry Miller)

All but forgotten

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...