Showing posts with label Hans W. Vogel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hans W. Vogel. Show all posts

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Hans Vogel


Reagan and Vogel, pals
     Earlier today, the SOCCCD community received an email from the district noting the passing and singing the praises of the district’s first board president, Hans Vogel (1922-2015):
     Dr. Hans W. Vogel, President of our first Board of Trustees, recently passed away at the age of 93.
     It was Valentine’s Day in 1967 that residents approved the formation of Saddleback Junior College District, dubbing it the “Sweetheart of Orange County.” In July 1968 the board hosted then-Governor Ronald Reagan for a high-profile dedication of Saddleback Junior College. Dr. Vogel would ultimately serve as Board President four times in his eight-year tenure….
     Over the years, in an attempt to understand our benighted district, I've written about Vogel often. It's pretty clear that Vogel—a war hero, successful volleyball coach, contractor, lawyer, and right-wing paranoid—was a very interesting man and someone perhaps best viewed, as they say, as a man of his time. He sure was!
     Not long ago, I was surprised to learn that Vogel had a significant role in the political career of Ronald Reagan. (Some will be impressed; others will be horrified.) Two years ago, I encountered this description of Vogel in a book by Tom Rogers, chairman of the OC GOP from 1969 until 1972:
     Hans Vogel was one of the first county residents to become involved in conservative politics. As a local businessman and bookstore owner, Hans was able to gather a circle of friends and associates to informal discussion concerning many issues. He was an early supporter of [John Bircher] John Schmitz, but his most impressive accomplishments was to sponsor a book-signing event at his Tustin bookstore, featuring a rising star in GOP politics, Ronald Reagan who had written a book Where’s the Rest of Me? [1965] The event was a success by all standards, and really introduced the future governor to local conservatives who came away with a signed book and a determination to support Ronald Reagan in his political career.
     Hans was also active in the County Republican Central Committee as publisher and editor of the Observer. [Elsewhere, Rogers explains that Vogel did an excellent job in that role. The Observer faded from the scene many years ago.]
DtB posts mentioning Hans Vogel:
"Utt" Library, September 1972


Friday, June 19, 2015

Hans Vogel obit

Obit

Published in Orange County Register on Jun. 28, 2015.

Vogel, Hans William 

Less than 15 years after the first ships traveled from Europe to the U.S. by way of the Panama Canal, Hans W. Vogel made his voyage from his birthplace in Cologne, Germany to the sands of Long Beach, California. Once there, Vogel quickly traded the idyllic Rhine River of his early childhood for the ocean sports of the Pacific. A graduate of Long Beach Polytechnic High School, Vogel had a particular passion for beach volleyball. This passion would eventually lead him to USC where he organized, recruited and coached the university's first men's volleyball team in 1948. Under Vogel's leadership that team would go on to win two National Men's Collegiate Volleyball Championships. 

Leadership was an early hallmark of Hans Vogel who received numerous military honors and decorations, including two Bronze Star Medals for "Actions Above and Beyond the Call of Duty," when he helped to negotiate the surrender of 82 German troops during combat at the Siegfried Line on the border between France and Germany in February, 1945. Eventually, he would be a leader in the Orange County construction industry, an administrator with the Tustin Union High School District, and ultimately one of the founding members of the Board of Trustees for Saddleback Community College. Vogel was appointed the Board's first president and served in that capacity during four of the eight years of his tenure with the college. 

But for Vogel his proudest leadership roles were not to be found in his illustrious and varied military, academic or business careers, but rather in a place much closer to home and his heart. It was in the company of his family, sharing his roles as parent, grandparent and great-grandparent with his wife of 72 years, Barbara Vogel, where he measured his good fortune and happiness. 

On Friday, June 19, 2015, Vogel died at the age of 93 surrounded by his wife and several members of his extensive family. 

Vogel was born on March 14, 1922, in Cologne, Germany as the only child of Elsie F. and J. Jean Vogel. 

