Sunday, January 6, 2008

Three great women, songs

C'mon, check these out. All of these are wonderful, but, as a performance, Leslie Feist's cover of "Secret Heart" gets my undying devotion (even if she does hit a sour note on her guitar at the end). When I watch this, I can't help but smile, and the smile lasts.

PJ HARVEY: she rules


DIONNE WARWICK: great singer, not thinker. Dionne + David/Bacharach = great


PATTI SMITH: because I couldn't find a good version of her "Gimme Shelter." This'll do.


Kinda like LESLIE FEIST, too: "Secret Heart," live

The big soak (watching and waiting)

The OC Register reports that
.....A slide caused the evacuation of horses this afternoon from a stable in Modjeska Canyon, Orange County Fire Authority Capt. Mike Blawn reports.
....."It appears part of a hill came down when an intense storm cell moved through the area, bringing heavy rain and hail," Blawn said.
.....Mud slid into the stables at 17286 Modjeska Canyon Road, forcing the evacuation of about 12 to 15 horse to the Orange County Fairgrounds.
....."There were no reported injuries to people or horses," Blawn said.
.....Modjeska Canyon road is closed at Siverado Canyon Road as work crews clean up the mud, Blawn said. It in unknown what time the road will be reopened.
.....…The National Weather Service at 3:55 a.m. today issued a flash-flood watch until 3 a.m. Monday.
.....While light mud covers some canyon roads, no heavy mudslides or debris flow occurred in the area overnight, Orange County Fire Authority Capt. Mike Blawn said today.
.....Residents in Modjeska, Harding, and Williams canyons remain under a voluntary-evacuation request today.
.....…"The hillsides are still dangerous even though we've had no damaging slides or flows, Blawn said.
.....…Light showers will continue through most of today with a heavier storm forecast to arrive between 10 tonight and 3 a.m. Monday. This third storm to hit the county since Friday night could dump another 2 inches of rain on the foothills and canyons, and a quarter- to a half-inch on other areas, the National Weather Service reported.
....."The main thrust of the storm will be felt early Monday but there will be lots of light showers until Monday afternoon when the storm passes through, weather forecaster Ed Clark said….


Picture taken yesterday, Williams Canyon, RB (CW)

AS A KID, I was a huge Moody Blues fan. By the mid-seventies, I felt that I'd outgrown them, more or less. Probably so. But this MB song from 1969 still stays with me at some level.

This matter of "Watching and Waiting"—I can't say that I've outgrown that.



I remember being a young man high and lonely in the Sierra Nevada, this song playing in my head, as blustery clouds blew by.

Plato's cave, 2001 (a Space Odyssey); Betina across the ocean, never to be seen again.

Listen to that little tune I put at the start of "Trustee Fuentes' Spanish Adventure, Part 2." Did that maybe twenty years ago on a cheap keyboard.

W&W? Maybe.

Historical video: "Get the Goo Out" (6/21/05)

Lots of faculty showed up in the middle of summer to "Get the Goo Out."

Nice try.

These YouTube videos are limited, and so I was unable to include everyone who spoke. Excluded were Lewis Long and others.

I also excluded remarks by Ray "White-Wash Willy" Chandos (see Ten Years of Bowdlerizing Excellence!) and IVC Chief of Police Owen Kreza (see A Little Background on Owen Kreza and the Irvine PD), who, you'll recall, was forced to quit amid rumors of alarming misconduct.

These two were Mathur's only defenders (during this portion of the evening). (I'd be happy to post video of their pro-Mathur remarks, if there is any desire for that.)

Lined up against Mathur were some of the district's best and brightest: Wendy Gabriella, Lewis Long, et al. And 60-100 faculty, wearing black.

Note: this video presents faculty public remarks, on June 21, prior to the board closed session. The previous Mathur Saga/Historical Video concerned faculty public remarks after the closed session on that day. These videos are about the same "occasion," but importantly different stages of that occasion.

Saturday, January 5, 2008

In and around Williams Canyon




This is maybe a mile above Cook's Corner, heading toward O'Neill Park. See the horses?



