Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

tuesday, february 27th

You know, lots of times I mention things here just because people ask me to and I’m a nice guy that way believe it or not. Most of the time, I never actually go to any of it. But I must say that I actually left the confines of my home last week and went to the Songwriters Showcase with the Memphis Troubadours at the Flying Saucer, and I must say it was very, very good. I highly recommend it, especially if one Bobby Memphis is singing.

Categories
News The Fly-By

POP CULTURE PRESS

Okay, I ll be the first to admit. Sometimes we do some silly things here at the Flyer. Heckfire, the pesky Fly is certainly responsible for more than his fair share of the silliness. But when the CA, our mighty daily up and does something just plain odd (on purpose anyway) it s a little bit disconcerting. This past Sunday, not one, but two regular columnists burned a fair amount of column space by quoting familiar TV theme songs. Religion columnist David Walters, showed great restraint by quoting only the first verse of the Beverly Hillbillies theme, while Captain Comics quoted the theme to Wonder Woman in it s entirety.

But who can blame them? They re just good old boys, wouldn t change if they could, fightin the system like two modern day Robin Hoods.

Categories
Art Art Feature

PAST TENSE

It’s been 38 years since dynamite killed Denise McNair, Carole Robertson, Addie Mae Collins, and Cynthia Wesley in Birmingham, Alabama; 37 years since members of the Ku Klux Klan shot and killed James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner in Philadelphia, Mississippi; 36 years since a lone gunman shot and killed Jon Daniels outside a rural grocery in Lowndes County, Alabama; and 35 years since fire bombs hit the home of Vernon Dahmer near Hattiesburg, Mississippi, leading soon after to Dahmer’s death.

Dahmer was a middle-aged black businessman and landowner respected by blacks and whites alike. Daniels, age 26, was a white seminarian originally from Vermont. Chaney, 20, was a black from Meridian; Goodman, 20, and Schwerner, 23, were whites from New York. All five participated in the Freedom Summer of 1964, and all, for that reason alone, were objects of suspicion, potential targets of white violence.

Denise, Carole, Addie Mae, and Cynthia were not local civil rights activists, however, nor were they “outside agitators” acting on conscience and publicly calling for an end to bigotry. They were, on September 13, 1963, four girls in their early teens in Sunday school at the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham. But their church had been the starting point the previous April for a march led by Martin Luther King Jr., and when dynamite ripped through its foundation, the blast blew their Sunday best from their backs.

Who was directly responsible for these crimes? Initial investigations on top of reopened investigations over the past several decades have identified the guilty, overturned in some cases innocent verdicts, and put those guilty behind bars. But several new books — one memoir, one biography, a photography collection, and two major histories — depict more than the well-covered events enacted by equally well-known players. Together they concentrate on individual figures, some known, some not-so-known, who shaped or were shaped by the uncivil Sixties South.

One of those not-so-knowns was a minister named Robert Marsh, who moved his family from the relative quiet of southernmost Alabama in the spring of 1967 to become pastor of the First Baptist Church of Laurel, Mississippi. This was a plum assignment for an up-and-coming “Man of God, revered by everyone who knew him for his preaching and teaching and spiritual insight,” a Man of God equipped as well with the build of a line-backer and “killer good looks.” The words are those of Marsh’s son Charles, who in The Last Days: A Son’s Story of Sin and Segregation at the Dawn of the New South (Basic Books) tells of just how unquiet Laurel’s corner of Mississippi was in 1967, especially unquiet if a pastor so much as questioned his white congregation’s basic stand on race. And it was Bob Marsh’s basic stand too until two events drove him near to breakdown: his handing of the Jaycee of the Year award to a man who within the hour was arrested for killing Vernon Dahmer; and his subsequent talk with a black minister in Laurel who gave Bob Marsh a lesson in the price paid for taking an honest stand. But the book is more: an especially close look at the fine-tunings of racism within a single, extended, Southern family — from the author’s grandfather, Kenneth Toler, who “dared to tell Jim Crow’s dirty secrets” as a reporter covering Mississippi politics for The Commercial Appeal, to an uncle in Kosciusko who helped found that town’s virulent Citizen’s Council.

