Reviewing the clips that survived the cut
JOSEPH N. BELL
I have a large manila envelope into which I stuff clippings from the
news that I think might make column fodder. When that envelope gets
too full, I dump it out, throw away or file the clips that are badly
dated, and start over again. Here are some of the items that survived
the latest cuts.
History teacher Dan Granite at Corona del Mar High School got into
predictable trouble by showing his seventh-grade history class an
R-rated theatrical movie about Joan of Arc recently. I haven’t seen
the movie, so I can’t attest to its historical accuracy, but that
wasn’t the main concern of the parental complaints, which focused on
scenes of graphic sex and violence. Sort of like “The OC” television
show.
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District Board of Trustees acted
with admirable speed to ban “R” rated movies from our public school
classrooms. But as long as the board is having a look at such
matters, I would suggest the members consider historical accuracy, as
well.. The only time I can remember having a real go with a teacher
was when my youngest daughter told me about a movie she had just seen
in her high school history class -- also at Corona del Mar -- in
which every country in the world to the left of J. Edgar Hoover was
painted bright red as communist, with new candidates blinking
ominously for entrance in the background.
I asked the teacher if this film was being shown as an example of
political propaganda, which would have been fine with me. When he
assured me it was being taught as factually accurate, I demanded and
got a review of the film by school authorities, and it was banished.
But a lot of other movies that were less politically motivated but
just as inaccurate continued to be shown. God knows, for example, how
many American kids got their information about Gen. George Custer
from Errol Flynn’s portrayal of him in “Custer’s Last Stand.” Or of
the Vietnam War from “The Deer Hunter.”
I once watched a heated and acrimonious debate in the press room
at the Academy Awards between Jane Fonda -- who had just won the best
actress award for “Coming Home” -- and Michael Cimino, whose “The
Deer Hunter” had just won best picture. Fonda was furious with Cimino
for the liberties he had taken with well-established truth about
Vietnam. Cimino didn’t deny the inaccuracies but rather defended them
on the basis of creative freedom. For that reason alone, I would urge
school officials to concern themselves not only with pillage and rape
but at least minimal accuracy in the filmed history shown our kids.
*
I’ve read so many dozens of letters and editorials, pro and con,
about the expansion of St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church that I’ve
decided I may be the only person in Newport-Mesa left without an
emotional investment in this issue. The facts are pretty simple. No
one, to my knowledge, has denied the good works generated by this
church or the value of the activities that would be added. Nor does
anyone deny that the addition would cause problems. There is some
debate about the severity of the increase in traffic and congestion
that would result, but not in their existence. So, only two questions
seem to me really relevant: first, are the benefits the expansion
would bring sufficient to negate the problems they would cause the
current residents; and, second, should the addition be forced on the
residents if that remains the only option?
I would answer “no” to both questions. There is no way to
compromise this issue. Any addition is certain to add problems to
what is already a congested area, and there is no compelling reason
the people who live there should be required to take this burden on,
no matter how socially useful it might be. The parking improvements
suggested by the church could be a different matter. Even if -- as
expansion opponents insist -- they are part of a conspiracy for the
church to get a foot in the expansion door, couldn’t they be made
contingent on the denial of expansion?
*
There appear to be many more layers in the elimination of the Job
Center by the Costa Mesa City Council. The reasons being given for
this action by the three-man majority may only scratch the surface of
deeper motivations. For example, it seems odd for a council that
found it expedient to pay a $750,000 settlement to a disgruntled
employee to cite economy as a reason for torpedoing a Job Center that
costs the city only a small fraction of that amount -- especially
when increased police protection would eat up much of the savings.
Before he became mayor, Allan Mansoor wrote on the Pilot’s Forum
page: “If you continue to increase spending on government social
programs, how is that fiscally conservative?” The fine performance of
the Job Center stands as a firm answer to that question. It was
created in the first place to fill a social need the private sector
didn’t serve. There’s no reason to believe that the private sector
will fill that need if the Job Center is axed.
*
Finally, my favorite place to take cynical visitors, the Nixon
Museum in Yorba Linda, has finally decided to play by the rules, join
up with the official presidential library system and put the Nixon
papers under the control of the National Archives. This supposedly
will mean that such confections as the smoking gun tape, which had
been doctored beyond recognition, will now tell it like it was
instead of how the loyal Nixonites wanted to convince visitors that
it happened.
Like Nixon, himself, the people running the library aren’t going
down without a fight. A symposium was recently scheduled there in
which an array of esteemed scholars, including some critics of
Nixon’s presidency, were going to deal honestly with Nixon’s record
during the Vietnam war. The symposium never happened. Library
officials canceled it on the grounds that tickets weren’t selling
well enough, but there are some deep suspicions that the real reason
was that the Nixon image wasn’t going to fare well under the new
rules.
It’s clearly going to be a rocky transition, and I find myself
feeling sorry to see the museum trying to go straight after all these
years. It won’t be nearly as much fun to show my out-of-town guests.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.