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The SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT — "[The] blog he developed was something that made the district better." - Tim Jemal, SOCCCD BoT President, 7/24/23
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Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did" 27 Dec 2023 3:33 PM (last year)

 


This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register:

July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2023 Roy left us just after midnight on November 20, 2023, with family at his side and Robert Johnson's blues playing in his room. An aggressive brain lymphoma took him away from us too soon, at 68 years old. The loss is shocking and heartbreaking.

Roy was born on July 14, 1955 in Murrayville, British Columbia to Gunther (Manny) and Edith (Sierra) Bauer, German immigrants who had met and fallen in love on board the ship Anna Solain as they left Germany after WW II. After arrival in Quebec, they married and lived in Kemano and Kitimat, British Columbia, from 1953-58, during which time Roy and sister Annie were born, then moved to Vancouver where they lived for two years.

The family came to the United States in 1960, living briefly in L.A. County, then Anaheim, and finally the house they bought near Villa Park in 1961. Their neighborhood was surrounded by orange groves and tall eucalyptus trees that served as windbreaks, and Roy loved walking to school alongside the massive eucalyptus trees that lined Santiago Boulevard. Roy's younger brothers Ray and Ron were born during this period. In 1976, Manny built a home near Trabuco Canyon, nestled among the live oaks and chaparral and graced with a panoramic view of Saddleback Mountain and the hills stretching beyond Plano Trabuco.

When the kids were young, Manny and Sierra took long drives, with Roy and Annie in the backseat for hours on end. Roy believed that his love of music was born listening to the radio on those drives. He found tunes such as "Sukiyaki" and "Midnight in Moscow" magical, then and for all of his life. Music was deeply important to Roy, and he introduced his family to music he loved from early days: "Dark Side of the Moon," the Moody Blues, Neil Young, Willie Nelson, and the Tijuana Brass were at various times family favorites. In the late 80s, Roy and his brother Ron enjoyed recording their own musical compositions on 4 track tape.

The Bauers were deeply attached to their animal companions, and Roy's love for animals was constant all of his life. The family dogs Billy and Ildy, from the early days in Trabuco Canyon, were especially dear to Roy. He adored his loyal companion, Teddy Bear, a rescued tabby who loved taking walks with Roy and tree-climbing when the spirit moved him, and who greatly amused colleagues and students with appearances during Roy's on-line meetings and lectures.

Roy excelled in the Cub Scout and Boy Scout troops his father led, achieving Eagle Scout rank in 1968. (He was always amused that his Eagle diploma was signed by then-President Richard Nixon.) He attended Villa Park High School, then earned a B.A. and a Master's degree in Philosophy at UC Irvine. He found a great gang of friends in the graduate program at UCI who played volleyball for hours on Friday afternoons and goofed around on Balboa Island and Laguna Beach on weekends. He and fellow graduate student Kathie Jenni became friends during that time and fell in love. Roy married Kathie in 1982 at the Jenni ranch in Montana, and the two enjoyed fifteen years together, loving their life and home in old-town Orange. The marriage came to an end, but the two remained close friends for all of Roy's life.

Roy joined the Irvine Valley College faculty in 1987 and taught there for 37 years. He was a passionate and committed teacher with a deep interest in ethics and political philosophy, and a passion for moral issues such as animal rights that energized his teaching. Roy served for over 25 years on the Academic Senate. In the 90s, he watched as leaders of a then-corrupt faculty union allotted themselves huge salaries and endorsed Board of Trustees candidates whose singular qualifications were avoiding scrutiny of inflated pay scales and accepting union leadership's endorsements. One was a conspiracy-theorist and Holocaust denier. These circumstances inspired Roy to attend and record board meetings, do extensive research, and feed news of district shenanigans to newspaper reporters. Soon he founded Dissent, an investigative journalism newsletter which he wrote, illustrated, photocopied, and hand-delivered to faculty, staff, Board of Trustees, and union mailboxes at both SOCCCD campuses, IVC and Saddleback. Dissent reported on the Holocaust denier and inspired two community-sponsored recall efforts. Roy endured personal and political attacks, bogus disciplinary actions by administration and, due to his vigorous and relentless criticism of corrupt board members, was ordered to attend "anger management" classes. This delighted him. Represented by legendary civil rights attorney Carol Sobel in trial, Roy prevailed in court. The impact of Dissent cannot be overstated: its vigilant reportage led to political change in district and campus leadership, democratic reform of the union, improved oversight policies, and affirmation of both academic freedom and the value of public higher education. The UC Irvine libraries feature digital archives of Dissent the Blog, and recently agreed to accept the Professor Roy Bauer Papers into their Orange County collection.

Roy was an exceptional person, deeply loved, admired, and respected. He was never a conventional thinker, and impressed even those who (roughly) shared his political and moral outlook with penetrating critiques of accepted wisdom, popular trends, idiotic jargon, superficial thinking, and cliché. He was a superb philosopher and a talented historian, delving deep into Orange County history and chronicling his parents' early lives in Germany.

Roy's bravery in the face of disease and intensive care was matched by his moral courage in standing up for what was right. He was incredibly, unhesitatingly generous, bestowing gifts both small and very large indeed on family and friends. He cultivated a wide range of interests ranging from language to film, physics to politics, cooking to veterinary practice. He was a brilliant writer, with a genius for satire and wickedly hilarious graphics that animated Dissent. His love of music was eclectic and discerning, and many of his friends found their way to new and old music alike through Roy's discoveries. He appreciated a wide range of genres and sensibilities, from Bulgarian choral folk to contemporary rock, from Mo-Town to punk, but most of all, and always, the blues.

Roy was preceded in death by his parents, Manny and Sierra, who passed in 2017 and 2019, and his younger brother Raymond, who died in a work accident in 2001. He is survived by brother and sister-in-law Ron and Susan Bauer, sister Annie Kook, longtime friend (and former wife) Kathie Jenni, nieces Sarah, Catherine, and Natalie and nephew Adam; office mate and great friend Lisa Alvarez, beloved pal Jan Rainbird, and many other friends and colleagues.

Roy, we were lucky to have you while we did, and we will hold you close in our hearts forever. We love and miss you fiercely.

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Remembrance [of Roy Bauer] by Matt Coker in Citric Acid 23 Dec 2023 8:36 AM (last year)

 


In the latest issue of Citric Acid, former OC Weekly writer and now UC Irvine School of Social Ecology’s Social Media Manager Matt Coker remembers Roy Bauer:

 

Having spent too much of my youth reading Mad, Cracked and National Lampoon—blatantly plagiarizing the latter’s high school yearbook issue for my high school newspaper’s April Fools edition nearly got me removed from the editor’s chair—I felt I found a kindred spirit in Roy Bauer. His Dissent newsletters tackled important issues swirling around his beloved Irvine Valley College and IVC’s South Orange County Community College District overlords in true muckraking fashion. But Dissent’s presentation was slavishly sophomoric, filled with rude and crude images that were gif- and meme-worthy before anyone knew what the hell a gif or a meme was.

My memory could very well be faulty, but I believe IVC English Professor Lisa Alvarez first alerted me to the shenanigans happening in the SOCCCD alphabet soup in the mid- to late 1990s, with source material coming in the form of Dissent clippings that both enlightened me and made me envious because of the hilarious images, headlines and overall snark. I seem to recall Professor Alvarez leading me for the first time to the classroom of IVC Philosophy Professor Bauer, who provided a sobering overview of the SOCCCD shitshow.

That meeting, Roy’s follow-up calls and emails and my trusty Dissent subscription produced short items in my OC Weekly printed blog-before-there-were-blogs column "A Clockwork Orange" (that I now wish I’d named "Clockwork Orange County"). My clips, more reporting and attendance at, oh, let’s say colorful SOCCCD Board of Trustees meetings led to the April 10, 1998, cover thumbsucker “The Evils of Froguenstein: The real monsters behind community college trustee Steven J. Frogue.” (If you want to read it a) God bless you, and 2) Don’t try OC Weekly’s archives because … does OC Weekly even have archives? Not that I can see. Probably went down with a former owner’s Chris-Craft. Fortunately, Roy reprinted the whole thing for his own blog-after-there-were-blogs blog, Dissent the Blog—with the original OCW cover and much better illustrations than what we used inside.)

To quickly recap the Frogue thing without prejudice, we turn to Terry O’Banion, author of The Rogue Trustee: The Elephant in the Room (2009, The League for Innovation in the Community College) and the chapter titled “What Motivates the Rogue Trustee?” (that makes me wish we’d used fROGUE in our headline).

Presidents and other members of the board have a particularly challenging situation when the personal agenda championed reflects values and prejudices that are anathema to educational culture. While educators usually support the examination of all sides of an issue, it is embarrassing for the college as a whole when one of its own trustees publicly champions a perspective that few educators can support. One of the most challenging cases cited by a number of presidents in this study is that at the South Orange County Community College District (SOCCCD) in California—a case that has been very public in the local press and on faculty-sponsored websites, so it can be referenced here.

In 1998, Matt Coker, a reporter for the OC Weekly, described in detail the efforts of a college trustee at SOCCCD to persuade the college to sponsor a seminar on the John F. Kennedy assassination. As the board president, he got his fellow trustees to approve spending $5,000 in district funds to pay four speakers. The speakers included talk-show host Dave Emory, who contends Nazis who fled defeated Germany played a leading role in slaying JFK; John Judge, who says a cabal of gays and the military-industrial complex was behind the killing; Sherman Skolnick, a contributor to Spotlight, which the Anti-Defamation League calls the most antisemitic publication in America; and Michael Collins Piper, who wrote a book claiming that Kennedy’s assassination was a hit orchestrated by top-level CIA officials in collaboration with organized crime and Israel’s intelligence service, the Mossad. The national media covered this case, and there were protests from hundreds of local citizens, including college faculty and students, as well as a number of local and national organizations. In response, the board of trustees decided to move the seminar off campus; it was finally cancelled. There are many, many details and problems surrounding this personal agenda by a trustee in a very complex situation that has become a legend in California community colleges.

Before we go any further, if Rob Reiner’s new podcast concludes actual German Nazis (as opposed to the lame, Trump-loving kind) locked arms with gay Defense Dept. warmongers, CIA spooks and Mossad agents to off Kennedy, scrunch what you just read into a ball, swallow it, and lose this IP address.

As for our dearly departed Professor Bauer, please know that he kept me in the loop about SOCCCD shenanigans for years and years, and while I always appreciated the chuckles, I also knew that despite Dissent’s Mad/Cracked/Lampoon-worthy takes, deep down Roy despised the unnecessary shame that came his school’s way. He would have preferred the shit for the shitshow had never been … um … shat. He really cared, and I hope someone coming up takes his lead.


To read the rest, click here.


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SOCCCD Faculty Association newsletter features two tributes to Bauer 20 Dec 2023 11:03 AM (last year)


 




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A Friend Pays a Musical Tribute 12 Dec 2023 9:36 PM (last year)


At the Sunday December 10 concert on the Rezanoor Stage at IVC, Professor Emeritus Stephen Rochford conducted IVC's Wind Symphony in "Lyric for Band" by George Walker.*

Steve dedicated the piece to Roy and his choice words which preceded were perfect. Steve and Roy served well over two decades together in IVC's Academic Senate and in the struggle to restore integrity to the college and the district. Did Steve mince words? Are you kidding me? Steve is a class act. No word mincing! Gimme some truth as another musician, John Lennon, might say.

*In 1996, George Walker was the first African American to win the Pulitzer Prize for Music, awarded for for "Lilacs," a piece for voice and orchestra featuring Walt Whitman's poetry.

Roy could be counted on to snap cool pics of Steve at commencement in his finery. Here's one:

As Steve told me, "We're all hurting and we're all feeling grateful for having Roy in our lives."

Cherish each other people.

*

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Last Stand on Jeffrey 2 Dec 2023 9:32 AM (last year)

 


By Rebel Girl's count, there are five orange trees left at the corner of Jeffrey and Irvine Center Drive, where Irvine Valley College stands. This week, she noticed activity around the two on Jeffrey.
Two workmen, a small bulldozer, tools. Reb had time, so walked over, tromping over the dusty weedy empty lot where, when she was hired thirty years ago, a full grove stood. Back then, student clubs held “orange picks” to raise funds, selling the fruit to those who would pick their own. We didn’t raise much money, but it was fun. The groves thinned as the college expanded. Through the years, she noticed others, immigrants it seemed to her, who would come to the shrinking groves in spring and cut bunches of orange blossoms. Every year, the fruit would grow, but without proper care, was small, hard, too sour to eat. No one came to pick anymore. Still, in the spring, the college still smells of orange blossoms.
The tree stood, its round crown full of pale fruit, its trunk where it met the earth surrounded by a square moat, the dirt broken into dark crumbles.
Gerardo told her that were not cutting down the trees, just digging holes around them so they could be moved. Yes, she could take a picture. Pero, por que?
Rebel Girl explained the best se could. She is a teacher at the college, and a poet. Poets like trees.
He laughed. He praised her Spanish for its accent as she apologized for everything else.
Finally they talked about Nicaragua where he was born and grew up and fled and where she had been once in 1984. The war? Yes, la guerra. Where did she go? Managua, por supuesto, Matagalpa, Leon, San Juan de Sur. A beautiful country. And now? They were in agreement about Daniel Ortega. Rubén Darío? Yes, Gerardo knew the grand poeta de Matagalpa. Everyone did.
In Darío’s poems you can find trees, lots of them.
This is one of his most famous:
Fatality
The tree is happy because it is scarcely sentient;
the hard rock is happier still, it feels nothing:
there is no pain as great as being alive,
no burden heavier than that of conscious life.
To be, and to know nothing, and to lack a way,
and the dread of having been, and future terrors...
And the sure terror of being dead tomorrow,
and to suffer all through life and through the darkness,
and through what we do not know and hardly suspect...
And the flesh that temps us with bunches of cool grapes,
and the tomb that awaits us with its funeral sprays,
and not to know where we go,
nor whence we came! ...


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"Ain't no room on board for the insincere" 25 Nov 2023 3:33 PM (last year)

 

Roy and his boy Teddy. 2021

I would amuse Roy with stories of my students. He would amuse me with stories of his. We kept each other amused. 30 years of stories. 30 years of students.

One motif: students who were related to notables. The civil rights leader Medgar Evers' grandson. The great-granddaughter of actor Fred McMurray. Some great-grandchild or great-grand something of writer William Styron. The scion of the great Kenyan writer Ngugi wa Thiong'o. An estranged descendent of James Irvine. There they were, in our classrooms, in our offices, asking for letters of recommendations or just hanging out.

This encounter in 2012 particularly delighted Roy:

So this morning at the Writing Center at the little college in the orange groves, I am working with a student, last name of Zevon. She is doing well and I help her to do a little better. At the end of the conference, I say, "Zevon. Unusual name. By any chance are you related to the singer-songwriter Warren Zevon?" 

I almost don't say this as it sounds so foolish, but I do. It's been almost ten years since he died plus, what are the chances?

 I get a big smile. 

"He was my father's cousin," she says. "Uncle Warren. A little crazy." 

"I love his music," I tell her. "It means so much to me. If I keep talking about it, I'll start to cry." So I walk away, work with the next student. So it goes.

Mutineer - by Warren Zevon

Yo ho ho and a bottle of rum
Hoist the mainsail, here I come
Ain't no room on board for the insincere
You're my witness
I'm your mutineer

I was born to rock the boat
Some may sink but we will float
Grab your coat, let's get out of here
You're my witness
I'm your mutineer

Long ago we laughed at shadows
Lightning flashed and thunder followed us
It could never find us here
You're my witness
I'm your mutineer

Long ago we laughed at shadows
Lightning flashed and thunder followed us
It could never find us here
You're my witness
I'm your mutineer

I was born to rock the boat
Some may sink but we will float
Grab your coat, let's get out of here
You're my witness
I'm your mutineer
You're my witness
I'm your mutineer
I'm your mutineer




*

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Roy Bauer tribute at SOCCCD Board of Trustees Meeting: "I think it's clear Roy was the pulse of Irvine Valley College and he did make the district better." - Tim Jemal 23 Nov 2023 6:32 AM (last year)

 

Karima, Roy and Rebel Girl heading for Zov's for another legendary lunch.

Rebel Girl attended the SOCCCD Board meeting Monday night, a perfect way to honor Roy. After all, as someone remarked, Roy probably attended more board meetings than anyone except Marcia.

This was an extraordinary evening, a moving tribute to Roy and perhaps the first time ever Robert Johnson was played at a board meeting.

Here's a link to the recording with the highlights noted below:



Rebecca Beck, Margot Lovett and Melanie Haeri: 37:41-45:40

Scott Greene: 47:31- 48:11

Chancellor Barnes: 1:31-1:33

President Hernandez, Chris MacDonald, Cindy Vyskocil: 1:38-1:40

Marcia Milchiker and Tim Jemal: 1:43- the end

So proud of us all, what we are able to do together.

Rebel Girl knows Roy was too.

As Chris MacDonald said, "We'll miss you, brother."

Rebel Girl and Roy in their natural habitat.




Yes, Roy was an Eagle Scout. Of course, he was!



Cookiemas, 2018.

Our new home: 2014.


Commencement, 2016.



Portrait of Roy's old desk beneath the window in the A-200 office where he spent the years of 1987-2016.  (I joined him in 1993. The office space is now occupied by Lewis Long. The student is probably still there.)

A drawing of Roy, aka Chunk Wheeler, drawn by Rebel Girl and Red's kid, circa 2007 when the kid was four or
five.  

Roy and Beth Sanchez, post-commencement gathering. May 2009.




Roy in San Francisco, 2013.



Roy at Ken Brown's wedding in 2009.  IVC old-timers will remember Ken as first a student, then an adjunct instructor of Philosophy who was later "fired" by Dean Howard Gensler.

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Update on Roy: Day 28: A Few Good Friends 20 Nov 2023 7:53 AM (last year)


UPDATE: Roy passed away late last night, Monday November 20. Family around him. Robert Johnson singing the blues.  Cherish each other people.

It's November 19, Roy's 23rd day in Hoag. 

The last few days have been challenging. Roy is now on the 4th floor of the West Wing in the Cardiac Care/ICU unit. Ocean view.

Rebel Girl will spare you the medical details even though she knows that Roy would not. 

The visits of old friends continue to be steady:  Karima, Phil, Peter, Dan R and Dan d, Brittany, Henry, Kurt, and more. Family presence is constant.

Keep those cards and letters coming folks.  

Frank M. dropped by and noted later that Roy was "so naturally brave about what he is going through."  

Jan R. mentioned that he and Roy talked about film the other evening. Roy asked about the line "You can't handle the truth," and needed help identifying the movie it was from.