Any wonder, then, that Bob Marsh, on the invitation of Green Acres star and Laurel native Tommy Lester, preached to Jesus freaks for a few weeks north of San Francisco? Laurel had changed him, California changed him, and Bob Marsh (along with the political gains of blacks in the South generally) helped change Laurel upon his return. Author Charles Marsh, professor of religion at the University of Virginia, changed too — into directing the “Project on Lived Theology,” a topic his father taught him even as his father perhaps scarcely realized it.

Lived theology took a life-ending turn, however, in 1965, in Alabama, in the person of Jon Daniels, subject of Charles Eagles’ recently republished Outside Agitator (University of Alabama Press). A child of New England Congregationalist parents, the quiet, bookish Daniels hardened himself at the Virginia Military Institute, quit Harvard as an English graduate student his first year, and turned his sights to the priesthood when he entered the Episcopal Theological School in Cambridge, Massachusetts. There his training required work with the inner-city poor, and there, in the spring of 1965, he heeded Martin Luther King’s call for clergy to march from Selma to Montgomery. And it was in Alabama that Daniels mostly remained — registering black voters, integrating churches, manning protest lines — until August, when he and other demonstrators (including Stokely Carmichael) were arrested in the town of Fort Deposit for marching without a permit.

The mayor was advised to release them, but he could not advise Tom Coleman, who encountered Daniels, along with the Catholic priest Richard Morrisroe and two black women also serving as civil rights workers. Outside a grocery near Hayneville, Coleman pulled out a shotgun, fired on Daniels, who died instantly, and fired on Morrisroe, hitting him in the back, an injury from which he eventually recovered. An all-male, all-white jury took 1 hour, 31 minutes to find Coleman not guilty of manslaughter. The defendant, the jury informed the court, was understandably acting in self-defense against two churchmen Coleman alleged were armed

In 1994, the Episcopal church officially made Daniels a martyr of the church and added his name to its Calendar of Lesser Feasts and Fasts. And in the Chapel of Saints and Martyrs of Our Own Time at Canterbury Cathedral, his name appears alongside Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Martin Luther King Jr., and Archbishop Oscar Romero. This for a man Charles Eagles in his thoroughly researched and equally troubling Outside Agitator calls “a civil rights activist who was not a leader.” What Eagles means is a self-knowing leader in his own eyes in his own time. But T.S. Eliot, with eternity in mind, called a martyrdom “a design of God, for his love of men, to warn them and to lead them, to bring them back to his ways.” Make God, then, the designer; Jon Daniels, the non-knowing means back to God’s ways. (And if this makes Tom Coleman an unwitting tool, you are welcome to your beliefs.)

A year before Daniels’ murder, the look, the black and white look of civil rights volunteers from North and South, you can find in the photographs by Herbert Randall in Faces of Freedom Summer (University of Alabama Press). Published here are a handful of the 1,759 negatives Randall’s camera generated thanks to a fellowship which enabled him to spend a year creating a photographic essay on black life, an essay, thanks to the urging of Sandy Leigh, Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee field secretary, Randall centered on the committee’s work that summer in Mississippi, Hattiesburg in particular.

Randall’s end-products were negatives not even he had thought to print until a University of Southern Mississippi staff photographer went to work producing them for the school’s archives and an exhibition in 1999. And what the resulting photographs lack in polish they make up for in immediacy: whether it’s Pete Seeger smarting under the glare of a Southern sun, Vernon Dahmer topped in a pith helmet and instructing Northern volunteers on the anatomy of a cotton plant, Rabbi Arthur Lelyveld’s blood-stained head and shirt, or Sandy Leigh’s anxious expression during a community center get-together in Palmer’s Crossing — an expression denoting full knowledge that Chaney, Goodman, and Schwerner had disappeared. Did Leigh know or not know then that on August 4th their bodies would be found?

