Friday, March 6, 2009

Commencement speaker choice a good one

Good news! Irvine Valley College President Glenn Roquemore has announced “the selection of Dean Sharon Salinger, University of California, Irvine, as IVC’s 2009 Commencement Speaker.”

Salinger is, among other things, a noted historian. Read more about Dr. Salinger here.

Her books: Amazon.

Congratulations and kudos (or at least one kudo) to the speaker selection committee (including Rebel Girl!) and Prez Rocky.

I was resolved in my own mind to have rested this night at Southerns, but on my approach to the House it was no more than a mere Hut, full of rude mean people, and tho' some of their countenances were not quite so unpromising as those I left at Roans, they were attended with this additional discouragement to me, that they were every one, as well as the Landlord, inflamed with liquor and exceeding turbulent and noisy.

—A quotation that begins Salinger's Taverns and Drinking in Early America

Wow. Sounds like last week's CPAC meeting.

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Saddleback College is still smokin'


Marla Jo Fisher of the OC Register reports (2 more O.C. colleges ban smoking) that Santa Ana College and Santiago Canyon College (in Orange) have now joined two other OC community colleges—namely, Fullerton and Golden West—in banning smoking on campus, except for parking lots.

Santa Ana College has gone further, banning the use of any tobacco products. The school has adopted the designation “Tobacco-free campus.”

Marla notes that, when, some time ago, Fullerton College banned smoking and eliminated ashtrays, trash-can fires started breaking out all over campus like pimples on a teen-aged face.

At the February meeting of the SOCCCD board of trustees, a student addressed the board, urging support for making Saddleback College “Tobacco-free.”

Trustees stared at the kid like carps.


No doubt efforts to drag our colleges into the Twenty-First Century will continue, inspiring Trustee Tom Fuentes (at some future point) to intone that Socialism and Humanism, among other dark things, continue to menace "our Land," tempting our "good" young people into lives of gayness, vegetarianism, and unfettered teetotalitarianism.

Amen.

See also
Abortion protestors today at Santiago Canyon College
Chancellor Mathur blames his loutishness on hormones

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

How much more don’t we know?

Unbelievable!

Yesterday, the New York Times reported that
The secret legal opinions issued by Bush administration lawyers after the Sept. 11 attacks included assertions that the president could use the nation’s military within the United States to combat terrorism suspects and to conduct raids without obtaining search warrants.

That opinion was among nine that were disclosed publicly for the first time Monday by the Justice Department….

The opinions reflected a broad interpretation of presidential authority, asserting as well that the president could unilaterally abrogate foreign treaties, ignore any guidance from Congress in dealing with detainees suspected of terrorism, and conduct a program of domestic eavesdropping without warrants.

The opinion authorizing the military to operate domestically was dated Oct. 23, 2001, and written by John C. Yoo, at the time a deputy assistant attorney general in the Office of Legal Counsel, and Robert J. Delahunty, a special counsel in the office…. (Memos Reveal Scope of Power Bush Sought in Fighting Terror) [My emphases.]

To see John Yoo’s 37-page opinion, go here (a large pdf file).

These days, Yoo teaches at Chapman University School of Law in the city of Orange (he’s on a semester-long leave from Cal). Today, the OC Reg offers an interview of the fellow. Some excerpts:

Q. Were you surprised with the student reaction at Berkeley to you being there?
A. Berkeley is sort of a magnet for hippies, protesters and left-wing activists. So I'm not surprised that being one of the few recognizable conservatives on campus that I would generate a lot of heat and friction….

Q. Have you done anything interesting since moving to Southern California?
A. I'm getting in shape, which everyone here seems to be in. I went and joined this L.A. Sports Club down in Irvine, and Kobe Bryant works out there….
...
Q. What needs to be understood with governmental decisions?
A. There are tradeoffs inherent in every question. Someone can say, "I think it's more important that other countries have a more favorable opinion of us than any intelligence we gain from interrogation." That's a benefit and a cost. That's the cost … we will get less information about the enemy.

John Yoo is Chapman’s Fletcher Jones Distinguished Vising Professor of Law. According to the university,

The Fletcher Jones Distinguished Visiting Professor of Law is selected annually from nominees and candidates who possess exceptionally outstanding credentials in legal education, and whose personal and professional lives reflect the highest ethical standards. [My emphasis.]

Today: Keith Olbermann interviews Constitutional scholar Jonathan Turley re the memos:

Monday, March 2, 2009

Those perky Republicans

Williams & Cruz spending big taxpayer bucks in beauteous & delightful Sacramento

You’ll recall that Saddleback College’s new President, Tod Burnett, previously served as deputy appointments secretary for Governor Schwarzenegger. (You can see why Chancellor Mathur wanted him so badly.) 

According to a district press release, “[Burnett] advised the Governor on making appointments to hundreds of positions in state government.”

I guess Mr. Goo thinks Burnett will eventually make a few calls for 'em.  You know, open some doors. (It's all about the students, you understand.)

Burnett’s Sacramento successor (or, at any rate, the guy who has the job now) is Republican John Cruz who resides in San Clemente.

That's quite a commute.

According to OC Weekly's Matt Coker (John Cruz Snared),

John Cruz … is the appointments secretary for Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. The LA Times caught Cruz's hand in the state taxpayer cookie jar in the Sunday piece "California Paid for Top Officials' Free Rides."