"A Few Good Men," Jan answered.

Roy then wondered about the screenwriter and Jan told him Araon Sorkin and then they were off and running for awhile.

Why that line? Why this film? Perhaps Roy was inspired by Kurt M.'s artistic offering which decorates Roy's hospital room:


Thanks for being there in all the ways you are folks.  We always knew you were the best.

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Update on Roy: "When you got a good friend" 11 Nov 2023 10:27 AM (last year)

 

The start of the new chemo regimen means that Roy lost his Gilligan’s Island panorama. Alas. He is now ensconced on the 8th floor of the West Wing of Hoag. The room is smaller and so is the window and view. The plan is that he will be here for the duration of the chemo round, then will be transferred to a skilled nursing facility, then back to chemo and so forth until it is done.

Above you see some of the items that have traveled with him to the new room, including some new additions: the Hoag teddy bear and your notes, printed out in large type and collected on a clipboard.  Some of you asked if you can call or email him directly and Rebel Girl expects a number of you have already done so. But you should know that Roy's ability to access those devices is limited. Please consider communicating via Rebel Girl or, if you are in contact with Roy's family, via them.

About those notes: Roy LOVES them! Keep them coming! Post them below or feel free to email Rebel Girl. No note too short or too long. You might want to share a story about the past or tell him what you are up to today. Rebel Girl will print them all out.

When she reviewed the first batch with him, Roy stopped and told her a little bit about those people she doesn’t know. So many fun stories of the past: the extra credit guillotine he constructed to pass a French class, the VW bug that could make only right turns, a cameo appearance by Jody Hoy! Roy remembers everyone, everything. It means so much to him that folks remember him at this time when he is surrounded mostly by strangers. The cheerful physical therapists who visit him told Rebel Girl that they use the notes to help him engage with them. So consider your communications as part of his physical therapy routine. 

Just FYI, on the BINGO card of visitors that Rebel Girl is keeping Roy has scored two former deans, four former colleagues, and an assortment of friends. No BINGO yet.

The other day Rebel Girl heard the physical therapists ask Roy what his favorite music was and she heard Roy's answer, strong, swift, without hesitation: "The blues."  

Here's some blues for Roy today, by the great Robert Johnson:

"When You Got a Good Friend"

When you got a good friend
that will stay right by your side
When you got a good friend
that will stay right by your side
Give her all of your spare time
love and treat her right


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Blast from the Past: "The Unabauer Manifesto" (April 8, 1999) 6 Nov 2023 5:35 PM (last year)


Tonight, home from a visit to Roy at Hoag in Newport, Red Emma reminded Rebel Girl that once upon a time the county had an alternative weekly newspaper and that the one and only Matt Coker had indeed profiled Roy. 

A few clicks, and behold, the internet revealed on April 8, 1999, the OC Weekly published "The Unabauer Manifesto." 

Go ahead and laugh. You're supposed to! Roy would be disappointed if you didn't chuckle.

This was in the midst of the 100 Years War or something that surely felt like that at the little college in the orange groves. There were subpoenas, depositions, lawsuits, appeals and victories, for the most part, followed by a long bitter Cold War.  We would wonder if IVC was more like Poland or Franco's Spain. Rebel Girl favored the Spanish analogy and its charming facist tolerated for decades after WWII.

Those looking for an SOCCCD history lesson and Roy's part in making it, as current board president Tim Jemal asserted, a better place, may find Coker's profile in courage an inspiring place to start.

As for Rebel Girl, what she likes best is how well Coker saw Roy for who he is and the college an the district for what it was, had been and could be.  

So here it is, in all it's glory. 

Just pretend it's a Friday afternoon in the last year of the last century. And you, you're picking up a thick tabloid (gratis!) from a newstand in an O.C. strip mall, such good company to have while you eat an amazing burrito, chips, salsa, the works. Good times.


THE UNABAUER MANIFESTO

MATT COKER | POSTED ON

Professor Roy Bauer has let everyone in the South Orange County Community College District know he wants to drop “a 2-ton slate of polished granite” on the head of his boss, Irvine Valley College's president. He's proclaimed an “urge to go postal” during an election party for conservative Board of Trustees candidates. And his e-mail address is frighteningly similar to the handle of another college professor preoccupied with going postal: “Unabauer.”

Alarming? Cedric Sampson says he thought so. The district chancellor sent Bauer a letter in December accusing the ethics and political-philosophy professor of creating a “hostile work environment” and “strongly urged” him to “participate in the district's Employee Assistance Program”-counseling-“to defuse this volatile situation and assist you in dealing with the feelings of anger you have exhibited.”

One might logically share Sampson's anxieties over Bauer-except that Sampson's evidence was excerpted from Bauer's underground, over-the-top newsletters: The 'Vine, which covers Irvine Valley College, and Dissent, which targets the district. The pesky, smart-ass, stream-of-consciousness-raising newsletters are clearly a cross between Mad Magazine and the OC Weekly-without the intrusive editing for clarity.

Sampson was specifically irked over the Nov. 2 Dissent, in which Bauer wrote that “I, for one, have etched the name of [union president] Sherry 'Realpolitik' Miller-White and others of her ilk on my permanent shit list, a 2-ton slate of polished granite that I someday hope to drop on [Irvine Valley president] Raghu Mathur's head.”

Then there was the following week's issue, when-riffing off someone's comment at a trustee-election party that those present were “the very best in the district” -Bauer mused that at a fictional party for conservative candidates, “no decent person could resist the urge to go postal.” There was also coverage of a fantasy funeral for Steven Frogue (a trustee who'd recently fought off a nasty recall campaign over allegations that he has minimized the Holocaust) at which Mathur and mourning trustees choked on “a lurid gas emanating from the Great Man's gaping mouth.”

Sampson said he found more signs of Bauer's alleged depravity in the Nov. 16 Dissent. That issue referred to the Irvine Valley College president's policies as the Milosevic-Mathur Academic Integrity Matrix, or MAIM. However, Bauer notes that others in the district contribute to the newsletters, and sadly, he could not take credit for the MAIM line.

But he takes responsibility for newsletter illustrations Sampson finds offensive. One shows Mathur beheading his foes (it accompanied a story on the president's alleged enemies list). The other, a still from the 1940 flick Dr. Cyclops, shows three shrunken people crouched down on a chair, setting up a rifle to shoot at a giant (for an article on the board's micro-management of the college campuses).

And in just about every issue, Sampson alleged, Bauer offended Asians by referring to Mathur as “Mr. Goo.” Bauer contends he was playing off the last syllable of the president's first name and the bumbling cartoon character Mr. Magoo. But Sampson said he believed “Goo” was short for “gook,” a derogatory term for Asians. Mathur is of Indian descent.

As for the “Unabauer” e-mail address, Bauer changed it to that after trustee John Williams was quoted in The Orange County Register comparing the professor's writings to the Unabomber Manifesto.

Many district observers don't believe it's Bauer's colorful rhetoric that distresses Sampson, but rather his penchant for finger-pointing-which finger depends on the occasion-at the surreal events on South County's Saddleback and Irvine Valley college campuses. Bauer asks officials loads of loaded questions at public functions and sticks his nose into the affairs of what he believes to be a corrupt college, district and faculty union.

Bauer first came to the public's attention when he sicced the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) on Frogue in the fall of 1996. The trustee had just proposed a John F. Kennedy assassination seminar at Saddleback that would include speakers some consider crackpots (one wrote a book tying Kennedy's killing to the Israeli government's secret police; he and another invited speaker contribute to The Spotlight, which the ADL has branded the most anti-Semitic paper in the country). The seminar was nixed after strong public reaction.

Sampson's letter was dated three days after the Register ran a guest column from Bauer critical of the board majority and the faculty union that brought that majority to power. Just days before receiving the letter, Bauer says colleagues warned him that top officials had begun building a case against him that would result in his termination. Bauer and others saw Sampson's letter as ammunition to bag Bauer.

Bauer sued, winning a temporary injunction in federal court in Los Angeles on March 22. U.S. District Judge Nora M. Manella described Sampson's ordering of Bauer into counseling “Orwellian” and ridiculed the chancellor's examples of threats of violence. For instance, when it came to dropping a 2-ton slab of polished granite on Mathur's head, Manella exclaimed, “Think of the logistics!” The injunction prevents Sampson's letter from being placed in Bauer's personnel file and bars the district from ordering him into counseling. It marked Bauer's third legal victory against the district in the past two years.

[

So just who is this ticking time bomb? “I consider myself the most nonviolent person I know,” said the 43-year-old, bushy-bearded mountain of a man as he stretched his long frame into a cozy chair on a coffeehouse patio across the street from Irvine Valley College. “I'm a vegetarian because I don't want to hurt animals. I couldn't be further from a violent person. People who know me kid me about it. They regularly point out that I'm just a teddy bear. And I point that out, too. Unfortunately, it doesn't do a thing for the babes.”

Bauer's 30-second history: born in British Columbia to German immigrants. Moved to Orange in 1960. U.S. citizenship five years later. His father for many years presided over the Santiago Canyon Water District board of directors. Eagle Scout in 1970. Attended Villa Park High School. Undergraduate and graduate studies at UC Irvine. Part-time teacher at Irvine Valley College before getting a full-time gig in 1986. Met the woman who would be his wife for 15 years in grad school. Divorced about a year ago. (Sampson alluded to the split as an indicator that Bauer could blow. Bauer counters that he and his ex, a University of Redlands philosophy professor, remain good friends; he even house-sat for her “and her fucking boyfriend” recently.)

Bauer became Irvine Valley College's sole full-time philosophy instructor in 1996. “My specialty is ethics and political philosophy,” he said. “I love scholarship. I love philosophy. Teaching is, well, fun. I love the freedom of being a professor and being able to determine the shape of my week. I can read a philosophy book at home and bring it into class to read to students.”

When he first arrived at Irvine Valley, the college had adopted “an innovative government model: the chair model.” That system allowed faculty members to choose their respective departments' chairpeople from among their own. Those faculty leaders performed part-time administrative duties. In exchange, they were given time off from teaching.

“It was perceived by many people to be progressive,” Bauer said. “We enjoyed that model until the summer of 1997, when-in closed session, illegally-the board simply eliminated it.”

The new board majority-funded by the faculty union-decided that the chair model was too expensive. Too many chairpeople were earning full-time pay yet spending too little time in the classrooms, the trustees contended. In a recent conversation with the Weekly, Frogue alleged that faculty members were earning up to $150,000 per year while teaching only a few hours per week.

Chemistry professor Mathur was named interim president of Irvine Valley College, and one of his first orders of business was reorganization. Deans at Saddleback, which did not have a chair model, were brought in to take over the administrative duties Irvine's faculty members were performing. Teachers were sent back to their classrooms full-time (unless they were union leaders-those who got Frogue and his allies in office-who are still permitted to deduct the hours they spend on union business from their teaching loads).

Bauer sued the district because Mathur's appointment came without prior notice and behind closed doors-a violation of the state's open-meeting law. Bauer won, although the judge refused to unseat Mathur because the board had since gone back and re-appointed him in public. Later, Bauer sued over other open-meeting-law violations involving Mathur's permanent appointment as president, reorganization and other matters. He won that one, too, with the judge ordering the board to record all closed sessions for the next two years because of “persistent and defiant” violations. Experts of the state's open-meeting laws considered the ruling precedent-setting.

Bauer's critics contend that the professor is taking on the district out of petty personal interest. He was a department chairman when the chair model was torpedoed. Bauer pointed out that he had been appointed chairman just a month before the board's October surprise, and the job involved no financial windfall as far as he was concerned. “Being a chairperson was not a way of making more money,” he said. “It was, rather, a way of having a time-consuming, odious job that no one wanted, even if we saw the need for it. It was my turn, that's all. Literally no one ran against me for chairperson.”

Besides, he added, it's not as if the trustees' new system of governance actually works. A national accreditation committee blamed deep divisions between faculty and trustees on the new system and demanded radical reforms before they'll accredit the campuses.

The turmoil is a simple power struggle. Bauer and others like him believe faculty leaders chosen by their peers should have a major say in curriculum and staffing-and have the freedom to criticize administrators and the board if they're screwing things up. The board majority believes the trustees and their handpicked administrators should run the whole show-and that everyone must act as team players. The faculty union leadership position comes down to this: so long as teacher salaries remain among the highest in the state, we don't care who wins.

[

The union's tunnel vision is occasionally frightening. Besides funding the conservative board members' elections in 1996, they hired political consultant Pam Zanelli, who blanketed precincts with a gay-baiting flier to discredit the conservatives' opponents. (It alleged that challengers of the Frogue slate would mandate gay studies in classrooms.) Zanelli was later rewarded with a plum administrative job in the district. In '98, the union helped elect two more Christian Coalition-backed candidates to the board.

“The people who took control of the faculty union many years ago have seen to it that they only involve themselves with one issue: faculty salaries,” Bauer said. “They are utterly unprincipled. They pursued a quid pro quo with three right-wing Republicans and a Democrat [trustee Dorothy Fortune]. The board majority has nothing philosophically in common with the union, and the union has nothing especially in common with the board. Meanwhile, people like Frogue were able to practice their nutty agenda without a whisper of complaint from the union.”

Bauer's battles with the district have brought him recognition-mostly unwanted, he would argue. “I'm a shy person,” he said. “I don't like standing up in front of a large group.”

He wants it understood that several other faculty members are also fighting the board and the union. But he's also clearly disappointed that some of his colleagues have surrendered the fight-or never joined it in the first place. “The tenured, full-time faculty are the most protected people in the world, but as a group, they're the people we've been able to count on the least,” he said. “Look at what I've had to do: I've had to call Frogue a coward to his face. I've had to sue the bastards three times. I've had to challenge the trustees in public numerous times. I've had to publish these newsletters. And, yeah, finally they came after me. But most faculty won't even sign a fucking petition.”

It's noon on March 16, a bright, blustery day. Most passersby are oblivious to the portable stage that has been set up in front of Irvine Valley College's brick Student Services Building; they're more concerned about lunch, making it to their next class or pumping more quarters into those damn parking meters. But about 60 people -mostly students occupying the seats set up in front of the stage, others milling about off to the side-are intently focused on the proceedings. The Student Civil Liberties Club, recently formed by two undergrads who had organized weekly rallies against Mathur, Frogue and the board majority, gathered to bestow their first Laser of Liberty award to Bauer.

Wendy Phillips, an Irvine Valley anthropology professor and lawyer who represented Bauer in the open-meeting-law cases, noted: “When I first met Roy, he was this soft, quiet-spoken guy. He was not this savagely political individual who was out to get the Board of Trustees. Nothing could be further from the truth.” Calling Bauer “a rare person: a teacher who actually lives what he teaches,” a student then presented the award, which Bauer hoisted to much applause. He thanked the speakers “for the lovely, lovely bullshit about me,” then apologized that he had to rush off. His next class started at 12:30 p.m.

Bauer missed the remarks by guest speaker Jon Wiener, a UC Irvine history professor and sometime contributor to the Weekly and The Nation. Wiener knows a thing or three about fighting the powers that be: one of his biggest claims to fame is successfully fighting the FBI for years to declassify its John Lennon files. Wiener explained to the crowd that free speech must not be silenced-even if what is being said isn't totally true-because truth cannot come to light without a hearty “clash of debate.” Wiener noted that the free speech Frogue wanted to engage in with his JFK seminar should be allowed-but not sanctioned as a college course because the trustee is not qualified to present that kind of academic material.

Besides missing Wiener's speech, Bauer missed the sight of Frogue standing in the back row taking everything in. After striking his palms against each other in order to provide applause so light as to be inaudible, Frogue engaged in a friendly, 45-minute chat with the Weekly. Turns out Frogue has a lot in common with us: he loves KPFK, Noam Chomsky and cold beer. But he does hate what all the district upheaval has done to his family (“There have been tears, many tears”). He actually seemed to be-drum roll-a nice guy.

[

(Upon hearing this, Bauer remarked, “Yeah, well, even Hitler loved his dog.”)

As Frogue walked to his car, he was informed the Weeklywas doing a profile on Bauer and could he sit down for an interview on what kind of person and teacher he thinks Bauer is? “I don't know that; I don't know him,” he said, throwing in the obligatory reference to “personnel issues,” which elected officials are led to believe must remain confidential under state law. “I can't say what I've heard,” he added slyly.

Pressed for something, anything, Frogue came through.

“He's been here a long time. He loves teaching,” he said. “That's something that should be applauded. I wish he could just be kinder.”

Frogue said the highly charged atmosphere created by district dissenters has led to violent outbursts on campus. Looking at the stage one last time as it was being torn down, Frogue remarked, “So much talent going to waste” before disappearing into the parking lot.

Where does Bauer go from here? “I have not had the luxury of being able to focus only on teaching since the fall of '96,” he said. “I think I'm still doing a good job, but I'm certainly more distracted than I used to be. Part of it is that it's a small campus. Every day I run the gauntlet of friends and enemies-mostly friends-who ask me about what's going on with the board and the lawsuits. In the minutes before class, I've got to think about this. It definitely affects my teaching. I look for the day when I can focus solely on teaching.”

Reaching into a gray, portable filing box at his feet and pulling out Sampson's letter, Bauer conceded the ordeal has rattled him. “The chancellor's letter is obviously a serious thing,” he said. “It made me spend a few days wondering if what I was doing was right. I came to the realization that, insofar as I'm a part of this battle, I'm fighting for decency and honest government.”

Whatever happens, Bauer is not ready to simply walk away from the fight and retreat into his classroom.

“To me, it's just a matter of principle. That union leadership should not be in charge,” he said. “And those unprincipled people should not be the trustees of this district. And the equally unprincipled Raghu Mathur should not be the president of Irvine Valley College. I will not stop until those matters are corrected.”

In the courtyard of Rebel Girl and Red Emma's canyon home.


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A Room with a View: An Update on Roy 5 Nov 2023 4:12 PM (last year)

On Saturday October 28, a little over a week ago, Roy received some disappointing health news.

While Roy initially assured Rebel Girl that he would send her a text to post here, that has not been possible. 

So she, his faithful co-conspirator on this blog for over a quarter century, is stepping in, knowing his intention to communicate and share. 

Roy's cancer has returned, or perhaps never completely left. Something about the blood/brain barrier and the failure of PET scans to detect such activity. Roy has two lesions in his brain that are a very aggressive form of lymphoma. 

His doctors have responded with a very aggressive plan that has already begun which includes chemotherapy and, toward the end, a bone marrow transplant. 

Sober optimism is called for, along with courage. Roy has both. 