What he certainly did know was Birmingham 1963, “Magic City” turned “Bombingham,” and King’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail.” What we now know, thanks to S. Jonathan Bass’ Blessed Are the Peacemakers (Louisiana State University Press), is not only a textual analysis of that landmark document but the lives of the men to whom it was ostensibly, though not formally, addressed: the eight city clergymen who had called on King, in print, to follow a gradualist course of action in order to safeguard the nation from what they sincerely feared to be guaranteed acts of further violence. But it was King who changed these clergy to varying degrees, not the clergy who changed King, and none more so than then Catholic bishop of Alabama Joseph A. Durick, soon to be bishop of Tennessee and, as events in Memphis would prove, the greatest risk-taker of the group. Bass focuses squarely on these men, respectfully: their careers, their ministries, their heartfelt beliefs, their sense of justice applied and misapplied, what they stood to gain and loose, what they owed to the culture that produced them. What history makes of them isn’t Bass’ job because a history this comprehensive has yet to be written.

Just as no future history of Birmingham the city can now do without Carry Me Home: Birmingham, Alabama: The Climactic Battle of the Civil Rights Revolution (Simon and Schuster), the product of 15 years of research by New York Times reporter and privileged daughter of Birmingham society Diane McWhorter. Privilege blinded the author’s eyes to much as a 10-year-old in 1963, as sheer or willed ignorance did to privileged and unprivileged alike throughout much of Birmingham’s story. But with close to 600 pages of highly readable text and 70 pages of microscopically sized notes, it will be impossible not to cite McWhorter in future books on the period and place. From anti-unionizer industrialists to nascent Communist cells, from tough-as-nails Dixiecrats to New Dealer sympathizers, from prominent city politicos and white-shoe lawyers to Ku Klux Klanners and the truly psychopathic fringe, from hardhead City Commissioner Bull Connor to equally hard-headed civil rights leader Fred Shuttlesworth, from Hoover’s FBI to Kennedy’s White House, there was hardly room for King to engineer the publicity he needed to restore his flagging image, and “engineer” is the right word for King’s tactics, as both Bass and McWhorter leave us without doubt.

Whenever McWhorter questions her own father’s capacity for trash-talk and his knowledge of explosives, however, the view in Carry Me Home presents a truly chilling prospect, one even Vulcan, Birmingham’s good god on Red Mountain, can’t warm. Trust then to the arm of justice, not to the arm of a torch-bearing god: In May 2000, two longtime, still-living suspects in the deaths of Denise McNair, Carole Robertson, Addie Mae Collins, and Cynthia Wesley were indicted by a state grand jury and turned themselves in to Birmingham’s county jail. The charge: murder. No bond.

Categories
News News Feature

FIGHTING WORDS TURN TO BLUSTER, BACKTRACKING

The fight between Alabama football booster Logan Young and University of Tennessee booster Roy H. Adams has turned into a farce, at least temporarily, as both men backtracked this week.

Young, who said earlier he plans to sue Adams for alleged defamatory comments on the Internet, now says he will wait until the NCAA finishes the investigation of the Alabama football program announced Thursday.

If the investigation leaves him and Alabama unscarred, as Young hopes it will, then he may not “stir it all up again” with a libel suit, Young said. Many skeptics have doubted all along that Young would follow through. In a radio interview with theFlyer last week, Birmingham Post-Herald sports columnist Paul Finebaum said Young is “famous for threatening to sue.”

If so, the threat seems to have gotten the attention of Adams, the Memphis booster known as “Tennstud” on the Internet. He posted messages this week suggesting someone else used his computer to say those bad things about Young.

“In fact, my computer is in an open area in my library and numerous friends have lurked and some have even posted using my name,” he said in one Internet message on the gridscape site. “Under gridscape, tacked to a shelf, I have left on an index card my pass word for gridscape!”

Fellow posters greeted this with a razzing (“As the Dud backstrokes,” began one), giving the whole bizarre affair the tone of a schoolyard shoving match between two boys who don’t really want to fight while the crowd eggs them on.

In an interview with the Flyer, Adams confirmed that he wrote the mystery poster posting.

“I’ve been real careful in making posts about the Memphis situation that I didn’t use his (Young’s) name in a defamatory or mean-spirited manner,” said Adams. “I’ve tried to be careful not to open myself to any libel or defamation suits.”

Young’s lawyer, Louis Allen, said Friday he is “still looking into all aspects and going ahead with our investigation.” Former Shelby County District Attorney General John Pierotti, now in private practice, is also working for Young.

