Saturday, October 15, 2011

Downtown Chicago

(Click on pics to enlarge them.)
I've been in Chicago since Wednesday. Great town.
Took most of these pics during a boat cruise of the Chicago River.
Marilyn, here, is actually 26 feet tall; she stands just outside the beautiful Chicago Tribune Building, near the river.


The Wrigley Bldg.
I love the look of the Carbide and Carbon Bldg. It really did shine like this at the end of the day.

Along the river

The Cops were protesting Egypt.

Chicagoans are nuts about weddings
The "mouth" of the river, sort of (harbor)

A marvelous mix of the old and new.
Again we see the Carbide and Carbon Bldg., built in 1929 and covered in polished black granite.
As I recall, this building--the Merchandise Bldg. (1930)--was built by the Marshall Field family but was eventually purchased by the Kennedy family (1948).
It's enormous--for a while, it was the largest building in the world--and it's right on the river.






Most of these shots were taken relatively late in the day.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Friday's Chicago adventures

We drove along Lakeshore Drive. The weather was good.



Our hotel is in Evantson. We were headed to the Museum of Science and Industry.
We visited the magnificent U-505, which was captured in 1944. It's huge and impressive. We even got to walk through the interior. Amazing.
All but one of the crew of 59 survived. They were secretly transported to a POW camp in Louisiana.
The machinery inside this torpedo was impressive.
Gotta say: Chicago did a great job with this exhibit.
The captain's insignia
A Stuka. We also saw a Spitfire. Loved it.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Rainy Chicago (Hull House)

It's been rainy today in Chicago, but Chicago is a town that looks good wet. This is true of other things as well.
I'm a guest of sorts of the Association for Humanist Sociology, which is having its annual meeting this week.
From the conference HQ (the Hilton-Orrlington), conferees took a bus to Hull House, which is a very cool place indeed.
Hull House was founded in 1889 by Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Starr. It is the most famous example of the century-old phenomenon of "settlement houses," of which there were 500 in the U.S. by 1920.
Naturally, Addams, a pacifist and progressive sociologist, had an FBI file; she was regarded for a time as "the most dangerous person in the country."
She was a philosopher, you know. A "feminist pragmatist."
In 1932, she received a Nobel Peace Prize. She died in 1935.
There isn't much left of the huge complex that Hull House became, but at least two buildings remain, and they are fascinating. Above is a clock in the larger building. Here we see keys used by Addams and other Hull House officials. You can read more about Hull House here.

In the old community building, we heard a lecture by scholar Mary Joe Deegan. Deegan is attempting to correct neglect of the sociological and philosophical work of Addams and her peers.

Tomorrow, the U-505

Instructor "disappears"

     [For a more recent update: go here.]
     I just noticed an article in yesterday’s Mission Viejo Patch about Saddleback College composition instructor Amy Ahearn:

Mental Breakdown Suspected in English Prof's Disappearance: Lake Forest resident Amy Ahearn has not been seen since September.

     Extreme weight loss and other strange behaviors reportedly preceded the sudden disappearance of Saddleback College instructor Amy Ahearn this summer.
. . .
     She was reportedly last sighted in Norwalk, CA in September.
     On the Saddleback College website, Ahearn is listed as an English composition instructor. [Elsewhere on the site, she’s listed as “on leave.”]
     Ahearn has been missing from her Lake Forest home since Aug. 22, the day the fall semester began at Saddleback.
. . .
     The website Rate My Professor has 77 reviews for her teaching, the most recent from Aug. 16. ¶ Postings about her teaching style were generally positive until 2008, when students begin to mention her aversion to students coming within 3 feet of her.
     Members of her family believe she might be suffering from a delusional disorder or the symptoms of Huntington's disease.
. . .
     Ahearn's family is asking anyone who has information on her whereabouts to contact the OC Sheriff's Department at 949-770-6011.
     Sheriff's spokesman Jim Amormino said Ahearn's disappearance is not considered suspicious and she isn't thought to be in any danger….

IN THE NEWS:

• Florida Governor Attacked Field His Daughter Studied (Inside Higher Ed)
     Many anthropologists remain furious at Governor Rick Scott, a Florida Republican, for saying this week that his state doesn't need more graduates in anthropology. Now the Associated Press reports that the governor's daughter, Jordan Kandah, has an anthropology degree from the College of William & Mary. Kandah's career path backs the view of anthropologists that their discipline can be preparation for a variety of fields. She was formerly a special education teacher and recently enrolled in an M.B.A. program.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Chicago

8:00 a.m. - I'll be in Chicago for a few days. See yuh.

9:29 - I’m at John Wayne Airport, waiting for my 10:05 to LV. Nothin’ to report, ‘cept boredom. The security people insisted on examining my continuous positive air pressure machine. It's a little thing, but I suppose you could put a bomb in it. A tiny one.