All this is taking place at Hoag in Newport where Roy has an ocean view (see above). 

It's a view reminscent of the opening credits of Gilligan's Island which Roy and his brother Ron confirmed was indeed shot there in Newport. 

Visitors have been steady. 

Roy's appetite is good. Rebel Girl has enjoyed ordering meals for him. See his "dislikes" from one of his meal receipts (classic Roy):

Only at Hoag where one might order lamb, rabbit, veal, pheasant, goose or duck! What, no ostrich? 

Alas for Roy, no wine list, no beer. 

One day, dinner arrived on a tray along with a prayer request card. 

Hoag, it seems, desires to treat not just the body, but the spirit.

Rebel Girl read the card aloud to Roy. "Do you have any prayer requests?" she asked, anticipating a negative answer. 

But Roy did have a prayer request: "The swift death of Donald Trump." 

Clearly Roy's priorities are in order, his own health and the health of the republic. 

Friends, there is something to be said for an institution such as ours that has through the years created a community so strong that at any time Rebel Girl can drive to Hoag, pay top dollar to park in a parking structure, get her official visitor badge and wristband, make her way to one room or another and find Roy holding court with family, natch, but also colleagues, so many good pals.

Rebel Girl will keep you posted here. Please reach out to her with any questions or concerns you have.

 She is happy to pass along best wishes, cards, etc. Thank you friends.

 Here's some Big Star, one of Roy's favorite bands:

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Saturday Night: We Took that Holy Ride Ourselves to Know 28 Oct 2023 8:26 PM (last year)

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WVU Slashed: "we will be a husk" 17 Oct 2023 8:59 AM (last year)


WVU Professors Get Their Layoff Notices  

Amid the sweeping elimination of degree offerings and faculty members’ jobs at West Virginia University, professors are left with possibly hopeless appeals. 

By Ryan Quinn (Inside Higher Ed) 

Reed
It’s been a month since West Virginia University’s Board of Governors rebuffed students’ and faculty members’ pleas not to slash academic programs and positions. 

Last week, Provost Maryanne Reed told the Faculty Senate that the 143 positions the board approved axing would only result in 69 people receiving layoff notices. But, she said, that’s because “there were a significant number of faculty that voluntarily retired or resigned.” 

“I realize that is of little solace for those faculty members who will be losing their positions,” Reed said. “I recognize this is going to be very difficult on those individuals and their families. I think we all know people who will be impacted.” 

WVU’s enrollment has dropped 10 percent since 2015, far worse than the national average and unusual particularly for a flagship university. University officials, projecting a further plunge over the coming decade, said they might need to cut $75 million from the budget and targeted low-enrollment majors, alongside pursuing reductions outside the faculty ranks. 

But the 28 eliminated academic programs included, among other things, all foreign language degrees and the only math graduate degrees at the institution, which is classified as an R-1 (“very high research activity”) institution and offered the poor state’s only math Ph.D. program. 

Reed gave her remarks as WVU was sending layoff notices to individual professors, making the universitywide number of terminations even more personal. April Kaull, a WVU spokeswoman, said the notification process continues this week. 

WVU’s timeline for the layoffs, posted online, said the notifications would be sent to individual faculty members “by Oct. 16 (week of).” But a termination notice provided to one faculty member says these “notifications began on Sept. 18, 2023, and last through Oct. 31, 2023, with the vast majority of individuals being informed by or before Oct. 16, 2023, that their position is being eliminated.” 

After the board’s vote, faculty members learned that eight additional untenured colleagues in the John Chambers College of Business and Economics wouldn’t have their contracts renewed after May—cuts that go beyond the 143 that the university and national media fixated on....

Kaull
It is unclear when West Virginia’s cuts will end. “While WVU always must look for ways to ensure we are operating as efficiently and cost-effectively as possible, there are no plans for any additional large-scale reductions beyond fall 2023,” says an online FAQ that Kaull pointed to. Inside Higher Ed requested an interview Monday, but Kaull instead provided emailed information. 

Professors have been sharing details about the layoff notices individually on X, mirroring how they broke the news in early August of just how many positions and degree offerings the university was planning to eliminate. 

“WVU math faced a tough day yesterday as we learned of 16 people being cut as part of ‘Academic Transformation,’” Ela Celikbas, an assistant math professor, posted Oct. 11. “Out of these, 10 faculty are ‘volunteered’ to leave, and six were riffed,” meaning laid off as part of a reduction in force.

Celikbas, who didn’t return requests for comment Monday, wrote, “We don’t know if there will be more cuts. I didn’t receive an email—so I guess I’m not riffed. Yet, my feelings are far from cheerful. It was a sleepless night, contemplating the unfortunate loss. One of the tenure-track faculty who will be riffed was in their fifth year—just like me—with hopes of going to tenure next year. I had the privilege of being part of the hiring process of some of the newer faculty members who volunteered to leave WVU.” 

Rose Casey, an assistant English professor, posted Oct. 3 on X, “Update: my job is safe, and I’m relieved. But that’s only because *eight* people in English have retired or resigned early. Eight. I grieve, genuinely, over losing these colleagues. And as our chair has told our dean, many of those who remain are on the market. We will be a husk.”…. . CONTINUED

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Further decline in ACT scores 12 Oct 2023 7:49 AM (last year)


Inside Higher Ed 

ACT Scores Drop for Sixth Year in a Row 

By Jessica Blake 

The national average ACT composite score dropped to 19.5 out of a maximum score of 36 for the Class of 2023, according to data released by the testing organization. 

Although the decline is not as significant as it was in 2022, when the average score dipped below 20 for the first time since 1991, this is the sixth consecutive year of a decline. 

What’s more, the proportion of students in the Class of 2023 that didn’t meet any of the ACT’s college-readiness benchmarks is higher than ever before. Only 21 percent of all students met every benchmark, in math, science, reading and English, while 43 percent met none of the benchmarks, according to the data. 

“Even as student GPAs continue to rise and students report that they feel prepared to be successful in college, the hard truth is that we are not doing enough to ensure that graduates are truly ready for postsecondary success in college and career,” ACT CEO Janet Godwin said. “These systemic problems require sustained action and support at the policy level. This is not up to teachers and principals alone—it is a shared national priority and imperative.” 

The 0.3-point score decline from 2022 to 2023 was slightly smaller than the 0.5-point drop from 2021 to 2022. Roughly 1.4 million high school seniors took the ACT test in 2023, an increase of about 40,000 over the 2022 graduating class, but still down from about 1.7 million in 2020. 

The scores have become less influential as opposition to and criticism of the ACT and other standardized tests has increased. The tests have been blamed for reinforcing racial inequities in college admissions, and widespread problems at testing centers administering the exam during the pandemic further prompted a majority of colleges to institute test-optional admissions policies. Research has also consistently shown that high school GPA is a better indicator of college success than standardized tests.

From Wikipedia: "The ACT has seen a gradual increase in the number of test takers since its inception, and in 2012 the ACT surpassed the SAT for the first time in total test takers; that year, 1,666,017 students took the ACT and 1,664,479 students took the SAT."

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"Beautiful" results 9 Oct 2023 9:41 AM (last year)


This morning, my oncologist informed me that Wednesday's all-important PET scan yielded "beautiful" results. The upshot: I have no cancer and am not likely to see a recurrence.

My blood numbers, though improving, are not yet normal, and so I'll receive treatment for that (e.g., I received an RBC booster this morning). The doctor seems to assume that that effort will be successful in short order.

I'll be monitored for the presence of cancer for five years. Still, at this point, it is very unlikely that the cancer will return.

This tense chapter of my life—which commenced perhaps a year ago—is now over. I still feel weak and mildly shitty, but that will pass as the chemo works its way out of my system. It's time to feel good again. 

The next chapter is largely unwritten, undetermined, a daunting freedom. A voice says, "don't screw it up." And there are so many ways to do that.

I am already moving in a particular direction. May it take clearer form and make some kind of sense. 
* * *

As if right on cue, Ancestry just emailed me an update on my ancestry—something people commonly if absurdly regard as part of who one is—and, as before, I find that I am largely (40%) Germanic with various eastern (e.g., Russian) and western (e.g., French and British) forebears. (Also: 3% Jewish.)

My mom is responsible for the eastern and northeastern stuff: she hailed from pre-war Prussia and Pommern. She made us listen to German march band music when I was a kid, but it sounded to me like merry-go-round music. As she listened, my mom imagined marching German soldiers; I imagined goofy unaffiliated horses and other creatures bobbing up and down absurdly and relentlessly and in a circle.

My dad was likely responsible for the western and northwestern contributions to my ancestry. He was from Southern Germany and Swabia (Swaben) in particular. 

Swabians are some peculiar people, man.

To get a sense of Swabians, consider the "Swabian salute," which is the expression Leck mich am Arsch. I recall my sweet cousin Tina (she spoke only German) using the expression a lot when she visited back in 1974. (She also freely used the somewhat affectionate phrase "Arsch mit Ohren," a term for a stupid person, which literally means "ass with ears.") She didn't seem to regard such terms as offensive. They seemed playful.

According to Wikipedia, 

The term Swabian salute (German: schwäbischer Gruß) is a partly humorous, partly euphemistic reference to the expression Leck mich am Arsch (akin to expression "kiss my arse", but literally "lick me on the arse") which is a common profanity. ... Although very common in most German-speaking areas with the possible exception of the extreme north of Germany [my mom was horrified by such vulgarities], the Swabian salute is used for a whole number of purposes [my emphasis] among the people of Swabia, Baden, parts of Bavaria and Austria, while in most other regions it is regarded as a rather vulgar insult only.

According to ... a German court, the [salute] can serve the purpose of "picking up an earlier conversation, continuing a stagnating conversation, giving new impulses to a conversation, ultimately end a conversation". Writer Thaddäus Troll ... added more reasons: "to express surprise, to express joy about unexpectedly meeting a fellow Swabian, to turn down a request regarded unacceptable". Naturally, the salute is also used as an insult.... 

I love it that saying "lick my ass," at least among German speakers, can be so subtle and versatile in conversation. Plus it retains its power as a flat-out insult, a kind of "fuck you." Very impressive. 

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The DISSENT FILES, part 4: Mathur's unprofessionalism and corruption laid bare 3 Oct 2023 11:22 AM (last year)

What I present below is an overview—based mostly on old DtB postsof an interesting and disturbing episode that occurred in our district (SOCCCD) and college (IVC) more than twenty years ago. It illustrates the sort of thing that can go very wrong when corrupt people are in charge. 


From The Rodney Poindexter affair  

Dissent 66

Monday, October 7, 2002 


White male from Virginia 

Among Raghu Mathur’s achievements while IVC President was a series of administrative hires that, despite protests from search committees et al., boldly ridded the college of administrative competence. Mathur did not seek the best employees; rather, he sought employees he could control and manipulate. 

One such hire was “RodPoindexter, ASIVC’s Administrator of the Year of 2002(?). The students select winners of such prizes; the President of the ASIVC at the time was one Anthony Kuo, chief among Mathur’s Center Drive Irregulars. Nowadays, he is running for State Senate here in California, having developed a reputation as a Republican insider and friend to builders and contractors. 

Mathur & Co.’s appointment of Dean Poindexter in June of 2001 was controversial. According to the Irvine World News, 

More than 40 teachers, students and community college leaders came to [the] meeting of the SOCCCD board of trustees to air their displeasure that long-time athletic director Aracely Mora was passed over for the job as dean of health sciences, physical education and athletics at IVC…The board voted 5-2 to appoint John Rodney Poindexter… Board members Marcia Milchiker and David Lang dissented… According to Irvine Valley College president Raghu Mathur, Poindexter is a well-qualified candidate and “brings a wealth of knowledge and background to this assignment.” ...Psychology professor John Lowe, a member of the hiring committee, said that Mora was the best candidate for the dean’s position… (6/28/01) 

     Mora was popular and well-respected, a very qualified candidate. Poindexter was none of those things. 

     When he arrived, Poindexter proved to be a devotee of Mathurism, i.e., the fastidious disregard of faculty opinion. Worse, judging by rumors, it seemed that Poindexter somehow posed a threat to the safety of employees, a situation that Mathur, and then his successor, Glenn Roquemore, steadfastly refused to recognize. 

     A year later, the problems at PE suddenly became public. The LA Times (6/29/02) reported that 

Mora
All five tenured members of an OC community college physical education department have filed a harassment complaint against their dean, and his secretary has told campus police she fears for her safety after he allegedly chased her down a corridor and cornered her…Rod Poindexter, dean of health sciences, physical education and athletics at IVC, has been the subject of faculty complaints since shortly after he started his job a year ago…“Dr. Poindexter is becoming more and more isolated,” said the 11-page complaint filed with the college…“His behavior has created an environment where there is fear that he can ‘snap’ and physically hurt others and himself. We need help. The abuse, retaliation and discrimination need to stop.” …The complaint…asks that the dean “be removed from the campus during the investigation…in order to protect the safety of the department members and the liability of the school district.” …The alleged confrontation between [secretary Suzi] Franzoni and Poindexter occurred Jan. 4. Poindexter said the relationship between them had been getting worse. “She went to the other side and started working against me.” …According to the campus police report, Franzoni had just come from a meeting with Poindexter in which he had told her she was not doing her work. She walked to the office of [faculty Ted] Weatherford…According to her statement to campus police, “In the next moment, Rod [Poindexter] came charging down the hallway directly at me. Rod pinned me in the corner against the wall” and began screaming at her…Franzoni also filed a report with the Irvine police department the same day. The officer wrote that Franzoni “repeatedly broke out into tears…I could sense [she] was very scared of Poindexter and very frustrated because the school officials don’t seem to be taking the situation seriously.” …Brent Shaver, Irvine Valley’s sports information officer, told campus police “what I did witness was Dr. Poindexter putting Suzie in a scary and threatening position.”…. 

     About a week later, the IWN reported that Franzoni was filing a “$1 million lawsuit” against the district. Some expected Poindexter’s immediate dismissal. 

     That didn’t happen. 

     After the Franzoni incident and the faculty complaint, cops regularly came by the PE building in an effort at pacification. Meanwhile, Poindexter had other problems: e.g., by late spring, word spread that two administrators, including Poindexter, had grossly overscheduled for the Fall. When this was detected—by the ever-clueless Glenn Roquemore (Mathur’s successor; Mathur himself had moved up to district Chancellor), who had failed to heed faculty’s warnings about Poindexter’s scheduling innovations—everybody’s teaching schedule was rendered unworkable.

     As had been predicted, Cely Mora soon found a job at another district. On August 1, 2002, the IWN reported that she had been “named dean of exercise science, health and athletics at Santa Ana College” for a salary of “$106,812.” (The IVC deanship paid $97K.) Off she went. 

     On the agenda of the last board meeting was “Mora v. Mathur.” Evidently, it is a discrimination lawsuit. 

     Wall bounceage: One quiet morning in mid-August (Aug. 14), the PE area again exploded with excitement. Paramedics rolled up and then carted someone away, and a rumor quickly spread that there had been a “fight” between Poindexter and an instructor. According to the rumor, Poindexter had ended up on the floor and had dialed 911! 

Ted Weatherford

     About three weeks later, the IWN reported that Poindexter “has been put on paid administrative leave by the SOCCCD board of trustees” (Sept. 5, 2002). The IWN hinted that the board’s action was prompted by the latest Poindexterous fracas: 

The decision came about two weeks after a confrontation between Poindexter…and…teacher Ted Weatherford…Campus police were called after an argument between Poindexter and Weatherford in the athletic offices on Aug. 14…Poindexter said he suffered back and neck injuries when Weatherford, the former chairman of the Physical Education Department, hit him with the door to Weatherford’s office…Weatherford…said he shut the door to his office after asking Poindexter to leave…Poindexter was informed on Aug. 27 [nearly two weeks later] of the board’s decision to place him on administrative leave…“I don’t know why (the decision was made) and they’ve (board members) told me nothing,” Poindexter said Tuesday. “I haven’t heard anything, they won’t return my phone calls.” …Poindexter…said he was not given a reason for being put on leave…[IVC President Glenn] Roquemore did not indicate when a decision would be made regarding Poindexter’s fate and did not know whether Poindexter would return to IVC…Poindexter suggested that the confrontation with Weatherford may have had a bearing [on the board’s decision]…. Poindexter said he and Weatherford had a meeting regarding Weatherford’s teaching schedule…Weatherford was upset, according to Poindexter, that he wasn’t assigned to teach some of the classes he had requested…The meeting began in Poindexter’s office, according to Poindexter… “He yelled about a tennis class and why it was being assigned to Jerry Hernandez,” Poindexter said. “He went storming down the hall and I went to calm him down.” …Poindexter said he followed Weatherford to his office to continue the discussion and Weatherford “slammed the door as hard as he could on me.” …Poindexter said he then “bounced off the wall” outside Weatherford’s office and suffered neck and back injuries that caused him to be hospitalized for six days. Poindexter said he strained his lower back and neck and doctors told him it will take approximately six weeks to fully recover…After the incident, Poindexter said he returned to his office to call the campus police. The college nurse and paramedics then arrived and Poindexter was taken to Irvine Medical Center…Poindexter missed six days of work, but said doctors told him he was well enough to return to work on Aug. 26. The next day, Poindexter was informed he had been put on administrative leave…Poindexter was not sure whether charges would be filed against Weatherford… “I thought he (Weatherford) would be suspended,” Poindexter said. “People tried to make it sound like it was my fault.” …Meanwhile, Poindexter will wait for a decision on his future… “I’ve been going to the doctor and meeting with my attorneys,” he said…. Weatherford…said an argument began after Poindexter suggested some physical education classes would be dropped… “I was concerned about classes being cut and he became argumentative,” Weatherford said. “I was calm and I said I didn’t want to argue.”…Weatherford said he then went to his office and Poindexter followed him…Weatherford said he then asked Poindexter to leave numerous times but he didn’t. He also denied that he slammed the door on Poindexter… “That’s absolutely not true,” Weatherford said. “I don’t know what he did, but I tried to close the door and he put his shoulder against the door.”…. 

 * * * 

     The latest issue of IVC’s Laser Beam notes Larry Oldewurtel’s selection as ASIVC’s “Teacher of the Year” (Oldewurtel, an old associate of Mathur and Roquemore’s, is a highly dubious choice for that honor), but it fails to mention Poindexter’s selection as ASIVC’s “Administrator of the Year.” What a curious omission! So I wrote the PIO about it. He wrote back: “It was an oversight on my part. I’ll do a follow-up in the next Laser to acknowledge him, albeit belatedly. Thanks for catching it.” 

     You’re welcome! 