Young has been repeatedly mentioned in Internet postings and news reports in connection with an alleged $200,000 payment to high school football coach Lynn Lang for delivering player Albert Means to Alabama. Young and Lang have denied that there was any such payment.

The source of the allegation is former coach Milton Kirk. According to Adams, Kirk blurted out the story last October to a crowd of people, including Adams.

“I know a dozen or more people heard it that night,” Adams said, but it was January before Kirk went public with his story in The Commercial Appeal. There has been speculation that Adams paid Kirk to put the story out in order to hurt Alabama’s recruiting, but he denies it.

“The only advice I have ever given Kirk was to keep it quiet, and that shows how much influence I have on him,” said Adams.

Adams even disavowed his now infamous nickname. He said he is an old-school newspaper buff and, as a novice Web surfer, tried several other Internet handles before choosing “Tennstud” after the Doc Watson tune about a horse.

“I hate that damn name more than anyone knows,” he said. “I am short, fat, ugly, old, and balding and anything but a Tennessee stud.”

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

monday, february 26th

And yet another art opening. This evening s is at Rhodes College s Hyde Hall for The Century Project by Frank Cordelle. And then there s always that deejay night at Melange. There’ll be some other interesting things taking place there soon. More later.

Categories
News The Fly-By

AL GORE’S ALBATROSS

The number one sign Bill Clinton doesn’t give a damn:

Sits in the back of Al Gore’s journalism class screaming, “Loser!”

From Friday’s Top Ten list on The Late Show with David Letterman.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

TIGERS TAME BULLS

The University of Memphis started the final week of the regular season by beating South Florida 79-61 before 13,118 at The Pyramid and a national television audience on ESPN2. The victory gives the Tigers the number-one record in Conference USA (10-4) going into the final two games of the regular season. Memphis leads four teams tied for second — Cincinnati, Marquette, Southern Miss and South Florida (all with 9-5 league records) — by one full game.

Senior Shannon Forman had 19 points to lead the Tigers on Senior Night. Kelly Wise had his 12th double-double of the season with 14 points and 11 rebounds. South Florida shot just 34 percent from the field. Memphis hit 48 percent.

The Tigers jumped to a 15-1 lead to start the game and were never seriously threatened by USF after that. Memphis is now 16-11 for the season with two games remaining (at Southern Miss Wednesday and at Louisville Saturday).

“I am just so happy for our seniors and what they have been able to do and accomplish through adversity,” head coach John Calipari said after the games. The four seniors — Marcus Moody, Shyrone Chatman, Shamel Jones, and Forman — were introduced individually before the game. Calipari presented each of the players with a framed photograph before taking the microphone and addressing the crowd (17,596 paid). He said the players had overcome great adversity in their basketball career, referring to the Tic Price scandal and having to play for three different coaches.

Following the game, Calipari continued to talk up Memphis’ NCAA tournament chances. He pointed out that his team had just won 12 of its last 15 games.

“I’m watching all these other teams, and I know what we are,” he said. Later, on his post-game radio show, Calapari said he thought his team was among the 30 best in the country.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

FOGELMAN CENTER STAFF “OUTSOURCED”

Despite concerns expressed by clients and University of Memphis staff members, Dean John Pepin of the University of Memphis Fogelman College of Business and Economics insists that the Fogelman Executive Conference Center (FECC) must be outsourced, along with the soon-to-open Wilson School of Hospitality and Resort Management and the FedEx Emerging Technology Complex.

The FECC, which is used by such companies as St. Jude ChildrenÕs Research Hospital, FedEx, International Paper, and the Shelby County Board of Education as a conferencing and corporate training facility, was established 14 years ago as a nonprofit educational outreach to the community.

Pepin says that the Fogelman College of Business and Economics is hard pressed to cover any FECC deficits, caused in part by university-required contracts for housekeeping and food services and by recent renovations to the 51 hotel rooms in the FECC. As a solution, the FECC staff and operations may be outsourced to a management company.

Several longtime clients have expressed their concerns about the changeover. CREDO’s Debbie Burnette, speculates that the costs will increase while the quality of service declines.

