Pat Brown's California takes a beating in Sacramento

Forty-two years after Pat Brown left office and 13 years after he died, his California took quite a beating last week.

The visionary governor swept into office in 1959, and by the time he was swept out eight years later, he had created the 16-dam, multiple-aqueduct state water project, devised the three-tier college and university system, constructed nine major campuses and built more than 1,000 miles of freeways to connect regions of his burgeoning state. To this day, much of what gets us where we are going -- literally and figuratively -- stems from what he did in his two terms.

It was hard not to think of that era last week as his successor, Arnold Schwarzenegger, and the Legislature agreed to a plan to deal with the state's $26-billion deficit, mostly by cutting the kinds of programs Brown championed.