     Meanwhile, the latest issue of Saddleback’s Online Newsletter (4/23/02) offers some sage remarks by Chancellor Mathur, including this one: 

“I am reminded every time I point a finger there are 3 fingers pointing back at me. It all begins with ME.” [Emphasis in original. Mathur never tires of this bromide.] 

How true. 

 —Chunk Wheeler 

TIMES 6-29-02 


MATHUR VS. WOMEN, by Chunk Wheeler

Dissent 

Wednesday, September 28, 2005 


As you know, Chancellor Mathur and women tend not to get along. I don't think Raghu likes 'em! Consider, for instance, the case of the much-loved administrative assistant, Leann Cribb, who worked under and with Raghu in the mid-90s. "Mr. Mathur routinely revises facts and manufactures innuendo to suit his objectives," she wrote in a formal complaint against Raghu (August 3, 1995). (For the whole letter, see People walking on eggshells.) 

Then there's the case of Bevin Zandvliete, the IVC spokesperson who quit after only a month. Raghu's administration, she told the Register, "was doing some things that I don’t think I could represent without violating my own ethics" (9/25/98). 

"Aracely Mora" is another name that comes up with regard to Mathur's ongoing war with women. Four years ago, then-IVC President (now Chancellor) Mathur hired a white guy from Virginia to be Dean of Health Sciences, PE, and Athletics at IVC. The guy didn't look like much, on paper or otherwise. That was bad enough, but he was chosen, by Mathur, over Cely Mora, a popular educator with a state-wide reputation for excellence in her field. According to the search committee, she was by far the superior candidate. But she's a woman, so Raghu decided to go with the guy with sh*tty paper. 

CIVIL SUIT; SUMMARY JUDGMENT; APPEAL

The guy's name was "Rodney Poindexter." People were plenty pissed off. Cely decided to take the matter to civil court. She sued Mathur personally for racial and gender discrimination. She had a strong case, as these kinds of cases go. But, to the amazement of many observers, the judge granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant; further, he ruled that she must pay Mathur's attorneys fees. 

The ruling was ridiculous, and so Cely appealed, and, in August of this year (2005), the appellate court unanimously decided that the original judge's granting of summary judgment in favor of Mathur was improper, as was his decision concerning attorneys fees. (Click on the graphics.) 




(FOR AUDIO of oral arguments, appeal: 

MP3 of oral arguments, appeal  (see also HERE)

Date argued: August 2nd, 2005 Docket Number: 03-56997 

Judges: William Cameron Canby Jr., Alex Kozinski, Johnnie B. Rawlinson) 

Toward the end, Carol refers to Glenn Roquemore as Mathur's favored white mail. 

And so the case is back on track, with a new judge. 

SO HERE'S THE THING. While Cely's been slogging through the civil courts, this Poindexter fella flames out in spectacular fashion almost immediately! (That Raghu sure can pick 'em! Remember when he hired a dean who tried to bring a Hilton Hotel to IVC? Ha! He, too, acted as Mathur’s hatchet man, settling scores with Mathur's alleged enemies—like me!) 

 * * * * * 


Anti-discrimination suit against CEO Mathur finally goes to trial next week 

Dissent 

Monday, August 28, 2006 


Back in June of 2001, then-IVC President Raghu Mathur, who currently serves as Chancellor of the SOCCCD, tweaked the hiring process for dean of health sciences, physical education and athletics at the college to get the underling he wanted—a twit he could control—and to avoid getting the underling he did not want, namely, Cely Mora, a strong and highly competent woman. (See Teachers, students protest athletic director’s transfer.) 

Long-time Mathur observers know that the former chemistry teacher tends not to get along with women, especially strong and competent women. (See Mathur vs. women.) 

Mathur
As we reported nearly a year ago, [In 2001,] then-IVC President Mathur hired a white guy from Virginia to be Dean of Health Sciences, PE, and Athletics at IVC. The guy didn't look like much, on paper or otherwise. That was bad enough, but he was chosen, by Mathur, over Cely Mora, a popular educator with a state-wide reputation for excellence in her field. According to the search committee, she was by far the superior candidate. But she's a woman, so Raghu decided to go with the guy with sh*tty paper. The guy's name was "Rodney Poindexter." The fellow turned out to be unstable and a danger to others. People were plenty pissed off. Cely later decided to take the matter to civil court. She sued Mathur personally for racial and gender discrimination. She had a strong case, as these kinds of cases go. But, to the amazement of many observers, the judge granted summary judgment in favor of Mathur; further, he ruled that she must pay Mathur's attorneys fees. The ruling was ridiculous, and so Cely appealed, and, in August of [2005], the appellate court unanimously decided that the original judge's granting of summary judgment in favor of Mathur was improper, as was his decision concerning attorneys fees. (To see how well Mathur’s twitular white male turned out, see Complaints, suit filed against college dean.) 

Well, at long last, court is in session—or, rather, it will be soon! The trial—it's a jury trial—is set for next week, from Tuesday through Thursday, in Los Angeles. Today, several IVC faculty and at least one former administrator were given notices to appear (on the first day of trial, I'm told). Don’t know who else was summoned. Stay tuned. 


The discrimination lawsuit: Mathur's "unauthorized baseball diamond" yarn 

Dissent 

Tuesday, April 24, 2007 



OK, I just got home, and it’s been a long day, so I can only give a very brief report on the first day of the “Mora v. Mathur” discrimination trial up in the Federal Court Building in LA. 

Back in 2001, Aracely Mora, a Latina, was the Director of the Athletics Program at Irvine Valley College and had served for about a year as IVC's interim dean of PE & Athletics. She had received only excellent evaluations and had established a state- and even nationwide reputation in her field. So she applied for the new Dean job that opened up at Irvine Valley College. In the end, she was among the three finalists sent up by the hiring committee for interview by IVC President, Raghu P. Mathur. She didn’t get the job. The man who did get the job, Rodney Poindexter, was completely unqualified, and he turned out to be both incompetent, unstable, and a danger to himself and others. What's more, according to Cely’s lawyer, Carol Sobel, he created a hostile work environment for the female faculty and other female workers. The women were given terrible teaching assignments and endured various other challenges. 

Somehow, for the male instructors, these difficulties largely did not arise. 

At one point, Poindexter was observed screaming at a female secretary, pinning her to a wall. When complaints were lodged about Poindexter's frightening behavior—at first informally, later formally—Mathur did nothing about it. Poindexter continued in his job for about a year. 

Even before the hiring process, Cely had been told by friends, including administrators, that she had no chance of being selected as dean. She was, after all, a woman, and Mathur didn’t hire women as administrators. 

Well, to make a long story short, the jury trial started today. The morning was devoted to selecting a jury. In the afternoon, Cely’s former dean, Greg Bishopp, testified. Tomorrow, members of the 2001 search committee will be called to the stand. The case will continue through Thursday and will resume next Tuesday. It should be over by the middle of next week.

Before the trial is over, we’ll hear some mighty juicy factoids. Even today, things got interesting. Mathur is now claiming that he decided against Cely because she had pursued the construction of a baseball diamond behind his back. Yeah, but it certainly appears that Mora did no such thing. As Bishopp's testimony today made clear, Mathur was involved in the project from the very beginning. 

Well, I’ve gotta go. I’ll report back ASAP. 

[The following post was posted on Saturday, April 28, 2007. It was a belated report of the opening session the previous Tuesday (the 24th):] 


Discrimination trial: OPENING STATEMENTS  

Dissent 

Saturday, April 28, 2007 


BUSYNESS PREVENTED ME FROM PROVIDING a full report of the first day of the RAGHU MATHUR discrimination trial, including the important “opening statements.” Belatedly, I provide that report below: 

The U.S. Courthouse on Spring Street is beautiful and old, built during the Depression. I always enjoy visiting that fine old building. Naturally, to enter the building, you need to submit to the usual airport-style security screening. These days, you can usually manage to get past the gate without taking off your belt and shoes! 

Judge A. Howard Matz’s courtroom is impressive, about 60’ by 60’, with an audience gallery occupying the back one third or so. (I’d show you a picture, but photography is forbidden.) 

Jury selection: Tuesday’s jury selection process was interesting—it’s always fun guessing which side is gonna nix which potential juror. The jury pool was diverse: various backgrounds, ethnicities, etc. The film/TV industry was well represented, but so was auto repair and studentry. Most prospective jurors seemed reasonable, intelligent. 

Eventually, the jury was whittled down to about eight people, and Judge Matz briefly lectured them about their task. The Plaintiff, he said, has the burden of proof, but “proving” her claim in this trial doesn’t mean establishing it “beyond a reasonable doubt.” For this case, he said, the standard is the “preponderance of the evidence.” That is, explained Matz, the claim made against the defendant must be more probably true than not true.” 

Opening statements

FOR THE PLAINTIFF: Opening statements commenced at about 1:50 on Tuesday. Carol Sobel, Cely Mora’s attorney, explained that Mora was making two claims: (1) that she was discriminated against—in the dean hire of Spring ’01—because she is a Latina; and (2) Mora and others who worked under Dean Poindexter were allowed by Mathur to suffer a hostile work environment.

Sobel explained that Poindexter’s lack of qualifications for the job was clear from the very beginning, a fact understood by most members of the hiring committee (whose role it was to winnow the field of applicants and make recommendations to the college President). While Mora had long been an Athletic Director at the college and had served as acting Dean for a year, Poindexter had no managerial experience at all; he was in fact an athletic trainer.

When Mora didn’t get the job, she returned to the classroom and took steps to leave room for the new dean to establish himself. Meanwhile, Poindexter’s first action was to take Mora’s office, despite its being a small faculty office that was distant from his assistant’s desk. 

Very soon, other disturbing incidents began to occur. Poindexter, a large man, would fly into rages and behave in a menacing manner. He did this only with the women. Department chair Ted W went to IVC President Mathur to express concerns on behalf of the women, but Mathur took no action. Meanwhile, the more the women complained about Poindexter’s behavior, the worse his behavior became. 

During the Spring of ’02, a particularly disturbing incident occurred; Poindexter screamed at and menaced a secretary—an event Ted W witnessed himself. The women grew increasingly fearful of Poindexter, and, soon, female PE instructors met with Poindexter only when accompanied by a male colleague. Poindexter targeted the women of his School in other ways, giving them bad schedules and classes, delaying their pay, etc. The men were given what they wanted. 

In April of ’02, after numerous informal complaints, six employees filed a formal “harassment” complaint against Poindexter. 

Meanwhile, John Lowe, an instructor who had served on the hiring committee, began to do some digging into the new dean’s background. He discovered disturbing facts about Poindexter that were concealed during the dean search. When he brought the information to the attention of administrators, who acknowledged it, nothing was done. 

Later, faculty discovered that Mathur had given Poindexter a “to do” list. But none of the tasks on the list concerned the most important issue, the safety issue. 

Eventually, an investigation was launched, but it was not completed until a year after problems had been brought to Mathur’s attention. During that whole time, Poindexter was not removed from the workplace. 

The investigation report of October, 2002, concluded that Poindexter did not have the skills to be dean, but that fact was already manifest during the search process in the Spring of ’01. But if Poindexter was incompetent, why was he only incompetent in his dealings with the women? Even the men acknowledged that Poindexter’s behavioral issues only concerned the women.

FOR THE DEFENDANT: Dennis Walsh presented the statement for the defense. He urged the jury to wait until all of the evidence was presented before they formed a judgment. There are, he said, two separate issues: (1) whether or not Cely Mora was discriminated against because of her race and (2) whether Mathur responded to the existence of a hostile work environment. According to Walsh, if Ms. Mora has a complaint, it is with Poindexter, not with Mathur. This suit is “something that is personal,” he said. 

According to Walsh, Mathur had very little involvement in the process that led to Poindexter’s hire in the Spring of 2001. The hiring committee’s job was to produce at least three qualified candidates for him to interview and choose among. Walsh emphasized that, in the elaborate hiring process, the three candidates sent up to the President of the College (Mathur) were understood to be qualified and on an “equal footing.” Mathur interviewed the three candidates, including Mora and Poindexter, and he “looked at the big picture stuff.” That (evidently) is why he favored Poindexter over Mora. 

Walsh explained who Mathur is. He came to these shores from India and worked his way up to his current high position as Chancellor of the district. When Mathur interviewed the three candidates, Mora, though a good candidate, didn’t impress. There was no discriminatory intent here. Walsh further explained that, before the Board of Trustees voted to give Poindexter the job (based on Mathur’s recommendation), they heard from members of the committee and others who objected to Mathur’s selection. They heard all the arguments. Even so, they voted to give Poindexter the job. 

Walsh acknowledged that Dean Poindexter “had some problems.” In part, he experienced problems because of faculty, including some members of the committee, said Walsh. 

According to Walsh, Mathur and the district responded appropriately to the complaints about Poindexter, for the district launched an investigation. Mathur had nothing to do with that. The “female investigator” eventually filed a report that found no reason to conclude that Poindexter’s behavior re the complaining women was “based on their gender.” Walsh noted that some of the people who later complained about Poindexter actually recommended him during the hiring process. 

Walsh closed by asserting that, when all the facts are laid out, it will be clear that the focus of the “Poindexter” problem was not Mathur, but Poindexter. Mathur is being sued because this is “personal,” reiterated Walsh. 

NOTES: 

1. Why had faculty members of the hiring committee forwarded Poindexter’s name to the President for interview? Walsh failed to mention a motivation that has become clear during subsequent testimony. Faculty members of the hiring committee (there were administrators as well) were aware that, were they to fail to send up three applicants (instead of, say, just Mora), Mathur would “shut down” the process, forcing it to start from scratch. Some members of the committee naively supposed that, upon sending up Mora and Poindexter to the second level, Mathur would do the “right thing” and hire the plainly most qualified candidate: Mora. 

2. About Mathur’s impressive rise to prominence. Walsh failed to mention the corruption, unseemly conduct, and illegality that attended that saga. Mathur's initial rise to administration occurred during a time in which the then-corrupt faculty union was in league with the "Board Majority" to reorganize the entire district and settle scores. See Dissent archives. 

3. Why did the Board of Trustees go along with Mathur’s recommendation to hire Poindexter? Walsh failed to mention that the Board of Trustees had already had a long history of defending their man Mathur against faculty objections and charges of unprofessionalism. Indeed, the faculty had voted “no confidence” in Mathur overwhelmingly, but still the board supported Mathur. Eventually, Mathur was selected as Chancellor; a year later, he endured a 94% vote of “no confidence” (qua Chancellor) among faculty. The board responded by giving Mathur a raise. He now makes about $300,000 a year. To some members of the board, that faculty object to a Mathurian decision is ipso facto a reason to support it. 

4. Can we trust Human Resources’ investigation of Poindexter? Walsh failed to mention that the head of Human Resources during the time of the Poindexter matter, Teddi Lorch, had been a member of the corrupt Board of Trustees that, twice, illegally appointed Mathur as President back in 1997. See College board gives former board member district [HR] job. (3/8/01) See also Former trustee only candidate for district [HR] job (2/22/01); College District Ends Suit by Hiring Former Trustee: Teddi J. Lorch is given the South County job she sought before filing an age-discrimination case in 1999, LA Times, March 9, 2001


The Mathur discrimination trial: according to witnesses, in 1997, Mathur rejected a candidate because of her ethnicity 

Day 2 of the Raghu Mathur “discrimination” trial. 

Dissent 

Wednesday, April 25, 2007 


HE SMILED: 

IT IS IMPOSSIBLE to watch this trial unfold without noticing the trail of disrupted and damaged lives left in the wake of Raghu P. Mathur's pursuit of administrative advancement. You know all the names. 

—But, no, you don't know all the names. During lunch today, I spoke with (plaintiff) Cely Mora's attorney, Carol, and with various other friends and colleagues. One colleague had a look of sadness on his face as he described the unhappiness of one of the unsung victims of Mathur's profoundly unfortunate 2001 hiring of Rodney Poindexter as Dean of PE, Health Sciences, and Athletics: a non-academic employee who had simply tried to do her job, a quiet job, she thought. But, then, suddenly, she found herself in something big and ugly and incomprehensible. I listened with horror and surprise. "She just hasn't been able to get past it," explained the colleague. 

As he spoke, I looked up and spotted Mathur at the other end of the cafeteria, next to a vending machine, speaking on the phone. He was only a few feet away from his table. There sat his very expensive lawyers—paid for, naturally, by the district. They're good. 

Mathur seemed confident. He smiled. 

WHAT'S YOUR NAME? 

 Proceedings started just after 9:00 a.m. Ted Weatherford of PE, a popular and affable instructor, was on the witness stand. He detailed his experiences as a member of the “dean search” that yielded the hire of Rodney Poindexter as Dean of PE, Health Sciences, and Athletics—thanks to the decision by Mathur (then President of Irvine Valley College) to hire that inexperienced White Guy from Virginia instead of the celebrated and experienced and tried-and-true Latina (Aracely Mora) who is now suing his ass. Well, when that went south and the school ended up with Dean Poindexter, the faculty made a real effort to work with the guy, reported Weatherford. (I've been impressed by the manifest magnanimity of some of these witnesses.) 

But, from Day 1, the new dean was a mega-disaster. Ted related several incidents. He described the infamous episode in which Poindexter ran after and screamed at secretary Suzi F. There were other episodes, all involving women, never men. Poindexter messed with their teaching schedules, adopted menacing postures, routinely became angry at them. He didn’t do that to the men. 

Eventually, Judge Matz called for a break. 

(During the break, Mathur’s lawyer, Dennis W, walked up to me and asked if I minded telling him my name. “Yes, I do mind,” I said. Creep.) 

TENNIS SHOES: 

Later, we heard about one female instructor’s attempt to secure tennis shoes for her athletes (when Poindexter was dean). For that, she had to meet with her dean—Poindexter. That was the standing order: if you want anything, you must meet personally with the dean. But the meeting (according to one witness) yielded another Poindexterian eruption of frustration and anger and bizarre sudden exits. The instructor was reduced to cowering. 

Knowing of these incidents, Ted, the chair of his department, complained to administrator Glenn R, who said: give Rod a chance. Plus: you people are exaggerating. No they’re not, said Ted.

Under cross, Mathur’s lawyer pursued a favored defense motif: Here, again, someone is testifying for Cely—but isn’t he a close personal friend of hers, Hmmm? J’accuse

SCORING ISSUES, NAIVETE: 

At about noon, Judge A. Howard Matz—a prickly and demanding fellow—sent the jury out to lunch, but he kept the two opposing attorneys back to spank ‘em for a while. The jury is “utterly befuddled,” he declared. You need a chronology! Charts! 