Oh good, the bomb stopped ticking

.....Well, it’s been exciting again, here in the mountains.
.....Yesterday, the Reb and crew were evacuated from Modjeska Canyon and came to my place. I, of course, am experiencing the twin maladies of cold and gout; I pronounced myself “not fit for human company” and hobbled and coughed my way to my parents’ house nearby. I'm not sure what that says about my parents or my regard of them.
.....But, by then, it was 11:00, and my parents had locked up and gone to bed. So, there I was, in the driving rain, banging on their door. I think I scared a few years out of ‘em.
.....But it all turned out OK.
.....This morning, no doubt owing to the diminution of rain, officials declared that canyon residents may return to their homes. That is odd, for mudslide danger exists because of the existing state of saturation of canyon walls, not because of rain per se. That is, things are as dicey in (some parts of) the canyons right now as they were at the height of the rain last night. So why call off the mandatory evacuation?
.....According to the Register,

.....Emergency officials decided to lift the mandatory-evacuation … although they continued to urge residents to stay away under a voluntary-evacuation request.
.....…Orange County Fire Capt. Mike Blawn said the worst of the initial storm had passed through the county. Emergency teams were not anticipating any more serious rainfall until late this evening, he said.
.....The storm was strong enough to trigger a brief flash-flood warning earlier this morning. It expired at 8:30 a.m., but the National Weather Service continued to warn that the danger of mud and debris slides and flooding was high.
.....For the moment, at least, the barren hillsides in the burned canyon areas seemed to be holding together in the face of the storm. "We have had no reports of property damage or injuries, and no debris flows or rock slides," Blawn said earlier this morning.
.....But, with storm clouds still hanging over the county, he warned county residents not to get complacent. "We don't know what the accumulative effect of the rainfall is doing to the hillsides," he said.


.....Am I nuts, or what? Calling off the evacuation makes no sense. I mean, isn’t this like evacuating a building cuz somebody found an apparent ticking time bomb inside, but then letting people return cuz the bomb stopped ticking?
.....Which reminds me. The evacuation center for this storm was set up at Villa Park High, which is where I graduated 30-some-odd years ago. (In the end, nobody slept there last night. Typical.)
.....Among my warm and fuzzy memories of that place—besides Kevin Costner and my lonely advocacy of George McGovern—were the constant bomb scares that occurred one year. An anonymous individual would call the school, declaring that he had placed a bomb in building X. Then we’d all go through the drill, ending up somewhere outside, yammering about the usual bullshit: Jethro Tull, Nixon, Up With People.
.....It was great fun.
.....No bomb was ever found.
.....Or maybe one was, but the damn thing stopped ticking, so they let us back inside. Could be.

Friday, January 4, 2008

The Great Mystery


WE READ Antoine de Saint Exupéry's The Little Prince every evening in Baja, finally finishing it up last night at home.

The midriff of Baja with its towering cardons and curly boojums, the devastatingly beautiful rocky isolation, and, this year's surprise, eruptions of early wild flowers, pockets of yellow and red fringing the road and the boulders, resembles, in some ways, the Little Prince's planet, Asteroid B-612.

Here then, is a great mystery. For you who also love the little prince, and for me, nothing in the universe can be the same if somewhere, we do not know where, a sheep that we never saw has – yes or no? – eaten a rose…

Look up at the sky. Ask yourselves: Is it yes or no? Has the sheep eaten the flower? And you will see how everything changes…

And no grown-up will ever understand that this is a matter of so much importance
!
At this, the end of the book, my little guy turned over, snuggled down in the blankets and announced that he believed that the sheep had not eaten the flower and promptly, oh so quickly, you know how they do, fell asleep.

Thursday, January 3, 2008

The community vs. Tom Fuentes and his UGLY POLITICS

.....OK, I'm spending my holiday with my second bad cold in a row—plus a bad case of gout in my left foot. Dang!
.....On the other hand, as of two weeks ago, I've got HIGHSPEED. Yippee! I feel so modern!
.....So, naturally, it's time for me to make videos and dump 'em on the internet, which is what I've been doing these last few days.
.....I actually spent some time on this one, though. I'm proud of it! 'Twern't easy to edit. Not a bit.

.....LESS THAN A MONTH after the SOCCCD Board decided (in February, 2005) to nix the "study abroad in Spain" program—owing to Spain's having "abandoned" us by withdrawing its troops from Iraq—the community responded, loudly and clearly.
.....Many chose to speak that night (March 22), including several faculty and lots of amazingly articulate students. I couldn't fit them all on this edit (YouTube limits the size of videos), but I got most of 'em in. Check em out!
.....It really was a great moment in the history of our district.



More to come!

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...