Tuesday, October 4, 2016

He's baaaack! And running for mayor of Irvine!


Yes, we know, we know. Former SOCCCD trustee Don Wagner has been termed out of the Assembly and failed to jump to the State Senate and is now eyeing Irvine's mayoral seat. Oh dear. His main opponent is Mary Ann Gaido (former two time council member and Planning Commissioner) who has a strong support in the community, followed with Gang Chen and Katherine Daigle.

What to say about the prospect of Don doing to Irvine what he did in the SOCCCD?

Tune in for more in the coming days and weeks.

A line-up of failure and disgrace: Don Wagner (third from right, scowling) joins,
 among others, convicted felon  former sheriff Mike Carona (at podium); Raghu Mathur (resigned under pressure, to his right); John Williams (fired O.C. Public Administrator, to his left), Tom Fuentes (Where to start?).
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Saturday, October 1, 2016


Quake alert issued for Southern California (OC Reg)
...The southernmost end of the fault hasn’t ruptured since 1690, and has been building up stress for 326 years. Earthquakes along the San Andreas typically occur every 300 years, said Morgan Page, a geophysicist with the U.S.G.S. Earthquake Science Center....
Cal State Fullerton's Math Department Has More Problems Than Overpriced, Mandatory Textbooks (OC Weekly)
     [Alain] Bourget is the math professor whose refusal to use the required textbook for his Math 250B course, "Introduction to Linear Algebra and Differential Equations," to instead teach from one about $100 cheaper created headlines across the nation. He earned enmity from university officials but was celebrated by colleagues across the country for standing up for academic freedom while garnering the gratitude of many students who increasingly view higher education as a high-priced shakedown.
. . .
     But the thing of it is, cost was not the reason Bourget chose the book. As he says now, the fact that the Strang book was less—significantly less—than the Goode text was merely a "happy coincidence." He would have still chosen the Strang book if it were the same price or a little more expensive than the Goode book.
     "The fact that the book was cheaper was nice," Bourget says, "but the most important thing, the reason I wanted to teach it, is that it was a better book, and I don't mean a much better book, but a much, much better book."
. . .
…Down the road at UC Irvine, that school's Academic Senate, clearly reacting to Bourget's case, recommended that faculty members forgo any profits they derive from assigning their students textbooks or other course materials they've produced....
WHO GOT RICH OFF THE STUDENT DEBT CRISIS? (The Center For Investigative Reporting)

Thursday, September 29, 2016

Third Annual Banned Books Day

For the third year in a row, IVC celebrated Banned Books Week with a reading and book giveaway. Banned Books Week is sponsored by the American Library Association and celebrates our freedom to read. The IVC event has been organized by Professor Virginia Shank and IVC's librarians.



Inspired by the ALA's superhero theme, the intrepid Professor Shank made a cape. 

Quotations about censorship and the value of books were chalked on the sidewalk
from the library to the new Liberal Arts building.  Some students joined in. 

Red "I Read Banned Books" buttons were distributed to all. 

Dean Feldhus looking soulful as she reads.
Professor Shank sported a nifty open book shaved hair design.

It was admired by many.

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Sunday, September 25, 2016

Just who "stepped on" free speech in the SOCCCD? Will YAF be truthful?

From the chapter's Facebook Page.
     Saddleback College's YAF ("Young Americans for Freedom") club—not sure what its standing is these days—has a Facebook Page.
     Here's something interesting I found on it today, evidently posted on Thursday:


     I gather that the chapter is sponsoring an initiative to "amend BP and AR 8000," the district's "speech and advocacy" policies, which were adopted about a dozen years ago.
     The YAF chapter says it "will be educating and informing students and faculty about the speech restrictions." I wonder if these YAF kids will acknowledge that the authors of these speech-limiting policies (AR 8000 etc.) were conservative Republicans and not "liberal" academics?  
     They will if they have a drop of integrity. 
     Let's see. 

SEE Students Sue District over 1st Amendment (DtB, April 15, 2002)

They stand for freedom. But do they stand for honesty?
     BACKGROUND: the YAF chapter posted the following back on the 8th:


     According to this post, the "full story" is at The Young America’s Foundation website, where we're told that the professor's action "is a perfect example of the way schools, and radical leftist professors like Lovett, leverage their bureaucracies to limit students’ right to free speech." Nowhere does the article note that the professor was enforcing district policy. 
     The article also reports that Saddleback College "attempted to block the YAF chapter’s 9/11 memorial earlier this week." Again, nowhere are we told that the memorial was "blocked" owing to the YAF kids' failure to turn in the needed forms to become an active club.
     The local YAF chapter has generated this and other misleading stories and, as near as I can tell, has done nothing to disabuse organizations of their errors. Nothing that has happened to these YAF kids reflects professor Lovett's politics. The unwanted events—"blocking" of the special YAF 9-11 event and Lovett's removal of posters—were the result of the kids' failures to follow the rules, including those established by conservative Republican trustees.