After lunch, Mathur’s attorney was all over the fact that Ted had given Poindexter a pretty good score after the first-level interview. Plus Ted had joined with the rest of the committee in a decision to send Poindexter’s name along with Mora’s to the next level—to be interviewed by President Mathur. If Poindexter was so damned unqualified, why were you people sending up his name? 

Ted explained that this particular dean search was the second go-round, and if the committee didn’t send up three names, Mathur would shut the process down, and the whole damn thing would start from scratch again. He really thought that Mathur would hire the candidate who was plainly the most qualified. 

“I was naïve,” said Ted. 

Mathur's attorney unveiled another motif: you faculty didn't want to start the process over, cuz then you might not get on the committee next time! Isn't that it! 

DO THE RIGHT THING: 

Next up on the witness stand was Ted’s colleague, Martin McGrogan, who also served on the Dean hiring committee. He told very similar tales. No, he definitely didn’t want to send Poindexter’s name up to the next level, but he hoped that Mathur would “do the right thing” by choosing the best candidate. Mathur’s lawyer again pounced all over the “friendship” that existed between Martin and Mora at the time of the dean search. Wasn’t she a close friend of yours? —Sure, said Martin, but everyone in the School is a close personal friend. That just happens when your work together with a small group of people. Martin described Poindexter’s meltdowns. It was pretty gruesome. I’ve got to say: that Poindexter fella was SERIOUSLY MESSED UP. Worse than I ever knew. 

BECAUSE OF HER ETHNICITY: 

The next witness, Priscilla Ross, was the chair of a hiring committee for a biology instructor back in 1997, when Mathur was appointed interim IVC President. She explained how the committee had judged that one candidate, Maala A (a female of Sri Lankan ethnicity), was stellar, but the remaining candidates were far less impressive. Once again, they faced the likelihood that Mathur, the spanking-new interim President of IVC, would shut down the whole process—forcing a time-consuming restart—were the committee to send up only one name, Maala’s. And so, especially since previous presidents generally went along with search committees' recommendation, this committee sent up the name of the next best candidate, too—a white male who was judged to be minimally qualified. (All others of those interviewed were judged to be unqualified.) As per custom, Priscilla, as chair of the committee, informed the second level group (Mathur and two Vice Presidents) that, though the committee was sending forward two names, Maala was the unanimous and clear preference of the committee. To their horror, the hiring committee soon discovered that Mathur had chosen the “minimally qualified” candidate. The committee then instructed Priscilla to discuss the matter with Mathur. Mathur met with her and explained why he had not selected Maala. Ready? He had not selected Maala owing to her ethnicity. Turns out, he didn’t want to be accused of choosing someone of his own ethnicity (Mathur hails from India, which is a stone’s throw from Sri Lanka). 

In Raghu's world, it's always about him. 

THE STAFF DIVERSITY OFFICER: 

The last witness of the day, history professor Frank Marmolejo, was the “Staff Diversity” Officer at the time of the controversial biology hire. One of Mathur’s VPs (Bob L) had expressed concerns about the biology hire (to Frank?), and so Frank met with President Mathur. He asked Mathur to explain his choice, his failure to hire Maala. According to Frank, Mathur then asserted that the white male was a “better fit for the job.” Further, Mathur didn’t want to be accused of reverse discrimination. 

RIPPLE EFFECTS: 

As I write this, I think again about the damage that this ruthless man, Raghu Mathur, has done and continues to do. There are so many victims: some big, some small. The instructor that Mathur hired in 1997, too, is a victim. He heard about a job, and so he applied for it. He interviewed. He got the job. He did nothing wrong. Plus he's a good guy. But then there's all this. 

More tomorrow. (It'll be an abbreviated session in court). --CW 


MATHUR discrimination trial, day 3: courtroom titters 

Day 3 (Thursday) of the Raghu Mathur “discrimination” trial 

Dissent 

Friday, April 27, 2007 


DAY THREE: 

Day 3 (Thursday) went well for the plaintiff (Mora). John Lowe, a now retired psychology instructor who served on the hiring committee, testified first. He explained that he had brought complaints of a hostile work environment to the relevant administrator (Glenn Roquemore, Mathur’s successor at IVC). Evidently, he had spoken with Mathur about the matter as well. At one point, Lowe’s memo regarding workplace violence was introduced. The jury sat up. Mathur’s attorney argued that, in “fairness” to Poindexter, administration could not remove him without an investigation. Under redirect, Lowe testified that, in his mind, the issue was not one of fairness. The issue was one of workplace violence. 

Next up was Cely, the plaintiff. She was allowed to read from her letter to the board of trustees (of the South Orange County Community College District), which asserted the discrimination allegation and also stated that she was the only administrator of color at the college and when she was not selected as dean, none remained. According to one courtroom observer, the jury paid close attention to those two facts and also laughed when they saw the scores of the two candidates on the first two rounds. (Both instructors and administrators served on the hiring committee; their scoring differed in interesting ways.) 

The trial resumes on Tuesday. Cely will finish her testimony. Then comes Mathur! 



Cely Mora's stunning testimony 

Dissent 

Wednesday, May 2, 2007 



TUESDAY: 

It’s been another long day, and I don’t have time to report everything that happened at the RAGHU MATHUR discrimination trial today, but I did want to report the first half of Cely Mora’s testimony. It’s pretty riveting: 

Here’s the story that emerged from Carol Sobel’s questioning of Cely on the witness stand today (for background, see Discrimination trial: opening statements): It was not until she witnessed Chancellor Raghu Mathur’s deposition (given in 2003) that she discovered that (so he said) he had decided against hiring her, and in favor of hiring Rodney Poindexter, in part because of her efforts to develop a baseball program and install a baseball field

“I was shocked,” she testified. Had Mathur ever mentioned to her that there was a problem with her handling of the baseball program/field? No, never. Mathur “never expressed to me” any dissatisfaction with that. 

Back in 1997 (when Mathur ascended to the Presidency of Irvine Valley College, thanks to a series of illegal board actions), he had asked Dean Greg Bishopp and Athletic Director Cely to make a presentation about the Athletics Program before the Exchange Club (a local organization of which Mathur [along with Police Chief Owen Kreza, et al.] was a member). Already then, the development of baseball and the building of a baseball field was part of the grand campus plan, and so it became a part of the presentation. After the presentation, Cely received a “thank you” letter from Mathur. 

The jury examined it. 

Cely described other aspects of the development of the baseball program—things about which Mathur was clearly apprised or involved. “You need approval [from Mathur] about everything,” she said. In the spring of 2000, there was a meeting of various persons (including former Angels manager Buck Rodgers) to organize fundraising for the baseball field. Mathur certainly did not indicate disapproval of her efforts at that time. 

By the summer of ’02, both colleges received a one-time lump sum, earmarked for athletic facilities. Mathur asked Mora to make a presentation before the board of trustees, requesting the funds specifically for the baseball field. 

During his deposition, Mathur had also indicated that Mora had created/pursued a track & field program without his approval, but Mora again testified that all aspects of the development of track & field occurred with Mathur’s full cooperation and approval. Had Mathur ever communicated to her that her school was expanding sports programs too rapidly? No. On the contrary. He seemed very pleased with the sports programs and the things that were being done to develop them. 

Also during the 2003 deposition, Mathur cited his desire to pursue Health Sciences and distance education as a reason for his decision to hire Poindexter and not Mora. But, testified Cely, you can’t teach most of her School’s courses using “distance ed.” That would be like teaching the hairdressing online. It’s “just not practical.” Plus there were state restrictions concerning the development of Heath Sciences courses using distance education. Still, she was in fact developing distance ed courses where feasible. For instance, she was exploring a TV course on self-defense to be offered on a “trial basis.” What did Cely think when, during his depo, she heard Mathur’s "reasons" for not hiring her (and hiring Poindexter)? Well, said Cely, he was trying to justify hiring a white male with minimal qualifications and no experience as an administrator. That is, he had invented an after-the-fact rationale. He was making all of this up. 

POINDEXTER ARRIVES: 


When Cely returned to IVC in the Fall of 2001, she had very limited contact with Dean Poindexter, she testified. The first thing he did was to move her out of her office, even though it was not the dean’s office, but a smallish faculty office, distant from his assistant. He seemed to be “establishing his power and control,” she said. So she decided to stay away from him. At first, she was moved to another office in the PE building. Then, after a month, she moved to the B300 building (one building over). At one point, Suzie F (Poindexter’s secretary) came to her to explain that they were moving Cely’s computer. Cely was perplexed. “He didn’t tell you”? asked Suzie. Evidently, Poindexter had requested the move. Naturally, Cely felt disrespected, inconvenienced, and harassed. She emailed Poindexter and tried to phone him, but he did not respond. She went to his office three times, but he was not there. During the 3rd week of the fall (2001) semester, she discovered that one of her classes had been cancelled. She wanted to know why it was cancelled so late. Also, she now needed a new assignment to replace the cancelled class. She tried to telephone and email Poindexter, but he didn’t respond to her communications. She didn’t want to bump a part-timer from a class, so she decided to work her hours (to replace the cancelled course) in the fitness center. 

In October, she had a surprise encounter with Suzie F, the secretary. Suzie was running down the hall, crying. Cely asked what was the matter. Suzie blurted out that she “wasn’t going to take it any more,” that he “couldn’t yell at her like that” and “treat her like that.” Who was doing that? It was Dr. Poindexter, she said. Until then, Cely had thought that Poindexter had a problem with Cely in particular. Now she began to realize that “this guy has some issues about dealing with women.” She got calls from two other female instructors, who complained about disrespectful treatment they had endured in dealing with Poindexter. They, too, experienced course cancellations. 

THE OCTOBER MEETING: 

In October, she attended her first faculty meeting of the semester. Department chair Ted W had explained to her that Poindexter was threatening to “write her up” for not attending the meetings. Besides, Martin M needed her support on some issue. All of the full-time faculty (about 12) were in attendance. At one point, they discussed a “massage therapy” program (which they had been developing). Cely noted what needed to happen with regard to course development. Poindexter suddenly exploded. “You’re wrong!” he shouted. His face turned red, his body moved forward. He was angry, agitated. “I was blown away,” said Cely. She had never seen any supervisor behave like that. Kent M and Martin M made remarks much like Cely’s, but Poindexter didn’t seem to have a problem with them. It was as though, in Poindexter’s mind, a switch would go on and off. He would be yelling and agitated, and then he’d suddenly behave normally—when speaking with the men. 

During the meeting, several male faculty offered views concerning who should represent the department at the Orange Empire Conference meeting. Poindexter could handle that. But when Kathryn M offered her view, Poindexter’s switch went off again, only his agitation was worse than before. His body-language was even more aggressive. He would repeat a comment or question as though he were a broken record: “What do you coach! What do you coach! What do you coach!” He moved his head closer to her. “I was stunned,” said Cely. 

At that point, she said nothing. She remained silent. She was very frightened. Poindexter seemed to be out of control. After that, Cely decided to keep an even lower profile. She stayed out of the building. She didn’t attend the next staff meeting. It seemed to her that Poindexter just couldn’t handle women with anything to say. But it became impossible to avoid contact with Poindexter. There were issues concerns the summer and spring schedules. At first, she tried to discuss those issues via email and phone, but he simply would not respond, so she had to go to his office. 

THE “MUSIC” EPISODE; THE JULIE EPISODE: 

In January (of 2002), she did just that, accompanied by Kathy S, a union representative. Cely normally taught summer courses, but Poindexter had not honored any of her requests for summer classes. In the course of the discussion, his face again became red and he started yelling. That switch had gone off again. Then he did something very odd. He turned on some music. He yelled even louder to be heard over it. Cely decided to leave. She didn’t want to wait to see what was going to happen next. 

About a week or two later, she visited Poindexter again, this time with Kathy and Julie H (Cely, Julie, and Kathryn were the only full-time female faculty in their department). They had come to offer a compromise with regard to summer teaching. Julie, too, had had none of her summer requests honored. She was afraid of Poindexter, but she figured that there was safety in numbers. Again, at the point that a difference of opinion arose, Poindexter became agitated, his face became red, and he started to yell. Julie slouched and became withdrawn. The women left.

ESCALATION: 

In February, there was another department meeting. The summer issues had not yet been resolved, and Poindexter had now cancelled another course of Cely's. All of the women had had classes cancelled (and possibly Ted had one of his courses cancelled). At this meeting, Poindexter’s behavior and demeanor were different. In the small conference room, everyone sat around a table. Poindexter sat at the head. At some point, he became agitated again, only this time he shifted his body toward Kathryn, who was sitting near him. She kept moving her chair away from him, but he kept moving toward her. She was plainly frightened. Cely said that she saw Kathryn start to panic. Kathryn became pale. 

The next day, Kathryn called Cely at home. She was crying. She said that she hadn’t slept. She explained that, after the meeting, Poindexter had come up to her and said, “Kathryn, don’t resist me. It’s not in your interests to resist me.” 

THE FIRST COMPLAINT: 

That’s when they contacted Human Resources. They spoke with Ettie Graham of the HR office. By then, Suzie F had already filed a complaint, which had initiated an investigation. And John Lowe, who had been on the dean hiring committee, had by then spoken with Mathur about Poindexter. The women by then wouldn’t walk to their cars unless accompanied by male colleagues. 

FITNESS CENTER EPISODES; OFFICE EPISODES: 

Also in the Spring of 2002, Poindexter showed up a couple of times at the fitness center while Cely worked there. He just walked in and stared at her. Then he’d leave. It was unnerving. She reported the incidents to Ettie Graham, among others. Poindexter would suddenly show up at her office unannounced. He would just come in, stop, look at her—then leave, having said nothing. 

A campus cop suggested that she keep a baseball bat in her office, so she did that. 

The complaint seemed to produce nothing. So she called Ettie at HR. “We need some help,” she said. “Can you help us?” That’s when Ettie suggested a formal complaint. 

Eventually, Poindexter produced a Fall schedule. Unsurprisingly, Cely was given a 5:30-7:00 p.m. tennis class followed by a 7:00-10:00 Health class. That meant that she would have no opportunity to shower and change between classes. Also, Cely was saddled with classes that had been cancelled previously owing to low enrollment. Cely calculated that 55% of her schedule would be cancelled, and so she informed the Acting Vice President for Instruction (Susan Cooper) and Poindexter. 

Today, Cely was asked why only five faculty signed the formal “discrimination and sexual harassment” complaint. She explained that non-tenured faculty were very vulnerable and didn’t sign for that reason. All tenured faculty signed it. 

THE INVESTIGATION: 

The formal complaint yielded an investigation, which included interviews with an investigator. The report was not finished until November or December of 2002, 7-8 months after the investigation had begun. During that entire period, Poindexter continued as her dean. 

Cely was very disappointed with the report. Some of its information was incomplete or inaccurate. The report stated that Cely was concerned about her physical safety, but Cely had said a great deal more than that about her safety concerns. 

In May (after she had been interviewed for the investigation), Cely was working at her desk at the fitness center. She seemed to sense something and so she looked up. She was startled to find Poindexter leaning over the front desk counter. His face was red, sweaty. “What do you want, Rod?” asked Cely. Poindexter mumbled unintelligibly. She repeated her question, and he continued to mumble. Cely was terrified. 

Cely mentioned the incident to the investigator, but, in the report, it was described in a manner that diminished it, failing to convey the menace of his behavior and her abject terror. She told the investigator about all of these incidents. She urged HR to move Poindexter away from her and the other women. 

CELY LEAVES: 

In July of 2002, testified Cely, she just couldn’t take it anymore. (At this point in her testimony, she struggled with tears.) She couldn’t bear to go to work. She couldn’t bear to see the concern on her parents’ faces. Her colleagues would come to her for help, but she couldn’t help them. She couldn’t believe that she had to keep a bat in her office. She couldn’t get anyone to help her and to help the other women. Not Mathur, not anyone. 

When she left Irvine Valley College—in July of 2002—Rodney Poindexter was still her dean. 


The lost reference: it was "very positive" 

Dissent 

Thursday, May 3, 2007 


I attended the Mathur "discrimination" trial today in LA. I'll have more time to report on it tomorrow—I hope! Been too busy tonight to write anything. In the meantime, here's a quick update. 

This trial is partly about the infamous Poindexter dean hire of 2001, which looks seriously dodgy. Prima facie, Rodney Poindexter wasn't even remotely qualified for the deanship (of Health Sciences, PE and Athletics at Irvine Valley College)—he had no supervisory or administrative experience—while Cely was amply qualified. And yet Mathur hired Poindexter, who turned out to be grossly incompetent, unstable, and, according to some, a danger especially to female employees. 

That Raghu sure can pick 'em! 

Part of the hiring process is the checking of references. All reference checks require documentation. They must be done using a special form provided by HR. So when the hiring committee forwarded three candidates, the chair of the committee (then-VPI Glenn Roquemore) went off (by himself, as it turns out; in court, he said nobody volunteered to go with him) and did the reference checks using those forms. 

Today in court, the jury had a chance to look at them—filled out by Glenn Roquemore re Poindexter's three references. It soon became clear that the three "references" for Poindexter were decidedly unimpressive (one was a former student). One "reference" declined to offer an unqualified recommendation for the Poindexter. These refs added up to practically nothing.

During the second-level interview of Poindexter, Mathur evidently got it into his head to ask Poindexter for a fourth reference. (That's what he said today, under questioning from Cely Mora's attorney, Carol Sobel.) That's odd. And he didn't ask the other two applicants for a further reference. Strange, isn’t it? 

So, says Mathur, Poindexter gave him a name and a number. Mathur now claims that he called the reference, and (surprise!) "it was very positive." Naturally, he used the required form. It sure would be great if we could look at that form, find out who had such great things to say about Poindexter. We wanna read the superlatives for ourselves! OK, so where's the form? Can we see it? 

Today, Mathur acknowledged that that form has not been produced. I assume that means that it disappeared. (Got any other interpretations out there?) Gosh, that's odd! Doncha think? And it was so very positive, too! 

TOMORROW: closing arguments. The jury goes off to make its decision. 



Mathur: reference checks for Poindexter 

Dissent 

Thursday, May 3, 2007 


Once again, I’ve got little time—gotta run off to my classes soon. So this’ll have to be quick. 

Yesterday, Cely Mora finished her testimony, then Mathur got up on the stand. Under questioning from Mora attorney Carol Sobel, we learned of the Chancellor’s responsibilities, upholding policies and whatnot. Ditto for the Presidential gig at IVC. Sobel noted that, during his deposition, Mathur claimed that he had never been a defendant nor a plaintiff in a lawsuit. “No,” he said. Well, as we all know, he has been both. 