11:34 - I'm in Las Vegas, which means "the spring," I think. Waiting for my 12:10 flight to Chicago. Beautiful weather. Managed to drop my laptop (MacBook Pro) from the baggage thingy above the seats all the way to the floor. Bang! Still works, it seems. Spent much of the flight thinking about the vast universe and the question whether it is to be feared or embraced. Still don't know.

No doubt I was working with a false dilemma. We're boarding!

7:20 p.m.(?) - I'm happily ensconced in my hotel room in the Orrington (I think that's the name) downtown. Lots of universities, cool shops, restaurants nearby. Off I go!

I've haven't been in Chicago since 1958, when I was maybe three. So this is all new to me. Very cool, so far.

• Professor who offended power elite resigns post (OC Reg)
     Fred Smoller is gone from his post as head of Brandman University’s master of public administration program.
     He’s not fired, as he has tenure, but the situation is a sticky one that raises thorny issues of academic freedom with critics.
• A Decade of Protesting Christopher Columbus Plays Out at Mission San Juan Capistrano Today (Navel Gazing)

 CAIR rebukes Councilman Derek Reeve (OC Reg; letters to the editor)
     Regarding “Of blogs and dogs: Councilman’s message to San Juan.” [Oct. 4] Councilman Derek Reeve needs to take responsibility for his own reckless acts rather than baseless blaming the mayor, his fellow council members or CAIR for his recurring problems, whether they are about allegations of plagiarism or insults levied at Muslims around the world, including his constituents. Being a leader used to mean being ethical, civil and uniting. I hope that standard has not been entirely lost….

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Wisckol dares to get real (just a little)

     The OC Reg's Martin Wisckol posts about new honors for SOCCCD trustee—and former OC GOP chair—Tom Fuentes: GOP’s ailing Fuentes to be honored again:
     Longtime former Orange County GOP Chairman Tom Fuentes will receive his second lifetime achievement honor in less than a month come Saturday, when the Western Conservative Political Action Conference convenes.
     Following a couple afternoon panels, the Western CPAC will host a reception for Fuentes and present him with a “lifetime leadership award.” Last month, the California Republican Party honored the cancer-stricken Fuentes with a “lifetime achievement award.”
     Breaking with recent journalistic practice re Fuentes, Wisckol dares to mention the controversy—and self-inflicted infamy—that attended Fuentes’ lengthy chairmanship:
     But 62-year-old Lake Forest resident, never one to pull punches, also saw his share of conflict and controversy. Among the most notable was the hiring of poll guards in the 1988 Assembly election of Republican Curt Pringle, who beat Democrat Christian “Rick” Thierbach by 843 votes. Fuentes said the security guards were to help ensure that non-citizens didn’t voting. A civil-rights suit was filed on behalf of five Latino voters alleging that the poll guards were sent to deter legitimate Latino voters. Fuentes, Pringle and fellow defendants paid $400,000 to settle the suit.
     The party’s stronghold on the county began slipping in the late 1990s. By 1998, Democrats had picked up two state legislative seats and a congressional seat. In 1999, Republicans fell below 50 percent of the county’s registered voters for the first time since 1984. In 2001, the county GOP lost its spot as the California county with the highest percentage of Republican voters.
     Fuentes’ loyal supporters continued to dominate the county party, but rumblings of dissatisfaction over his polarizing positions on social issues and his sometimes domineering leadership style continued growing until his resignation.

Plagiarism is just all right with Saddleback? (We illustrate some of Reeve's handiwork.)

Apparently, Saddleback is OK
with Reeve's plagiarism
     The OC Reg catches up with the Reeve story: Councilman with dog Muhammad out as Concordia instructor.
     Nothing new here, except:
Reeve also is a part-time instructor at Saddleback College in Mission Viejo. A representative there said Monday that Reeve is still employed at Saddleback.
     Meanwhile, again, Reeve says he can’t comment about his Concordia departure:
     Reeve said he is unable to discuss whether his departure had anything to do with his recent controversies.
     "Unfortunately, at this time I am not at liberty to comment," he said. "Hopefully that will change in the coming weeks."
Illustrating some of Mr. Reeve's curious handiwork:



I wanted to see for myself what all the fuss is about. I went to one of Reeve's July 2011 postings on the SJC Patch (at left above) and then I Googled some of "his" verbiage there. Right away, I got hits, including the NRA's "Institute for Legislative Action" website. Chunks of Reeve's "writing" (at left) are the same, word for word, as chunks of the "right-to-carry" verbiage on the NRA website (at right). The latter is dated April, 2010.
Click on graphic to enlarge it.
     A week ago, Reeve explained that he “carelessly submitted previously published material.”
     —That doesn't quite capture it, does it? Here, he evidently cut apart and then reassembled others' writings, submitting the product under his own name. The SJC Patch, of course, has presented other examples.


    See also:

 Derek Reeve, SJC Councilman, Loses Teaching Gig as Newspaper and Website Scrum Over Plagiarism (Matt Coker; Navel Gazing)
• O.C. councilman who named his dog Muhammad loses teaching job (LA Times)
• Jesus is just alright (Doobies)

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...