Sunday, March 18, 2007

for 19 MAR 07: A TWITCH IN TIME



At about 8:30 Sunday night, the tremors in part of my body were nine minutes apart. They were slight, but they were noticeable. And no, they had nothing to do with my old college making it to the "Sweet 16" in college basketball.



For the last year or two, I've detected slight occasional shaking in my left little finger. It might occur off and on for a few days, then go away. But in the last couple of weeks, the shaking began to occur on a regular basis - a couple of seconds at a time, about once a minute. It was as if a muscle in my left hand was pretending to be an air drill on a big-city street.



The small tremors were happening so regularly that I began to grow concerned. So I asked a nurse about it, in the church congregation I attend. The first thing which crossed my mind was the start of Parkinson's Disease -- yet I'd never stood that close to Mayor Pro-Tem Evelyn Turner Pugh.



The nurse guessed my twitching was something other than Parkinson's Disease. It could be nothing, she said -- or it could be the lack of something in my diet. She was unsure what the exact deficiency was, but thought it might be magnesium. They don't seem to put this in underarm antiperspirant, the way they once did.



"Have you had any changes in your diet?" the nurse asked. Well, my chocolate input had increased a bit in recent weeks. But I don't chant to myself "choc-late" during three-mile runs as I did long ago.



The nurse suggested I see a doctor about the twitching - and therein lay a problem. In almost ten years in Columbus, I've hardly ever visited a doctor. Only a couple of health situations had called for it - and you know, maybe Phenix Regional Hospital closed because everyone in Russell County kept themselves in shape.



I decided to wait a few days to see if the twitching would disappear - only it didn't. In fact, it seemed to spread to the bottom part of my left hand. If I didn't see an expert soon, before long I might be a walking earthquake.



A check of the WebMD web site for "finger twitching" found my fears of Parkinson's Disease were overblown. Something else came up - ALS, otherwise known as Lou Gehrig's Disease. Now this was even more puzzling, because I hadn't attended a major league baseball game in eight years.



After praying about it and thinking things over, I finally decided to have a specialist examine my left hand. Not knowing where else to turn, I went to Columbus Regional's Urgent Care Clinic one afternoon last week. A weekday afternoon is the perfect time to show up - with only ten minutes of waiting, and no crying babies in the lobby.



But of course, the day I determined to visit the clinic was the day the twitching went away. With nothing else to do in the waiting room, I timed my little finger - and it didn't move on its own in almost ten minutes. If the attendant hadn't called my name, I was five seconds from walking out and declaring victory.



There were the usual papers to fill out - but only three pages of them. The good news is that there was no in-depth stack of questions on a clipboard like other medical offices have. But the bad news is that one of the Urgent Care Clinic's questions involved whether I have a living will.



After two trips into the "back rooms" of the clinic and some basic checks of my weight and blood pressure, Dr. Graham finally entered the examination room to check me. He ruled out ALS at once, after I brought it up. As he put it: "Sometimes we're the victims of a little too much information."



Dr. Graham said my left little finger could simply be a passing thing, nothing to worry about. But he also hinted there could be a nerve ending problem, that a neurologist might need to check if it persisted. This was a bit discomforting, because I have a brother in a "neurological institute" - and he's barely been able to walk his entire life, much less write or speak.



"Any other problems?" Dr. Graham asked - and then I said something which apparently changed his diagnosis. I've felt a sore shoulder for weeks, which resulted from overstretching on the racquetball court. This explains why I don't go to Benning Park with a paint can, and cover up gang graffiti myself....



After a quick check of my shoulder, Dr. Graham told me the blood circulating around the shoulder could explain my twitching finger. So he wrote me a prescription for a medicine with a name like ibuprofen - only it begins with "Flurbi." It sounded like something the performers in "Disney on Ice" should take.



The paperwork from Dr. Graham included not only a computer-printout prescription, but follow-up instructions. One involved slowly taking "Oral Rehydration Solution," as my body could handle it. "Do you think the pharmacist will know what this is?" I asked the aide as I checked out.


"It's just water," he answered. That's pretty much what I expected - but it's still such a fancy name that I plan to surprise my friends with it one of these days.



The doctor's papers also advised me to "read the Shoulder Pain Handout and start Physical Therapy as directed." But I was never given a Shoulder Pain Handout. Maybe it was too heavy for me to carry, without causing more pain.



The trip to the Urgent Care Clinic wound up costing me 74 dollars, and the prescription about 21 more. So my twitching little finger wound up costing me about 95 dollars - and in the middle of my ten-day pain regimen, the finger twitching at several-minute intervals returned Sunday night. It's not affecting my typing at this point. And thankfully, it's not the middle finger that's jerking around....