Mathur acknowledged that, before interviewing the three finalists for the dean (of Health Science, PE, and Athletics) position back in 2001, he had read the data from the reference checks that had been done by then-VPI Glenn Roquemore. (Mathur was IVC Prez then.) One oddity of this case is the fact that Poindexter was hired despite no one’s having contacted his current employer. (Eventually, that employer was contacted, and it was revealed that P had some of the same issues there that turned up at IVC.) Since P didn’t mention that employer among his references, the hiring committee was prevented from doing that. But was Mathur prevented?

Under questioning, Mathur seemed to imply that he, too, was prohibited from doing that, though, he said, he could ask for another reference (without specifying). As near as I could tell, Sobel revealed that he was under no such prohibition. 

We examined the three “reference check” forms for Poindexter’s three references. (These revealed the results of the reference checks—calls to Poindexter’s references, and their answers to a series of questions.) One reference was a former student. Sobel questioned Mathur about that. “We serve the students,” said Mathur. That is, their input is very important (I suppose that’s what he meant). Another reference was a basketball coach. Sobel sought to have Mathur explain what about these references revealed that Poindexter had the qualifications for the dean job. 

It was rough going. Mathur can be obtuse. 

The third reference was a prior employer at the US Sports Academy. Sobel asked Mathur if he recalled that that reference “couldn’t recommend Poindexter without reservation.” The reference said he had no knowledge of P’s administrative abilities. 

Sobel then turned to Mathur’s request for a fourth reference. It was “very positive,” said Raghu. Oddly, the reference check form for the fourth reference “has not been produced.” Mathur acknowledged that. WOW. 

Was there anything in Poindexter’s resume that revealed that P had experience running an intercollegiate athletics program? Mathur claimed there was evidence in the resume that P had experience as a “director” of athletic training—hence experience as a supervisor/administrator. There was some dispute about that. Do you know what chairs of Athletic Training do? –No, not specifically. Sobel asked for Mathur’s documentation—or just notes—regarding his fourth reference check. 

At one point, Sobel said: “You have no evidence that you called the additional reference?” No, apparently. “I do recall that the reference check was very positive,” said Mathur. 

Sobel then focused on Mathur’s claim that Mora had failed to develop curricula (when she served as Acting Dean prior to Poindexter’s hire). Hadn’t she developed a massage therapy program? Didn’t she put through curricula for that? Doesn’t the President of the college approve all courses that go through the curriculum process? Mathur acknowledged this. He claimed to be “only vaguely” aware of Mora’s efforts on behalf of massage therapy. 

Sobel returned to the three (initial) reference checks. One was a Scott P. Evidently, Scott was one of Poindexter’s students. On the form, it showed that Scott couldn’t rate Poindexter with regard to relations with management. He was a student. 

Another reference, Hal W, had been P’s dean for over a year. Hal claimed that he only observed Poindexter’s work as a trainer; he claimed not to know about P’s administrative abilities. So, when it came to rating P on that, he didn’t offer a response. So the three references did not indicate that Poindexter had any administrative experience? Yes. Why ask for the fourth ref? Mathur “wanted additional information.” 

--Well, I’ve gotta run. I’ll try to finish this later today. Sorry to leave you hanging. --CW 


The verdict is in  (Uh-oh!)

Dissent 

Thursday, May 3, 2007 



WHATEVER ELSE may be true of Aracely Mora's case against Raghu Mathur, to the trial observer, there can be little doubt that something was very wrong with (1) the Poindexter hire and (2) protections from harassment for women at IVC and the SOCCCD. Without doubt, Poindexter was a disastrous incompetent, a point that is not disputed by the district. Nor is it disputed, apparently, that a simple phone call to Poindexter's previous employer would have made plain the man's incompetence and instability. With regard to the protection of women, the district appears to be adopting the position that Poindexter was a poor manager, but not a harasser of women. But unless the witnesses at this trial are remarkably accomplished and organized liars, it is quite plain that female employees of the college were subjected to Poindexter's menacing behavior and the college did nothing to protect them. 

The jury did not judge that these women were protected from a menacing employee. Rather, it rejected the specific claim that Mathur failed to respond to a hostile work environment (for these women). (See Opening statements.) 

Please note that the trial's verdict (in Mathur's favor) in no way challenges the fact that Poindexter was a disastrous and foolish hire (thank you, Raghu) or that there were people—women, in fact—who were allowed by the college/district to be terrorized by an employee. Remember: it wasn't until that employee got into a physical altercation that the institution pulled him out of the workplace, despite many months of complaints about his menacing behavior. (The judge decided that Cely's attorney may not refer to the altercation.) 

FOR THOSE OF US who have been observing the whole Mathur trial, it will come as no surprise that Cely lost her case today. It comes as no surprise because, during the course of the trial, we were increasingly aware and concerned that most of the jury of eight gave every indication of being a group of immature young people. One juror was always visibly bored and seemed to be sleeping much of the time. A young man (who works for a game show) seemed often to be snickering and joking to the delight of his new female friends on this jury. My heart sank each time I looked at these people. 

But enough about the jury. My advice: watch Mathur. See what he does now. 

Get a baseball bat 


EXONERATE 

Dissent 

Friday, May 4, 2007 


Today, the district (i.e., Raghu Mathur) issued a press release: 

JURY VERDICT EXONERATES...RAGHU P. MATHUR...A federal jury returned a unanimous verdict yesterday finding that there was no illegal discrimination or harassment on the part of Dr. Raghu P. Mathur, Chancellor of the South Orange County Community College, toward Dr. Acely [sic] Mora. Six years ago, Dr. Mora filed a lawsuit alleging that Dr. Mathur, then President of Irvine Valley College, failed to promote her to a dean’s position based upon her gender and ethnicity. She further alleged that Dr. Mathur failed to remedy a hostile work environment created by the person subsequently hired for the position, Dr. Rodney Poindexter. After 6 days of testimony and presentation of evidence, the eight member jury of five women and three men returned the verdict in 45 minutes. They found no illegal activity on the part of Dr. Mathur or Dr. Poindexter. “I am gratified with the jury’s verdict. It underscores that we are able to choose the best candidate, regardless of race, creed or national origin. Our district and colleges do take immediate action to investigate all complaints of discrimination,” said Dr. Mathur [my emphasis]. The attorney for the case, Dennis J. Walsh, commented, “I’m extremely pleased and honored to represent Dr. Mathur whose commitment to diversity and fairness was obvious during this trial.” 

UNDERSCORE 

That Raghu sure has a way with words. The verdict, he says, “underscores that we are able to choose the best candidate,” etc. Well, that's nonsense. But it’s true that things have now been underscored. As you know, trial testimony revealed that the man that Mathur chose in the spring of 2001 was not the best candidate. This trial, if not this verdict, underscored that Mathur chose the worst candidate. It underscored, too, that, four years earlier, he refused to choose the best candidate (for a biology position) “because of her ethnicity.” (The hiring committee chair and the Staff Diversity Officer testified that Mathur told them: I refrained from hiring a Sri Lankan candidate because I did not want to be accused of “reverse discrimination.”) 

PROTECTED 

I wonder how female employees of the district feel about Raghu’s “exoneration”? Women of the district, I ask you. Now that Mathur and the district’s (non)commitment to protecting you from workplace violence has been laid bare, how would you feel were your boss to scream at you and menace you? Confident of protection? 

My advice: get a baseball bat.* 

DUCK 

At IVC today, everywhere I went, people spoke to me about the expected Mathurian retaliation. It was starting to bug me. A colleague wrote an email that said simply: “It’s going to be duck and cover—or stop, drop, and roll—for a while.” 

Meanwhile, Mathur’s supporters showed their true colors in numerous comments to this blog. Read 'em! Odd. Mathur's fans all go by the same moniker: “Anonymous.” 


Coarse FUR & Mathur's inventiveness  

Dissent 

Saturday, May 5, 2007 


MAN, I wish I could find me a better crew of critics and opponents. The "Friends uv Raghu" (F.U.R.) are an embarrassment. If they don't come up with better stuff soon, I'll have to write my own anti-Dissent comments on this blog. 

Have you been reading the comments? There's been lots of support for the Mora forces, but lots of FUR, too. Evidently, FUR imagine that I, Chunk, instigated Cely's suit, or that Carol Sobel did. —No. Cely had been victimized (does anyone really doubt that?), and she needed an attorney. At some point, she approached Carol. Carol did not approach her. I have never been involved in this case in any way. (Carol was my First Amendment attorney back in c. 1999-2002.) My connection to this case amounts to this: I was aware of it. I attended 4 of the 6 days of the trial. I attended and reported on the trial because I support Cely (qua victim of workplace violence, qua victim of Mathur), because Carol is a friend of mine (she is my attorney), and because reporting on this trial made sense for Dissent. How so? I knew that, whatever the trial's outcome (which was always in doubt, for discrimination suits, I was told, are notoriously difficult to win), testimony would permit highlighting the truth about Mathur. Example: on the stand, Mathur acknowledged that the documentation for his mysterious "4th reference check" (on Poindexter)—the other three provided no grounds for hiring P—has been lost (or, anyway, has not been produced by the district). How very convenient for Raghu. 

That reminds me of Mathur's 1998 accusation that some IVC faculty were sending him "hate mail" and hate messages—perhaps a half dozen instances. That was mighty convenient, too (Mathur had just suffered a vote of "no confidence"). 

MATHURIAN CLAIMS, MATHURIAN DOCUMENTATION: 

During a subsequent depo (see below), he was asked if he kept any of the mail. No, he said. He was asked if he kept any of the emails. No, he said. He was asked if he kept any of the alleged voicemail. No, he said. He "kept" nothing. Absolutely nothing. He had zero documentation to support his stunning and obnoxious claim. 

And now, again, he has no documentation for the crucial claim (to defending the wisdom of his choosing Poindexter) that there was one reference who had "very positive" things to say about Poindexter, the man he hired despite his manifest lack of qualifications. One needs to ask: how likely is it that this crucial required documentation was lost? Of all the "ref check" forms filed at the district, why is this one lost? 


DIGRESSION: 

Mathur deposed: Sept. 28, 1999 


Carol Sobel
During the May 21, 1998, board meeting, Mathur, stung by a recent 74% faculty vote of no confidence, lashed out at an alleged faculty cabal who were, he said, “at the very core” of the vote against him. In the course of his rantings, three instuctors were named, including Bauer [i.e., me]. Remarkably, without offering a shred of evidence, he asserted that “People in this core in the past have sent me mail threats saying, ‘Go back to your country.’ These threats have come from some of these people, I am confident of it. When I went to the Sheriff’s Department and exposed it, all of a sudden those mail threats stopped.” He ended his remarks with a rhetorical flourish, describing how he had arrived on “American shores some 31 years ago with eight dollars in my pocket [and]…a dream.”] 

The attorney asking the questions is Carol Sobel. Mathur’s attorney, David Larsen, was provided by the district. 

Q Did you ever make any statements to the effect that you had received e-mail you perceived to be threats against you? 

A Yes. 

Q When did you make those statements? 

A I made a statement to that effect at a board meeting…. 

Q What did you tell the board about the e-mail you received? 

A That I have received threats. I don’t recall exactly what I said, but something to the effect that I have received threats from a small group of faculty staff members, and that’s essentially what I said. 

Q How many threats did you receive? 

A I believe I have received about three or four. 

Q Were they all received close in time to each other? 

A Over a period of time. I don’t know if I would characterize [it as] close together. 

Q Over what period of time were they received? 

A About six months or so. 

Q Did you print them out? 

A Some were already imprinted. I received them in the form of letters, and I remember one was a voice mail. 

Q So it is not correct then that you received e-mail threats; is that correct? A I may have received them, but I don’t recall right now. 

Q You don’t recall if you received any e-mail threats? 

A I’m thinking. I believe I have received one or two…. 

Q Now, let’s talk about the first threat you recall receiving. Was that voicemail, letter, or e-mail? 

A That was a letter. 

Q Do you have that letter today? 

A I had turned the letters over to the sheriff’s department…. 

Q Is there some document you can consult to find out the name of the individual at the OC Sheriff’s Department you consulted with? 

A I did try, but I think maybe—yeah. I can try. 

Q Well, you said it’s somebody you work[ed] with [at the Sheriff’s Dept.]. In what capacity did you work with the person? 

A Whatever his official capacity was. I don’t remember. But I went to file a complaint, reported it to the receptionist. She brought one of the inspectors and I told the story and he wanted copies of those [letters] turned over. And he advised me to talk it up in the college, which I did. And this was after two or three such letters I have received, and in the time being, it stopped. The threats had stopped. 

Q Where did you go to report this? 

A Laguna Hills Sheriff’s Department…. 

Q Do you recall when it was that you went to the…Sheriff’s Department?… 

A I believe it was sometime in 1990. 

Q Did you receive these in 1990? A Yes. 

Q Was there some reason why you waited nine years to raise this with the board? 

A It’s because the threats were becoming more violent in nature in terms of references to dropping granite or in terms of attacks on me, on my implications of attacks on my body and so forth. I felt that I had to convey my concerns to the board. 

Q Between 1990 and the time Professor Bauer started publishing the Dissent and ‘Vine, which I believe was sometime in late ’97, how many letters did you receive conveying threats to you? 

A As I indicated, three to four letters I received, and I did report at the time also to the chancellor of the district. 

Q I understand that. You indicated, if I understood your prior testimony—and if I’m incorrect, correct me—that you had received three or four letters at the time you went to the OC Sheriff’s Department, which now turns out to be in 1990? 

MR. LARSEN: What do you mean “now” turns out to be 1990? Probably always been. 

MS. SOBEL: The witness testified that he went to the board a year ago. The e-mail threats have now become several letters and voice mail and perhaps one or two e-mails, and the letters were all in 1990, so I’m just trying to make sure that I have this chronology accurate. 

MR. LARSEN: Your questions and tone of voice are argumentative. That’s all. Go ahead. 

MS. SOBEL: I appreciate it, but you can imagine my surprise that these [incidents] turned out to be eight years earlier. 

Q In between the letter that you received that caused you to go to the…Sheriff’s Department and the time you spoke to the board, how many letters did you receive conveying threats to you? 

A All together including e-mail, voice mail, written letters— 

Q I’m just asking for the letters right now, Mr. Mathur. 

A It was all together about half a dozen. 

Q When were the other three or two received by you? Were they after you went to the sheriff’s department? 

A Yes. 

Q When was that? 

A Some were received in the last couple of years. 

Q When you say the last couple of years, Mr. Mathur, can you be more specific? We are only talking about two or three letters here, so were they received in 1990 after you went to the sheriff’s department, or were they received in 1995? 

A Well, some [were] received in the 1990 time frame. Some have been received in the last—two or three have also been received in the last couple [of] years. 

Q Do you have copies of any of the letters? We are now up to about six or seven….. 

A I will have to look into my files and find out if I do or don’t. 

Q Did you turn over the subsequent letters to the OC Sheriff’s Department as well? 

A This time, I didn’t because— 

MR. LARSEN: Well, you answered the question. 

Q Why didn’t you go back to the OC Sheriff’s Department, if you received more letters? 

A Because of my experience from the first time. What they advised me was to talk it up, and that’s what I’ve done, and that’s why I chose to talk about it at the public board meeting. 

Q Had you received the letters just prior to the time you spoke at the public board meeting? 

A It’s possible. But I can’t give an exact time frame. 

Q Were any of the letters signed? 

A They were unsigned. 

Q What do you recall was the content of the first letter you received? 

A “Go back to your country where you came from.” 

Q And that was one of the letters in 1990, correct? 

A No. This is one of the letters I receive now. 

Q Is that the first letter you recall receiving? 

A In the recent times, yes. 

Q Was the letter handwritten or typed? 

A It was typed. 

Q Was it typed in just a regular type face or words cut out of a magazine and pasted on paper? 

A No. Typed. 

Q Was there anything about the letter that was distinctive that suggested to you what the source might have been? 

A No. Seemed it was written by someone from within the college. 

Q Why did it seem like it was written by someone from within the college? 

A Because this is where Bauer was publishing newsletters and creating a hostile work environment. 

Q When do you recall receiving this letter? 

A Before I made those comments at the public board meeting. 

Q But you don’t know when? 

A I can’t give you the exact time…. 

Q Did you look at it to see where it was mailed from? 

A Yes. 

Q What did it say? 

A Santa Ana. 

Q And did you keep the envelope? 

A I may have. Like I said, I don’t know whether I saved the letters or not, based on my experience with the previous situation. 

Q Did you inform anybody at the time you received the letter that you had received it? 

A Informed my family. 

Q Did you receive the letter at home or at work? 

A At home…. 

Q Who did you show the letter to in your family? 

A Showed it to my wife…. 

Q Now, other than saying “Go back to your country where you came from,” what else did the letter say? 

A I don’t recall. That was the statement that stands out in my mind. 

Q How long was the letter? 

A About half a page. 

Q And you don’t recall anything else said in the letter? 

A No. 

Q Other than the fact that Professor Bauer was publishing his newsletter, do you have any other basis on which you form the conclusion this came from somebody within the Irvine Valley College campus? 

A No, I don’t. 

For the entire depo, go to Mathur’s deposition 


Subdued 

Dissent 

Friday, May 11, 2007 


MY FRIENDS down south tell me that, at today’s special meeting of the District Leadership Council, Chancellor Mathur briefly held forth on his recent court experience, lecturing those in attendance. Given his key role in the disastrous & embarrassing & disturbing Rodney Poindexter episode—which of course yielded his recent courtroom adventure—one might suppose that Mathur would take the opportunity to warn others against his many and egregious errors. I'm told that he acknowledged no errors. 

Then he asked for questions. 

There were none. 

The meeting was over. 

Maybe somebody told the fellow to take the high road and he thinks this is it. 



Mathur loses motion 

Dissent 

Friday, June 22, 2007 


Concerning the discrimination suit brought by former IVC instructor Cely Mora against former IVC President Raghu P. Mathur: reliable sources tell us that Mathur moved for fees against Aracely and the judge denied his motion. 

You'll recall that Mora lost the case in Federal Court not long ago. (See Mora's testimony.) Nevertheless, in the course of the trial, Mathur's remarkable unprofessionalism and incompetence were fully revealed by witness testimony and documents, and not only with regard to the hire of the unstable and dangerous Mr. Rod Poindexter. (See Reference checks.

During the trial, it became plain that Mathur is in the habit of messing with hires and using them to pursue payback and control. Mathur's explanation for hiring Poindexter, a man who appeared to have none of the background necessary for the dean position for which he had applied, came down to alleged information provided during a mysterious reference check, the documentation of which has been lost. Or so said Mathur. 