While studying for his final examinations at UC Berkeley, Vogel learned of the attack by Japan on Pearl Harbor, and the day that would "live in infamy" - December 7, 1941 - would postpone the completion of his B.A. for another six years. Returning to Long Beach in January, 1942 to await his deployment, Vogel soon met Barbara Bogart. Years earlier, the two had been classmates at Franklin Junior High School in Long Beach. On September 2, 1942, they were married, and one month later Vogel entered the Army Service. 

In 1943, he was assigned to the Army Specialized Training Program in New York City where he completed intensive studies of the German language and culture; he was subsequently trained in interrogation and counter-intelligence at the Military Intelligence Training Center in Maryland. Between 1943 and 1945, Vogel participated in all five European Theater of Operations campaigns. He was honorably separated from active duty in November, 1945, but continued to serve in both the U.S. Army Reserve and the California State Military Reserve, attaining the rank of Lieutenant Colonel in the Judge Advocate General Corps until he retired in 1987. 

Vogel received his B.A. from USC in 1947 and taught German at both USC and the California Institute of Technology. In 1971, he received an M.A. in European History from Chapman College in Orange. He would consummate his academic achievements in 1976 with a J.D. degree from Western State University College of Law in Fullerton. 

He is survived by his wife, Barbara; three children; 17 grandchildren; and 25 great-grandchildren. 

To Plant Memorial Trees in memory, please visit our Sympathy Store. 


SEE ALSO:

Did right-wing loons establish the SOCCCD?

Monday, June 11, 2012

Charter trustees: the curious Mr. Alyn Brannon

 

     The district’s charter board of 1967 included Alyn M. Brannon and Hans W. Vogel of Tustin; Louis J. Zitnick of Laguna Beach; Patrick J. Backus of Dana Point; and Michael T. Collins of Laguna Niguel.”
     Gosh, what were these people like? Inquiring minds wanna know (but they shudder to think).
     As we reported previously, Hans Vogel, who often presided over the board during his tenure (68-72), was an early supporter of notorious arch-conservative loon (and Bircher, until even they wouldn't have him) John Schmitz.
     He was also an early appreciator of Ronald Reagan, having invited the fellow, in 1965, to sleepy Tustin to speak with local Neanderthals. (Who knows; maybe Jimmy Utt showed up with his tin foil hat.) Reagan, you'll recall, first ran for public office—Governor—in 1966. Owing to his relationship with Reagan, Vogel later managed to secure the participation of the Governor for Saddleback's dedication (1968). Surely that makes Vogel the cat's meow, among Republicans, for whom Reagan is second only to Jesus in their affections.
     OK, so what about the other four? Well, I’ve done some quick 'n' dirty research—mostly on two of them: Louis Zitnik and Alyn M. Brannon. Turns out Zitnik became a small-time Laguna Beach politician. Brannon, however, is more interesting.

Louis J. Zitnik

     It appears that Mr. Zitnik was (and still is?) a resident of Laguna Beach. Obviously, he was a member of the SOCCCD charter board in the late 60s. By 1981, he was an incumbent on the Laguna Beach County Water District. A 1993 OC Register article quotes Zitnik, still a member of the LBCWD, as a fierce proponent of a 3-million-gallon reservoir, approval of which had long been delayed, possibly contributing to the enormity of the Laguna Beach wildfire.
     Laguna Beach now boasts a 5-million-gallon reservoir that is named after Zitnik. (Louis J. Zitnik Reservoir and Pump Station, Laguna Beach, CA) It is touted as crucial to fighting wildfires in the area.
     It was designed and built by RBF Consulting, Tom Fuentes’ employer from 1975 through 1994.