Cruz, who earns $133,728 a year to head the staff charged with scrutinizing candidates for California's many boards and commissions, has charged taxpayers for his flights and for hotel bills of up to $382 a night on regular trips between his home and Sacramento, according to reporter Michael Rothford's examination of state disclosure records….

The Times reports: Cruz has spent as much as $4,196 traveling in one month; taxpayers have reimbursed him for hotel bills more than four times as high as the allowable state rate of $84 after he stayed two nights at the Hyatt in Sacramento for $383 each; and he did not obtain the required prior permission to pay that much.

Referring to Cruz and various others on the Governor's staff & cabinet, the Times reports:

State law allows employees to charge taxpayers only for activities on behalf of the public, which do not include commuting or events related to their personal lives.

"Is anybody at the wheel here?" said Michael Josephson, president of the nonprofit Josephson Institute of Ethics in Los Angeles.

"The best possible case for this, which is still not a good case, is [that] nobody is providing oversight. . . . The worst case is that you have some people who are knowingly taking advantage." (Free rides)

Gosh, this Cruz fella reminds me of someone in our midst. Hmmm.

(Near as I can tell, Tod Burnett, albeit woefully inexperienced as a college administrator, seems to be a good guy and a hard worker. Plus he seems to have an independent streak. Just maybe Raghu miscalculated this time.)

Idiot nation: carnival & spectacle & overkill

The OC Reg reports (Mayor who sent watermelon e-mail quits council, too) that Los Alamitos Mayor Dean Grose, who recently resigned over his unfortunate "watermelon" email, has decided to bail on his city council seat too.
"For the love of my community, and the health and well-being of my family, I am submitting my resignation as a Council Member," Grose said in a succinct statement to his council colleagues and Los Alamitos' city manager.

Supervisor John Moorlach expressed regret about Grose’s decision: "…I don't see a pattern and would not have called for his resignation from his council seat,” said Moorlach. Moorlach wished him well. 

Good for Moorlach.

The Los Alamitos city council meets tonight, and cops are being brought in for crowd control. Will Al Sharpton show up to speak as rumored? God, I hope not.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Accreditation actions for other colleges

The Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges (ACCJC) met in January and took actions with regard to dozens of institutions. As you know, both Irvine Valley and Saddleback colleges got essentially a clean bill of health from the Commission. 

But lots of colleges were on an ACCJC sh*t list of one kind or another. What happened to the other colleges?

Well, it's a bloody mess. I visited ACCJC’s website, which supposedly presents “the actions taken by the Commission … beginning with the most recent meeting.”

In my experience, ACCJC is slow to update this page, but it has at long last posted the results of their January meeting (see Recent Commission Actions).

According to that site, the Commission's January actions are as follows:

Reaffirmed Accreditation: 4 colleges
Removed from Warning and Reaffirmed Accreditation: 6 colleges
Removed from Warning: 1 college (Victor Valley College)
Removed from Probation and Reaffirmed Accreditation: 1 college
Removed from Probation: 1 college
Removed from Probation and Placed on Warning: 1 college
Placed on Warning: 6 colleges:
Cuesta College
El Camino College
Long Beach City College
Rio Hondo College
Santa Ana College
Santiago Canyon College

Continued on Warning: 5 colleges
Continued on Show Cause: 1 college
Placed on Probation: 3 colleges
Placed on Show Cause: 2 colleges
Accepted Midterm Report: 2 colleges
Accepted Focused Midterm Report: 6 colleges
Accepted Progress Report: 4 colleges:
Grossmont College
Heald College
Irvine Valley College
Saddleback College

Accepted Follow-Up Report: 8 colleges
Accepted Report: 1 college
Accepted Closure Report: 1 college
Accepted Show Cause/Closure Report and Terminated Accreditation effective April 3, 2009: 1 college
Rejected Follow-Up Report: 1 college

Orange Coast College:

I visited OCC’s Coast Report and found there a recent article (OCC’s fate in the mail) according to which

An updated [college accreditation] report will be sent to the [ACCJC] Thursday as Orange Coast College tries to salvage its name and get off a statewide warning list. OCC was put on warning by the group in June after failing to meet recommendations the committee made more than a year ago…. The recommendations included working on student learning outcomes, strengthening program review, creating a long term planning and budget process and distinguishing the functions of the college from the district.


…Despite the strides Coast has made, campus officials say they remain unsure whether OCC will be taken off warning.
“What the committee thinks is anyone’s guess,” [OCC President Bob] Dees said…. [My emphasis.]

That last recommendation sounds pretty familiar, doesn’t it?

I keep hearing that, since our colleges received their ACCJC seal of approval, Chancellor Mathur seems to have forgotten all about distinctions between the roles and responsibilities of the colleges (on the one hand) and the district (on the other) and the importance of maintaining them (highlighted by our recent anxiety-inducing accreditation adventure). 

For instance, apparently, the Chancellor now seems to think that it is the job of the district to initiate the two colleges' continued accreditation efforts, among other things.

Nope.

My new rug.

TigerAnn smiles and laughs on this fine day

TigerAnn plainly enjoys this fine weather. She sniffed the air and explored.
She nearly caught several lizards. Then she lounged for a while in the sun. She's a happy girl.

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...