The judge's decision means that the district had to pay over $250,000 to defend Mathur. Mathur once sued the district to cover expenses incurred when he unsuccessfully sued an instructor and former administrator for revealing (in Dissent) his violation of a student's privacy rights. The district coughed up about $40,000 for the notoriously parsimonious fellow. As Chancellor, Mathur makes about $300,000 a year, a salary without equal among college districts of the size of the SOCCCD. 


Addendum

Re the unsuccessful lawsuit, I dug this up from an old Dissent: 

September 1, 2000: 

it’s 12:45, and I get a cell-phone call from Wendy P, who’s been teaching all morning. She tells me that she has just served Raghu Mathur with papers regarding his “Judgment Debtor’s Exam.” 

I should explain. You see, back in January of 2000, Mr. [Ra]Goo filed a suit against Terry Burgess—and me—regarding my reports, in three issues of Dissent, regarding Mathur’s violation of a student’s right to privacy as delineated by a federal law (FERPA). That Mathur had violated that law was, at any rate, the conclusion of the district’s lawyer, Spencer Covert (yes, Covert—I’m not makin’ this stuff up!), who had been asked, by then-IVC president Dan Larios, to provide an opinion on the matter. Ironically, Mathur, a man who can neither detect nor pronounce irony, believes that the Dissent stories amounted to a violation of his privacy rights, and so he sued us for $50,000. According to Mathur, the only way I could have secured the documents I reported on was through the help of Terry Burgess, formerly the VP of Instruction. (That’s nonsense. The documents had been readily available on campus for years.) Thus Burgess was included in the suit. 

Unfortunately for Raghu, the great state of California has a law (the anti-SLAPP statute) designed to protect citizens from lawsuits that are filed by powerful interests—developers, politicians, et al.—merely in order to silence legitimate criticism. SLAPP ("strategic litigation against public participation") suits are burdensome annoyances, or worse, for defendants, but they produce a chilling effect on potential criticism by others as well. They thwart free speech. 

To make a long story short, we responded to Mathur’s suit by appealing to the anti-SLAPP statute, which yielded a quick dismissal. In court, Judge Brenner noted that my Dissent reports were both true and newsworthy and that, further, there was no evidence whatsoever that Burgess provided the information regarding Mathur that I had reported. In fact, he hadn’t. 

As per the law, Brenner ordered Mathur to pay Burgess and me costs and attorneys fees. That amounted to $34,000 and change. Ouch! This was months ago. But, as of this day (Sept. 1), Mathur hasn’t paid. 

In such situations, the prevailing side files for a “Judgment Debtor Exam.” Once it is granted, the “judgment debtor” is served papers that inform him that he must appear in court on a certain date. “If you fail to appear…you may be subject to arrest and punishment,” say the documents.

On August 29th, Carol Sobel, my attorney, filed for a debtor’s exam for Mathur. The order was granted on that day. So, on this day—the 1st of September—Wendy serves Raghu with the papers: “Hi Raghu. I’ve got something for you!” chirps Wendy. He stares but doesn’t move. She hands him the papers, smiling broadly. Eventually, he takes them, glumly thanks her, and then disappears behind the door of his office. Later, someone tells me that she thinks she heard Mathur crying and banging his head against a chair. But she isn’t sure. Could be, though. 

The document orders Mathur to bring 27 kinds of document, including 

All checkbooks, registers, and canceled checks for all savings, checking, credit union, bank, mutual fund accounts and/or all other accounts owned by you and/or you and your spouse for the past three years…All payroll check stubs for you and/or your spouse for the past three years…All passbooks for savings, checking, credit union, bank, mutual fund accounts, and/or all other accounts owned by you and/or your spouse for the past three years…All financial statements listing your assets…during the past three years…All stock registers or other records of stocks presently owned by you…All documents evidencing any partnership interest in property owned by you…All credit card applications…Ownership documents…Your state and federal income tax returns for the past thee years… 

 —and so on. 

Jeez, I’d cry too. 

The exam is set for September 19th. 

Above: in the end, Raghu writes the check. There were tears.


* * *

FINALLY

There is some evidence that John Rodney Poindexter is now 74 years old and living in Henderson, NV

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How the Censorship Industrial Complex Destroyed Free Internet (w/ Max Blumenthal) 2 Oct 2023 7:32 AM (last year)

 

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High hopes 29 Sep 2023 2:59 PM (last year)


Last Friday (the 22nd), I received my last infusion of the chemo regimen, but that didn't mean it would be smooth sailing. In fact, the last week has been pretty rough: constant low-level nausea plus endless profound fatigue. It was a real chore goin' anywhere, doin' anything. Now, I try to avoid all activity.

This morning, as per my Fridaycentric schedule, I went to Newport Beach and got another blood test and I visited with the nurse practitioner. My blood numbers were lousy: WBC is at .73 (normal starts at 4.0); RBC is at 2.59 (normal starts at 3.8); Hgb is at 7.7 (normal starts at 13.3; critical is below 7); platelet count is at 28 (normal starts at 150); and so on.

No wonder I was feeling shitty.

Sarah, the NP, explained that these are the numbers they pretty much expect a week after the (last) infusion; these numbers, she said, are not yet alarming. (Whew!)

She said: Go home, rest! No touch-football, beware of spiking symptoms, stay away from sick people, yada yada.

I got a referral for a post-infusion PET/CT. I just now scheduled that for next Tuesday morning. That test will tell me how well the chemo has worked. 

It's pretty important.

No exercise! Fasting! Hi-protein, low-carb diet the day before! —The usual demands.

I'll let you know how it goes. I have high hopes.

Be sure to listen to Episode 58: America This Week, with Matt Taibbi and Walter Kirn

This week: Canadian hypocrisy plus Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart"

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That kind of day 26 Sep 2023 6:20 PM (last year)

 

I was just a baby when my mom played this on some cheap record player in the wilds of British Columbia starting in 1956. Somehow, the song is deeply ingrained in me. Still love it.

Great song.

Early Elvis. Beautiful.

This one can hit you like a ton of bricks. December 2, 1929 Dallas, TX.
Washington Phillips (1880 - 1954)

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Roy Finishes Chemo 25 Sep 2023 4:39 PM (last year)

 

Friday morning, Annie drove me to the Keck Cancer Center in Newport Beach for an 8:00  appointment. The nurse drew my blood, via IV, for the usual test—called an "ANC," but involving 32 measures or counts, including Absolute Neutrophil (ANC), WBC, RBC, platelet, Hgb (hemoglobin), and so on. 

After about 5 minutes, the nurse showed me the results: the numbers looked "pretty good" all around, relatively speaking.

Over phone, the nurse briefly consulted with my oncologist, and he saw no problems sufficient to pause the chemo, and thus I commenced my last infusion, the sixth of six. 

The regimen for my lymphoma (stage 3 or 4, as I recall), is called R-CHOP. R-CHOP is an acronym for "a combination of three chemotherapy drugs given along with a monoclonal antibody and a steroid." My particular regimen, which normally separates infusions with a short, three week recovery period, was paused for some time owing to low blood numbers, especially platelets, RBC, and WBC, the three kinds of blood cells made by bone marrow. But we systematically worked through all that. (My doctor did acknowledge that such pauses reduce the efficacy of the regimen; still, he remained positive, since the process has seemed to be working, a judgment supported by a mid-regimen PET scan.) I got a couple of transfusions and an extra bone marrow biopsy along the way, and there've been several trips to the emergency room, including a visit just 13 days ago, owing to a critically low hemoglobin count (6.7). In general, however, my experience has been positive: the regimen has seemed to be working, and though I am profoundly fatigued and somewhat muddle-headed, I have grown increasingly chirpy.

Yes, chirpy. (No doubt chirpitude is side effect of muddle-headitude.)

Friday, no complications arose. I slept my way through most of the infusion. The process was completed by 2:30. "You're done," said the pretty, young nurse, smiling.

I smiled too. 

My last infusion done.

One of my early infusions, May?

UPDATE: [9-24]: This time around, the infusion has really kicked my ass—24 hours later. Let's just say I lost 7 pounds between early 9-23 and early 9-24. But, by Sunday mid-morning, nausea had largely subsided and fatigue has become the main issue, which is nothing new. Can still function, more or less, as long as I don't have to walk too far!
[9-25]: Feel pretty good, but still pretty fatigued. Managed a long convo with old Steve-O at the "Coffee Bean" on Alton. Lots to talk about. Lots of BS too.

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Very Happy to Hear from You, Mr. Gensler 24 Sep 2023 3:04 PM (last year)


What’s going on with the Gensler case? 

I’m talking about the district’s own Howard Gensler. You remember him. As you know, over the years, there have been numerous Gensler cases. B

Here, by the “Gensler case,” I mean specifically (a) the district’s relatively recent action (2018) of firing Econ and Poli Sci instructor Howard Gensler and (b) Gensler’s efforts to overturn that action. 

I bring this up now because, less than a month ago (8-22-23), something occurred relative to that case. (A friend clued me in on it last week.) A decision was written regarding an appeal of a court case, going back 4 or 5 years, involving Howard's firing.

I have before me a decision by appellate court (4th district) associate justice Joanne Motoike, which is readily available online (here). I’ll explain that decision as I understand it. You can read it and assess its ramifications on your own. 

In this case, Howard Gensler is both plaintiff and appellant and the SOCCCD Board of Trustees (et al.) are respondents (targets of the suit). Interestingly, one of the District’s attorneys is one Dennis J. Walsh. I remember him well; he was Mathur’s attorney in the notorious Mora v. Mathur (see) case in which, horrifyingly, Mathur prevailed, but not without laying bare for all to see how unprofessional his conduct was/is. (Some of the jury, too, were utter louts. The case was doomed.) 


PART 1: Howard is fired

The particular issue at hand concerns an action taken by the district in 2018. According to Justice Motoike, 

In December 2018, the District placed Gensler on administrative leave and provided notice of its intent to terminate his employment. Gensler attended a Skelly hearing on January 15, 2019, conducted by Dr. Elliot Stern, who had assumed the role of president of Saddleback College just two days earlier. After considering Gensler's oral and documentary evidence, Stern affirmed the decision to terminate Gensler's employment. 

But what’s a Skelly hearing? According to Google, 

A Skelly Hearing is a pre-disciplinary hearing named after a 1975 California Supreme Court case which solidified public employees' rights when faced with disciplinary action. A Skelly Hearing is part of due process to provide public employees with the reason for disciplinary action before that action is taken. 

Motoike continues: 

Dennis Walsh
On January 31, 2019, Stern signed the Statement of Charges and Recommendation for Termination. That same day, Dr. Kathleen Burke, the District's chancellor, signed a concurrence with Stern's recommendation. On February 1, 2019, those documents were forwarded to the Board, as was Gensler's most recent faculty performance evaluation dated November 2, 2015. In February 2019, the Board, in Resolution No. 10-05, voted to give notice to Gensler that his employment with the District would be terminated effective 30 days from the service of the notice unless he requested a hearing. 

Gensler was then informed of his right to request a hearing. 

Sure enough, in March, Gensler “filed a notice of defense/objection and requested a hearing.” Then, in June, Stern 

signed the accusation [an official charge of wrongdoing], alleging as the causes for the employment termination decision Gensler's "evident unfitness for service" … and his "persistent violation of, or refusal to obey, the school laws of the state or [the] reasonable regulations prescribed for the government of the district's board"[.] As factual grounds for dismissal, the accusation specified several instances of misconduct occurring from the Fall 2015 semester through the Spring 2018 semester. …[T]he Board certified the matter to the Office of Administrative Hearings for the appointment of an administrative law judge [ALJ]. 

(According to Justia, “In the United States, an administrative law judge … serves as the judge and trier of fact who presides over administrative hearings. ALJs have the power to administer oaths, make rulings on evidentiary objections, and render legal and factual determinations.” “Whereas court proceedings are overseen by a judge, administrative hearings are conducted by an administrative law judge (ALJ). One of the major differences between a traditional court proceeding and an administrative hearing is that the presiding administrative law judge serves as the trier of fact.”) 

Howard unfurls his mighty cape before the enemy

I should mention that we at DtB have no idea what these “instances of misconduct” are or the nature of the District's grounds for judging that Howard is or was unfit to teach—although we can certainly imagine many grounds, based on our experiences with the curious fellow over the years. 

We’re in the dark about this. Like Bat Man. 

In February of 2020, the ALJ “presided over 10 days of hearing at which the ALJ received testimonial and documentary evidence and heard the parties' arguments.” Then, in a lengthy written opinion dated Oct. 14, 

the ALJ concluded "[c]ause exists to dismiss [Gensler as an employee] pursuant to Section 87732, subdivisions (d) and (f). The district's decision to dismiss [Gensler] from employment is reasonable and supported by a preponderance of the evidence." 

(Here’s Ed Code 87732: 

No regular employee or academic employee shall be dismissed except for one or more of the following causes: (a) Immoral or unprofessional conduct. (b) Dishonesty. (c) Unsatisfactory performance. (d) Evident unfitness for service. (e) Physical or mental condition that makes him or her unfit to instruct or associate with students. (f) Persistent violation of, or refusal to obey, the school laws of the state or reasonable regulations prescribed for the government of the community colleges by the board of governors or by the governing board of the community college district employing him or her. (g) Conviction of a felony or of any crime involving moral turpitude. (h) Conduct specified in Section 1028 of the Government Code. –END) 

And so, in the end, the ALJ affirmed the district’s decision to fire Gensler. Howard was canned and rightly so. 

END OF STORY…. 


PART 2: Genslerian litigiousness 

—BUT NO. Anyone who knows Howard knows that that would never end the matter. Howard is nothing if not litigious. And he’s like the Energizer Bunny (but with a bat suit). 

In January of 2021, Howard filed a petition of writ of mandate, naming the Board and the District as respondents. You’ll recall that such writs are intended as remedies of defects of justice. 

“Writs of Administrative Mandate (Mandamus) are used to ask a Superior Court to review a decision made by an administrative agency of the government, such as for example the Workers' Compensation Appeal Board, or the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV)” (Google). 

By means of this writ, Howard sought the issuance of a writ "to vacate the termination decision of [the] Administrative Law Judge . . . and order the reinstatement of Gensler with back pay." 

Writs of mandamus ask for extraordinary actions—in this case, Howard was asking that the ALJ’s judgment, owing to some alleged defect(s), be “vacated” and Howard’s standing at the college be restored. 

The petition asserted six causes of action. 


THE SIX “CAUSES” 

In the first cause, Gensler claimed that the District 

provided defective notice and lacked jurisdiction, having violated [Ed Code 87671] … (failure to conduct a current evaluation), … (failure to include a peer review), (failure to include student evaluations), … (failure to allow Gensler to provide written comments to derogatory material placed in his personnel file which was used in the termination process), … (considering and relying upon evidence older than four years), and … (failure to provide notice of the complete and precise decision of the governing board and the reasons for the termination). 

Gosh, some of that sounds familiar! 

In the second cause of action in the petition, Gensler asserted the ALJ erred by concluding Gensler had engaged in unprofessional conduct justifying the termination of his employment. 

In the third cause of action, Gensler asserted the ALJ erred by concluding Gensler's statements were not protected by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution and his right to academic freedom. 

In the fourth cause of action, Gensler asserted he was deprived of a fair trial. He asserted the ALJ abused his discretion by precluding opening statements and closing argument, committing evidentiary error, relying on cases the Board had not cited in its briefing, ignoring pretrial motions and the Board's alleged discovery abuses, and denying Gensler's requests for sanctions and continuances. 

In the fifth and sixth causes of action, Gensler asserted the ALJ's findings of Gensler's "'evident unfitness'" and "'persistent failure to follow rules,'" respectively, should be reversed. 

As it turns out, the case will turn on the 1st cause — essentially, Gensler was not afforded a peer review, to which he is entitled — which is procedural, and not the potentially juicy other ones: is THIS conduct unprofessional?, etc

Natch, included in Gensler’s petition was a petition for “prayer and relief.” According to Howard, the Board should 

reinstate Petitioner Howard Gensler as a full-time tenured faculty member of Saddleback College [and] reimburse Howard … for lost wages and benefits arising from this action. 

Bat Man amid darkness
Howard also petitioned for his “costs in this action, including attorneys' fees…” and “For such other relief as the court considers just and proper." 

The District then filed an “answer” to the petition. I don’t have that document but we can imagine what it contains. No doubt the word "nope" figures prominently.

That brings us to October 22 of 2021, nine months later, when the “trial court,” namely, the one in which the Honorable Derek W. Hunt [see this] presides, must decide how to respond to Howard’s writ and the District’s response thereto. Essentially, Hunt, though generally in agreement with the ALJ’s conclusions, decides that something more is needed to go forward: “a statutory peer review process … as specified by ‘the standards and procedures established by the rules and regulations of the governing board [of SOCCCD].’” 

As Motoike explains, 

After having taken the matter under submission…, and after having fully considered the parties' evidence and written and oral arguments, [Hunt] entered a minute order [according to Google, a minute order is “An order of the court recorded in the minutes, which is the official court record of what happened in the case”] dated December 6, 2021, stating: "A copy of the Court's Statement of Decision Re: Petition for Writ of Mandate is attached hereto and incorporated herein by reference." In the court's attached statement of decision, dated December 6, 2021, the court [i.e., Hunt] discussed the parties' respective arguments but ultimately concluded: "[T]he court, although in its independent judgment is content with most of the conclusions of the ALJ, believes those conclusions must be reevaluated following a statutory peer review process conducted under Education Code § 87663(b) and (c) as specified by 'the standards and procedures established by the rules and regulations of the governing board.' [¶] The cause [affording Howard a proper “peer review,” I suppose) is therefore remitted to the respondents to include a peer review in petitioner's employment evaluation."

D'oh! 

Respondents [i.e., the District] filed a motion for reconsideration [again, don’t have that], which the trial court denied. 

On March 21, 2022—four months later—the trial court issued another minute order which identified the event type as "Chambers Work" without any party's appearance. … The minute order essentially reiterated its prior order of December 6…. 


In the March minute order, Hunt writes: 

On December 6, 2021 the court issued its written Statement of Decision thereon remitting the cause to respondents for further proceedings in accordance with the said Statement of Decision and the peer review process required by Education Code § 87663(b) and (c) as specified by 'the standards and procedure established by the rules and regulations of the governing board.’ 

Here are parts (b), (c), and (d) of 87663:

(b) Whenever an evaluation is required of a faculty member by a community college district, the evaluation shall be conducted in accordance with the standards and procedures established by the rules and regulations of the governing board of the employing district. (c) Evaluations shall include, but not be limited to, a peer review process. (d) The peer review process shall be on a departmental or divisional basis, and shall address the forthcoming demographics of California, and the principles of affirmative action. The process shall require that the peers reviewing are both representative of the diversity of California and sensitive to affirmative action concerns, all without compromising quality and excellence in teaching.