Alyn M. Brannon

     1. I Googled "Alyn M. Brannon" and found a recent federal court case record the upshot of which is that someone by that very name pleaded guilty to failing to file his taxes (ten years ago), received probation, and requested a shortening of his probation. Evidently, that person has a prior criminal history ("the Defendant in this case has a prior criminal history and violated the conditions of his pretrial release while awaiting sentencing in this case"). For some reason, the feds took this case very seriously.
     But is this our “Alyn M. Brannon”?
     Incidentally, this tax-evading Brannon often finds/found it necessary to travel to Mexico, which, he argued, made his continuing probation burdensome. The court was unmoved.
     This Brannon (age 77 in 2008, hence about age 37 in 1968) had lived in Oklahoma—remember that—but had moved to Arizona by the time of sentencing/appeal.
     2. One Alyn M. Brannon, with apparent ties to a business in Tustin (recall that "our" Brannon lived in Tustin), was the operator of a Cessna that crashed in Louisiana, having departed from Oklahoma, in 2002 (See):
     On June 15, 2002, approximately 2150 central daylight time, a Cessna P210N airplane, N4720P, was substantially damaged after the right main landing gear collapsed during landing roll at the Shreveport Downtown Airport (DTN), Shreveport, Louisiana. The private pilot and his passenger were not injured. The airplane was registered to and operated by Tower Systems Inc., of Tustin, California. [Tower Systems is a computer software firm that sells a very widely used “methadone clinic” software.] Visual meteorological conditions prevailed, and a flight plan was not filed for the 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91 personal flight. The flight departed the Shawnee Municipal Airport, Shawnee, Oklahoma, approximately 2030, and was destined for Shreveport.
     According to the pilot, while on approach to DTN, he lowered the landing gear, and the landing gear extended. However, the landing gear annunciator light (green), confirming the landing gear had extended and locked into position, failed to illuminate. By a visual check, the pilot confirmed the left main landing gear was extended, and the passenger confirmed the right main landing gear was extended. During a low approach over the runway, the tower controller performed a visual check of the nose landing gear, and the controller stated he was 90 percent positive the nose gear was extended. While landing on runway 32, the right main landing gear collapsed, the airplane veered to the right and came to rest upright off the right side of the runway.
     I found another record that indicates that there were no injuries in this incident and that the operator (Brannon) was not also the owner of the aircraft. The operator’s (i.e., Brannon’s) street address was 13422 Wheeler, Santa Ana.
     Again, the departure city was Shawnee, Oklahoma. —So this is likely the tax evader above (how many Alyn M. Brannon's could Oklahoma have?)
     Now get this: there’s a record of an Alyn M. Brannon, a resident of Stateline, NV, owning a 1967 Piper. According to a FindTheData record of a report, in February of 1994, while operating that plane in the Lake Tahoe area, Mr. Brannon crashed, totaling the plane.
     There was one fatality. [Note: more recent research indicates that the pilot of the plane, who was alone, was Alyn's son, Donald, who died on the scene.]
     I have found another FindTheData report according to which one Alyn M. Brannon owns/owned a 1974 Grumman aircraft. Evidently, that Brannon lives/lived in Phoenix, AZ. I have also found a record of an Alyn M. Brannon, owning a Grumman, living in Zephyr Cover, NV.
     3. Other records indicate that there is an 80-year-old Alyn M. Brannon (hence, 36 in 1968) who is possibly associated with addresses in Costa Mesa, Santa Ana, Tustin, and Arizona.
     You do the math. I think it is likely that these records concern one Alyn M. Brannon, and he's our Alyn M. Brannon.
     Gosh, such a guy.


     I have found little information on Patrick J. Backus. There appears to be an 80-year-old Patrick John Backus living in Dana Point. (He’d be about 36 years old in 1968.) I found a 1996 newpaper article that quotes a Patrick J. Backus, who was then principle of Orangethorpe Elementary School in Fullerton. He would have retired soon thereafter.
     I can find virtually nothing about Michael T. Collins of Laguna Niguel.

UPDATE 1/14: Collins seems to have done very well as an attorney. For at least twenty years, he's headed the Collins Firm in Virginia and environs.
















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...