One training director of a major Memphis organization, who spoke under the condition of anonymity, says, “I do not see a for-profit organization managing with the same quality, customer service, and focus on the training and education community of Memphis as is presently done. Therefore I hope that the decision will not be made to sell off a very valuable community asset. That is more than the building. It is the focused service that makes the difference.”

The FECC, which currently is booked ahead as far as 2003, had more than $2 million in revenue last year and regularly receives glowing evaluation reports of the services and staff. Current employees have not been guaranteed a position upon outsourcing and will no longer receive university benefits, such as free enrollment in classes.

Employees of the FECC have asked that the decision be postponed until Shirley Raines, the new U of M president, takes office in May and has a chance to review the situation.

Three companies have submitted bids to manage the facilities. Among them is Wilson Management, spearheaded by Kemmons Wilson, founder of the Holiday Inn Corporation, whose donation built the Wilson School of Hospitality and Resort Management.

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

sunday, february 25th

If you haven’t been in a while to one of the nicest places in Memphis, go to the National Ornamental Metal Museum for this afternoon’s preview reception of A Double-Edged Weapon: The Sword as Icon and Artifact. Today’s other art function is an opening reception at the U of M s Fogelman Executive Center for Kindred, an exhibit of black-and-white photographs of Tennesseans with disabilities.

Categories
News News Feature

ENVIRONMENTALIST DONELLA MEADOWS DIES

Hartland, VT — Donella Meadows, 59, of Hartland Four Corners, Vermont, died Tuesday at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in Hanover, New Hampshire, after a brief illness. She was an Adjunct Professor at Dartmouth College and Director of the Sustainability Institute with headquarters in Hartland. In addition, Meadows was a frequent freelance contributor to The Memphis Flyer.

Meadows was born March 13, 1941 in Elgin, Illinois, and trained as a scientist, earning a B.A. in chemistry from Carleton College in 1963 and a Ph.D. in biophysics from Harvard University in 1968.

She taught at Dartmouth College from 1972 until her death. She was on the faculty of the interdisciplinary Environmental Studies Program and the graduate program of the Resource Policy Center. In 1983 she resigned her tenured professorship to devote more time to international activities and writing. She retained an Adjunct

Professorship at Dartmouth, teaching environmental journalism and,

more recently, environmental ethics.

In 1972 Meadows was on the team at Massachusetts Institute of Technology that produced the global computer model “World3” for the Club of Rome. She was the principal author of the book The Limits to Growth, which described that model, and sold millions of copies in 28 languages. In 1991 she collaborated with her co-authors, Dennis Meadows and Jorgen Randers, on a twenty-year update to The Limits to Growth, called Beyond the Limits. She was also co-author of two technical books, published in 1973 and 1974 by the MIT Press, Toward Global Equilibrium and The Dynamics of Growth in a Finite World.

Her column was awarded second place in the 1985 Champion-Tuck national competition for outstanding journalism in the fields of business and economics. Meadows also received the Walter C. Paine Science Education Award in 1990 and was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in 1991. Selected columns were published in 1991 as a book, also called The Global Citizen.

In 1991 Meadows was selected as one of ten Pew Scholars in Conservation and the Environment. Her three-year award supported her international work in resource management with a systems point of view. In 1994 she was awarded a five-year MacArthur Fellowship by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.

Meadows lived for 27 years on a small, communal, organic farm in Plainfield, New Hampshire, where she worked at sustainable resource management directly. In 1999 she moved to Cobb Hill in Hartland Four Corners, Vermont. There she worked with others to found an eco-village, maintain an organic farm, and establish headquarters for the Sustainability Institute. Development of both the co-housing village and the Institute will continue.

Donella Meadows’ mother, Phoebe Quist, has referred to her daughter as an “earth missionary.” Meadows described herself in light-hearted Website profiles as “an opinionated columnist, perpetual fund-raiser, fanatic gardener, opera-lover, baker, farmer, teacher and global gadfly.”

Donella Meadows is survived by her mother of Tahlequah, Oklahoma, her father, Don Hager of Palatine, Illinois, a brother, Jason Hager, of Waterford, Wisconsin, and cousins and nephews.

A memorial service will be announced at a later date. Memorial donations may be made to The Sustainability Institute or to Cobb Hill Cohousing, both at P.O. Box 174, Hartland Four CorCorners, VT 05049.