The upshot? The court sympathizes with the ALJ’s initial judgments/conclusions according to which the District’s firing action was right and proper, and no judgment has yet been made with regard to the justice of that action; but the court, i.e., Judge Hunt, now wants the district to do a strictly kosher peer review of Howard. Nothing less.

Hunt’s directive implies that “peer review” failed to occur back in 2018. I know that, owing to long-time opposition of the faculty union, the SOCCCD has struggled to establish a peer review process, despite the state mandate for one—an issue going back many years. As a result, as far as I know, the SOCCCD, and thus Saddleback College, has no such process. 

That old unsettled issue seems to have finally come back to bite us in the ass. 

Hunt concludes: “The cause [Howard’s 1st cause? Affording Howard a proper peer review?] is hereby remanded to respondents for further proceedings in accordance herewith.” 

OK, I guess Hunt wants to make sure a proper “peer review” occurs, which seems reasonable given the Ed Code. I have no idea what the District has done with Hunt’s directive, whether they attempted to implement a “peer review” process, or maybe an ad hoc one just for Howard (that likely wouldn’t do). No doubt, establishing a peer review process would entail involvement of the faculty: the Academic Senate, the Faculty Association. But, again, historically, our faculty have taken a very low road about the "peer review" mandate, preventing development of that process, leaving us no choice but to use empirically discredited student evaluations or dean evaluations (does my dean know anything about my field? No). Is our district’s failure to embrace/develop a peer review evaluation process putting the district behind the eight ball here? 

Sure looks like it.



PART 3: HOWARD'S INAPPROPRIATE 2-22 MOTION: NOT SO FAST, BUSTER

This brings us to a somewhat weird episode in our story. Two months later—on February 9, 2022—Howard files a motion for attorney fees, which is odd, since no one has yet prevailed in this case, and it is the winner who is awarded attorney fees. The District responds by filing its opposition. Oddly, “no documents filed in connection with this motion were included in the appellant's appendix on appeal.” 

The hearing on that motion occurred on April 8, 2022. According to Motoike (who is relying mostly on court reporters’ transcripts of the hearing), 

At the hearing, the trial court ...[stated]: "This is the petitioner, Mr. Gensler's motion for attorney fees .... [¶] So this is the case, the writ petition in which I ruled that the cause should be remanded to the respondent for further proceedings in accordance with the Education Code …. [¶] And let me make two points clear right now. [¶] First, it was a remand for further proceedings. It was not a judgment. In other words, at this point we have no idea … who is going to ultimately prevail in this dispute." (Italics added.) 

The trial court continued: "So let me start with a procedural aspect. And that's CCP section 1021.5. [¶] This is a statute that Mr. Gensler has relied on, and it says in its first sentence . . . [¶] 'A successful party' . . . may recover attorney fees . . . 'in any action which has resulted in the enforcement of an important right affecting the public interest.' . . . [¶] I think that's an overstatement at this stage to say that Mr. Gensler's success has been achieved. [¶] His original writ sought two outcomes: [¶] One, his reinstatement as a full-time, tenured faculty member. [¶] And two, reimbursement of the wages that he would have been paid if he were not terminated. [¶] He has not yet achieved any of those two objectives. [¶] The outcome of the hearing before me—or [sic] I simply sent it back to the respondents for consideration of that peer review element. And as far as I know, that's undecided." 

After discussing whether attorney fees might be recoverable in this type of case, the court stated: "I think that those points could be argued at a later stage in the case. [¶] But notice, that third element, that assumes that there is a monetary recovery in the underlying action. Now, that could happen someday. As I say, this case isn't over. Mr. Gensler, if he is successful getting his wages reimbursed again, that might trigger that portion of the statute, but that hasn't happened yet. [¶] So although I'm very happy to hear from you, Mr. Gensler, my tentative ruling is to deny this, at least without prejudice, until we've played out our hand with a remand or if there's an appeal." The trial court later explained to Gensler [that] "what I'm saying is that your dispute has not yet been successfully resolved in your favor." (Italics added.) 

Inexplicably, the appellant's [Gensler’s] appendix contains a document prepared by Gensler entitled "Notice of Entry of Judgment" and dated April 28, 2022 which states: "Please take notice that on March 21, 2022, Orange County Superior Court Judge Derek W. Hunt issued a judgment in the above captioned action…. A true and correct copy of the judgment is attached hereto, together with the December 6, 2021 Statement of Decision…, and a Judicial Comment with a filing date of March 21, 2022…." … The purported "judgment" referenced in Gensler's notice of entry of judgment and identified in the notice as item No. 147 in the register of actions, is a copy of the court's March 21, 2022 minute order, quoted in full ante, which, as explained to Gensler at the April 8 hearing, was not a judgment but an order remanding the matter to respondents to conduct a peer review evaluation for the court's later consideration. 

The appellant's appendix also includes a document that appears to have been created by Gensler that is identified in the appendix's table of contents and in the document's title as "Judgment." That document states [that] three documents—the March 21, 2022 minute order, the court's statement of decision, and also an entry in the register of actions (dated March 21, 2022) stating "'Petition for Writ of Mandate Has Been Granted'"—"constitute the judgment" in this case. 

"[T]he substance and effect of a decision, not the clerk's offered label in the register of actions, is the controlling consideration. [Citation.]" (Natomas Unified School Dist. v. Sacramento County Bd. of Education (2022)….) Here, the cited portion of the register of actions reflects the clerk's understanding that the petition had been granted which is directly in conflict with the trial court's statements regarding the ruling in the matter. 

Gensler filed a notice of appeal from the March 21, 2022 "judgment" [the “minute order”] on June 23, 2022. 

—Appeal of the judgment? Did Howard miss the April 8 hearing in which the absence of a judgment thus far was clearly noted? Why is he so clueless? Is he trying to pull a fast one here or what?

So Howard appeals—what exactly? Hunt’s rejection of Gensler’s motion for fees? Or something broader? As Hunt explains, the larger case has not been decided yet. That awaits implementation of the peer review process. So is the appeal only concerning Hunt’s rejection of Howard’s odd and somewhat inappropriate writ (asking for back pay, attorney fees, etc.)? It seems so. 



PART 4: THE APPEAL (OF THE 2-22 MOTION)

Here’s where Justice Motoike enters the picture. She is tasked with assessing Howard’s March 22 appeal of Hunt’s decision (re the 2-22 motion), not the ALJ’s decision (to find the District’s action of firing Howard faultless). And so this maybe isn’t as big a deal as some might think. 

Motoike identifies the appeal that she is opining upon in this way: “Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, No. 30-2021-01177691, Derek W. Hunt, Judge. Dismissed.” 

It seems to me that Hunt “dismissed” only the writ; as he himself explains, he has offered no judgment about the larger case regarding whether the District acted properly in firing Howard. That’s still out there in Law-Law-Land, it seems, awaiting a decision (by Hunt, I assume). 

In her decision, Justice Motoike provides an overview of governing legal principles in this case. “In general,” she writes, "an adverse ruling in a judicial proceeding is appealable once the trial court renders a final judgment.” But no final judgment has been rendered in this case. 

She next cites Dhillon v. John Muir Health

The question presented in Dhillon, supra, … was whether the trial court's order on a petition for writ of administrative mandamus was a final judgment. The Supreme Court explained: "We have previously recognized that a judgment is final, and therefore appealable, '"'when it terminates the litigation between the parties on the merits of the case and leaves nothing to be done but to enforce by execution what has been determined.'"' [Citations.] '"It is not the form of the decree but the substance and effect of the adjudication which is determinative. As a general test, which must be adapted to the particular circumstances of the individual case, it may be said that where no issue is left for future consideration except the fact of compliance or noncompliance with the terms of the first decree, that decree is final, but where anything further in the nature of judicial action on the part of the court is essential to a final determination of the rights of the parties, the decree is interlocutory."' [Citations.] 'We long have recognized a "well- established policy, based upon the remedial character of the right of appeal, of according that right in doubtful cases 'when such can be accomplished without doing violence to applicable rules.'"' [Citation.]" (Ibid.)

 . . . 

The Supreme Court in Dhillon observed the Court of Appeal's dismissal order "deepened a long-standing conflict concerning the appealability of a trial court's order, on a petition for writ of administrative mandamus, remanding the matter for further proceedings before the administrative body." (Dhillon, supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 1113.) The Supreme Court concluded: "[F]ocusing on the nature of the particular remand order before us, similar considerations lead us to conclude that the superior court's order partially granting Dr. Dhillon's writ petition was an appealable final judgment." (Id. at p. 1116, fn. omitted.) …. 

Eventually, Justice Motoike presents her reasoning in the Gensler case: 

Applying Dhillon to the …[present] case, we conclude the trial court's order remanding the matter to respondents to conduct a peer review evaluation did not constitute an appealable order. Here, in the petition containing six causes of action, Gensler sought the issuance of a writ under section 1094.5 of the Code of Civil Procedure ordering the Board to reinstate him as a full-time tenured faculty member of Saddleback College and to reimburse him for lost wages and benefits. 

Unlike the trial court in Dhillon, the trial court here did not rule on the merits of the petition. The trial court did not decide whether the petition should be granted or denied and has not yet otherwise granted or denied any item of relief Gensler sought in the petition—e.g., the court has yet to decide whether or not Gensler is entitled to reinstatement and/or backpay. Although Gensler had complained in the petition's first cause of action the respondents had not conducted a peer review evaluation, his position was that such an omission resulted in respondents' lack of jurisdiction to terminate his employment. He did not request a remand for a peer review evaluation to be conducted—that was the trial court's idea, ostensibly to collect more information to confirm what will be its ultimate ruling on the petition. In the conclusion of its statement of decision, the trial court states: "And so the court, although in its independent judgment is content with most of the conclusions of the ALJ, believes those conclusions must be reevaluated following a statutory peer review process ...." (Italics added.) In other words, the trial court stated it had reached some tentative conclusions but still needed to reevaluate those conclusions pending receipt of further information gleaned from the peer review evaluation on remand. 

At the April 8, 2022 hearing on Gensler's motion for attorney fees, the trial court expressly stated its order remanding the matter "was not a judgment" and "at this time we have no idea at this stage who is going to ultimately prevail in this dispute." According to the trial court itself, all issues remained open and undecided until after the peer review evaluation was completed. 

. . . 

In short, the trial court's remand order failed the "'"general test, which must be adapted to the particular circumstances of the individual case"'" as set forth in Dhillon—"'"it may be said that where no issue is left for future consideration except the fact of compliance or noncompliance with the terms of the first degree, that decree is final…. [holding trial court's ruling on petition for writ of administrative mandate was not a final judgment under the Dhillon standard and thus not appealable because it "neither ordered the full substantive relief that the District sought—including the District's requested '[j]udgment ordering the [County Board] to set aside the Decision'-nor resolved all issues except the fact of compliance or noncompliance. 

The trial court's order therefore is not appealable. Consequently, we lack jurisdiction, and the appeal must be dismissed

DISPOSITION 

The appeal is dismissed. Respondents to recover costs on appeal. 

WE CONCUR: GOETHALS, ACTING P.J. SANCHEZ, J. 


I think we should look carefully at the agendas of the next few meetings of the SOCCCD Board of Trustees. This isn’t over yet.

See also this


UPDATE: 

P.S. [9-19]: one document I came across online seems to suggest that there will be a hearing on the 20th of September. "Remittitur."

P.P.S. [9-24]: the aforementioned document now reads "Remittitur issued." 
According to Google:

["Remittitur" is] Latin for “to send back, to remit.” The purpose of remittitur is to give a trial court the ability, with the plaintiff's consent, to correct an inequitable damage award or verdict without having to order a new trial.

I suppose this means that we're right back to: the ball's in the district's court; provide peer review of Gensler. —After that is accomplished, presumably, the case will be brought back to court for a decision. Am I right? "Chemo brain" makes me doubt myself, but I think I am at least approximately or essentially correct.

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"Learning styles" debunked 24 Sep 2023 2:25 PM (last year)

 

     The degree to which the education community—even the higher education community—accepts trendy, unscientific codswallop is stunning, and disturbing. 
     Remember the "whole language" vs. "phonics" battle, starting in the 50s? The long-discredited "whole language" approach is still insisted upon in much of K-12 and it infests college instruction to a degree as well. See Systematic rational failures and SLOs: part I (DtB). See also Cut the politics. Phonics is the best way to teach reading.  (Washington Post editorial board; March 11, 2023)
     The sad truth is that many educators have no understanding of the notion of evidence or scientific method.

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The John Eastman blues 24 Sep 2023 2:08 PM (last year)


What you need to know about John Eastman’s 2020 election charges
 

Politics; PBS Newshour 

Sep 21, 2023

What does the Fulton County indictment allege

The indictment released on Aug. 14 charges Trump and 18 alleged conspirators under Georgia’s RICO law, which is often used to prosecute criminal organizations. In addition, Eastman faces other conspiracy counts related to forgery, impersonating a public officer and filing false documents. 

The indictment alleges that Eastman, along with other Trump associates, contacted state officials in Arizona and Georgia whom they pressured to unlawfully appoint alternate slates of presidential electors who would vote in favor of Trump, in “an overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy.” 

… 

What does Trump’s federal indictment allege

Eastman is believed to be “co-conspirator 2” in the federal indictment brought by special counsel Jack Smith at the beginning of August. .Prosecutors describe this conspirator as “an attorney who devised and attempted to implement a strategy to leverage the Vice President’s ceremonial role overseeing the certification proceeding to obstruct the certification of the presidential election.” 

The indictment from the Department of Justice says co-conspirator 2 encouraged lawmakers in certain states to decertify legitimate electors. It also alleges that in late December 2020, the individual “circulated a two-page memorandum outlining a plan for the Vice President to unlawfully declare [Trump] the certified winner of the presidential election,” while also acknowledging that his proposal would violate the Electoral Count Act. .Eastman was also a primary focus of the House Jan. 6 committee’s investigation in June 2022. Under a subpoena to testify, he responded to nearly 150 questions by pleading the Fifth Amendment, according to CNN. Similarly, in 2022, Eastman pleaded the Fifth Amendment during the Fulton County special grand jury investigation that led to the recent Georgia indictment…. 

See article 


See also: 

  1. The historical John Eastman  (DtB)
  2. "Orderly transition" (the misadventures of Orange County's own John Eastman) (DtB)
  3. 8-18: Chapman faculty slam John Eastman (DtB)
  4. To be followed by a fine minstrel show (DtB)
  5. Matt Coker on Don and Tom (DtB)

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Hank finishes chemo 14 Sep 2023 1:03 PM (last year)

 

This fellow isn't me, Roy Bauer, of course, but he will be very familiar to educators because of his omnipresent "Crash Course" YouTube videos and similar productions. Hank Green got cancer a while back and has just finished his chemo infusions.

His cancer seems to be more serious than mine, though my chemo has taken much longer (nearly 6 months). My treatment—involving 6 cycles—was paused for a month and a half because "my blood hates the chemo." as my oncologist likes to say.

I think Hank's remarks are very helpful in communicating what it's like to go through chemo. His experiences have been—and continue to be—very similar to my own.

I now have a bad cold (I think)—came down with it during a recent stay at Hoag Irvine Emergency (I suffered critically low hemoglobin and received a transfusion)—and it remains to be seen what that will mean, given that I am so immunocompromised. Chemo patients are sitting ducks.

I tested for Covid today and at least I don't have that. Whew!

Hang in there, everybody!

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One bad day 6 Sep 2023 10:12 PM (last year)


Most days are pretty good, but nausea has been closing in, slowly, day by day, mostly in the background—until this morning, when it arrived, full frontal.

I woke up feeling like something that was dragged around town in a sack behind an old Chevy. I could barely function. 

Wasn't sure if Nikki, my housekeeper, was gonna show up—went ahead and boldly took a shower anyway. It was all I could do to stand there, dry myself off, drag myself down the hall.

Nikki showed up around 9:00 I guess—but I hadn’t noticed. I just wandered back into the kitchen area, nearly blind from dizziness and low blood sugar. I very nearly fell on my ass.

But Nikki was there, saw the whole thing.  She looked worried. "What's up?" she seemed to say. 

“I don’t know why I’m so messed up this morning,” I said. I stumbled toward the refrigerator for something wet.

“Good morning,” I said. 

The boy, hangin' by the old water tower

I had an appointment with my eye doctor at 10:00 a.m. Plus I got a note from Ruby at the district that I neglected to pay my WEX (some kind of med insurance) bill. I barely managed to write those checks. Could barely see 'em.

"Gotta get my act together here," I muttered. 

Wobbled out the door, and started the car. Driving to Irvine. A highly dubious project. 

“Why don’t you cancel!” yelled Nikki.

Nope. Gonna do this thing. Nobody can stop me now. 

Stubborn; stupid. I do that.

Got to Dr. D's in Irvine all right and went through the hideous gauntlet: eyes poked and prodded and shined into, talked at, prescription written, glasses chosen, consulted with Dr. Dusenberg (or whatever his name is, I dunno anymore). It was pretty tedious, but I was civil. Felt like shit on a stick. Smiled pleasantly, mostly. Hoped for it to all to end, but it dragged on.

I finally got out of there, and squeezed myself into my little Lexus under the trees, by the fake lake. Alas, I was blinded by the infernal eye drops and sunlight. My vision was so bad, I pulled into Karl's just to get my bearings. Got some French Fries. Waited. My vision only got worse. 

Had to mail that WEX payment. Drove to the post office (just down the street, on Sand Canyon); could barely see the damned building. Opened the door for some lady carrying boxes. Managed to drive home in one piece before noon. I reached my goal! I'm done!

"So now you're gonna crash?" asked/asserted Nikki as I shuffled past her and off to my bed. "Yeah," I said. "I'm done."


Teddy (my cat) followed. He complained like he does. Lights out.

Just woke up. It’s 2:30. Nikki’s gone, I guess. Still feel like warmed over roadkill, but a little better. 

Checked my blood pressure: perfect. Don’t seem to be dying or anything. 

Sister Annie's parked outside in her Toyota using my Wifi (that's been goin' on for weeks; I hate AT&T). 

Teddy’s sleeping in Sunny's old spot [former cat] way in the back room. I guess he decided not to sleep with his old dad, that unpleasant lump.

Feeling a bit better, I just went back to sleep. 

It's not so bad. It'll do. 

Just one bad diner along the long Chemo Highway. The one bad stop.

All is well then! 

John Sturges was hired as director in June 1954 and shooting began the following month near Lone Pine, California, where the small town set had been quickly constructed. (Wikipedia)

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