Tomorrow's board meeting

     The agenda can be found HERE.   
     Open session starts at 6:30.
     There'll be the usual reports, including, of course, the IVC report and the Saddleback College report.
     Burnett's report mentions SC's 9-11 event and student Audra Leslie of YAF:


     The Discussion Item is 4.1: SOCCCD: Legislative and Advocacy Overview
  • Presenters will be Tere Fluegeman, Executive Director of Public and Government Affairs,
  • Mark MacDonald, State Legislative Advocate from McCallum Group Inc., and
  • Dana DeBeaumont, Federal Legislative Advocate from Capitol Advocacy Partners
     Here are some slides from their presentation:

This one's called "Who we are"



Full-time and Part-time, eh?

Item 6.1 of General Items is "Agreement for Chancellor Search Consultant Services with Professional Personnel Leasing, Inc." About $30K.

Item 6.5 is "ATEP IVC First Building Project, Change Order No. 1, McCarthy Building Companies, Inc. Approve Board Change Order No. 1 for the ATEP IVC First Building project and authorize staff to execute the corresponding change order with the design-build contractor resulting in an increase of $1,268,345 for a revised contract amount of $17,553,345 and add 15 days for a revised contract completion date of November 24, 2017."

Under "reports" is item 7.2: "2017 Teacher of the Year Recognition Ceremony Information on OC Teachers of the Year program. The nominees being honored from SOCCCD are Claire Cesareo, Anthropology Professor from Saddleback College and Rebecca Beck, ESL Professor from Irvine Valley College."

Item 7.3 is "Technology Plan Accept for review and study the proposed SOCCCD Technology Plan." Here's the presentation.

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Leaving A-200



Poster for our valiant - and ultimately failed - recall effort. 
Most A-200 denizens are packing up and moving their new digs in LA Building  (as the new Liberal Arts building is called by some) which presents opportunities for archaeological discoveries like the poster above and the reading packet below.

Who could forget the Holocaust denier on our board, who was supported by so many faculty and administrators, some still in their positions?  Who could forget that among our part-time faculty were two fellas who went on to publishing acclaim, one wining a Pulitzer Prize? Quick, someone tell our PR folks. It's not every community college who can make such boasts. Indeed, imagine a evening exchange of ideas between Steve Frogue and Michael Chabon in the faculty lounge. Or not.

"A long memory is the most radical idea in American history," so said historian Clare Sparks.  It certainly is in the SOCCCD.  Come visit us in LA Building!

Reading packet for WR 11, the Short Fiction Workshop, almost 30 years ago.
Still in its shrink wrap.
Perhaps worth a pretty penny on eBbay? 
Trustee Frogue made the over of the OC Weekly.
We still have copies!



Rebel Girl, c. 1986
UPDATE, Friday, the 23rd: today, Rebel Girl was busy taking Limber Lou to an audition in Hollywood. Meanwhile, I taught until 11:45 and then hotfooted it over to LA101, where a meeting of the new VPI (Chris McDonald) with faculty of the Schools of Humanities and Languages & Language Resources was underway. As I entered, a guy asked me to turn in my keys (to A239, my office for the last 28 or so years). He gave me a new key—to LA214, my new lair, again with Rebel Girl.
     Soon, we broke for lunch, and some of us ate with the new VPI, Chris McDonald, who seems like a decent guy. As it turns out, our long-time dean, Karima, just snagged the Interim version of McDonald's old gig at Saddleback, and so the meeting was about more than just moving to new digs. Who would be our interim dean? Lots of tongues were flappin'. Lots of rumors were flyin'. What will the future bring? Who knows.
     As usual, snafus surfaced. The boxed books and shite from one office hadn't been moved, and the movers were now gone; some of the new office computers didn't work right; some folks couldn't get the printer to work; and so on. The usual stuff.
     The door to my (our) new ofice doesn't stay open, so I've got to use this big dumb door-opening wedge thingy. The air-conditioning seems to produce a temperature a notch above comfort. I could go on, but mostly I'm excited about our new building and office. It's all shiny and new and, for the first time, faculty in my school have their own lounge, complete with comfortable chairs and a fridge and a sink—plus a great big mirror ball over in the corner. (Well, no.) College faculty offices need to be on the second floor of a cool looking building with windows, and now we've got that, so I'm happy.
     For now.

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...