E-MAIL UPDATE: This letter was sent to the Ledger-Enquirer, and "cc'ed" to me....



Several years ago the COLUMBUS HOUSING AUTHORITY issued $75 million in bonds to a lady from Ft Walton Beach to purchase five local apartment complexes. This was to be a social experiment where the tenants of the apartments were to work together to renovate and improve the apartments and common grounds for the benefit of all. Also included in the bond issue was money to be used to help with the renovations. This same thing was done in at least four other Georgia cities.



The bonds were sold, mostly to people who could not afford to lose their investment, and were most likely under the assumption that the bonds were guaranteed by the Housing Authority.



No payments were made on the bonds, the renovation money which was to be advanced as renovations were completed somehow disappeared, most likely to the lady in Ft. Walton. The apartments were foreclosed and sold for about one half of what was paid for them with the bond issue. The bondholders lost over half their investment.



Now we have Ashley Station a mixed income housing project which is another social experiment. I do not believe that doctors, lawyers, or any high income professional people are going to pay thousands of dollars a month in rent to live next door to someone that pays $200.00 a month.



I recently read somewhere that the CHICAGO HOUSING AUTHORITY said that the biggest mistake they ever made was building mixed income housing projects.



Lon Gammage



So if someone comes to your door in the "tornado zone" and claims to be bonded, be careful. They might actually be holding bonds which are in default.



The new Ashley Station complex is now open for occupancy, where the Peabody Apartments used to be. The buildings look quite nice -- but how are lawyers going to know what their neighbors pay in rent, unless they become nosy and start asking? Oh wait, I forgot. It's called the "discovery process" in a trial.



Isn't Ashley Station somewhat similar to how Columbus housing works in general, under the property tax freeze? Your new neighbor may pay twice the property tax you do. Yet the population of Columbus has been growing slowly -- despite the rush of people to a Harris County which still has no Wal-Mart or Piggly Wiggly stores.



Big cities such as New York also come to mind - places with "rent control" rules. Units in some buildings can have a wide range of prices. Yet somehow, the children from varied backgrounds all get along on TV, on "The Suite Life of Zach and Cody."



I think I was actually part of a "mixed income housing project" years ago in Oklahoma. Housing was scarce when I moved there because of an oil boom, so I lived in an apartment complex at the east edge of town. I actually made a game out of the discarded aluminum cans I picked up while jogging - and more often than not, the sodas beat the beers.



I never asked my neighbors how much they paid in rent. In fact, it never crossed my mind to ask. So what I did can work at Ashley Station - a policy of "don't ask, don't tell" which was years ahead of its time.



BLOG UPDATE: On this Hurtsboro Monday, the Constable who lives there is scheduled for trial on two charges. R.J. Schweiger isn't even leaving messages at Talbot County forums anymore. So maybe he's gone back to the "old school" way of rallying support - by going door-to-door at home.



Back to health issues, for our top item from the Sunday news....


+ The "Getting On Top of Life" broadcast on WAGH-FM found Pastor/School Board member Joseph Roberson revealing he spent time in intensive care three years ago, after his uvula was removed. Who knows how many church members went home, and tried to look up that word in the dictionary under "Y."



+ The annual "Thunder in the Valley" air show ended at the Columbus Airport. The stunts this year weren't quite the same, compared with a year ago. Not in the sky - I mean finding a parking place at the former Wal-Mart store on Airport Thruway.



+ Jimmy Johnson edged Tony Stewart, to win a Not-So-Well-Known Tool Company's 500-mile race at Atlanta Motor Speedway. This was a classic battle in every sense of the word - as Lowe's defeated The Home Depot.



+ My alma mater good ol' Kansas advanced to the regional semifinals in college basketball, by killing Kentucky 88-76. But for some reason, the server at Loco's put me in a booth against a wall where I had to look up and around a light to watch a flat-screen TV. I'm assuming he was trying to help me digest my dinner.



COMING SOON: An e-mailer directs me to a picture of a young man holding a fish....



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18 MAR 07: HAVE BIKE, WON'T TRAVEL



Before we get to our topic, here's an open invitation to Kansas alumni and friends in the Columbus area: Let's meet at Loco's at 5:00 p.m. ET. Let's watch K.U. beat U.K. Let's have a repeat of Friday night - which was a classic case of "Niagara falls."



BLOGGER BEGGAR #2: Something told me to stop at "Fourth and Fourth" the other afternoon. I don't think it was my stomach, even though I bought a bag of corn chips at Money Back. And it certainly wasn't for the service - because the checkout line was slow and long, while one of the attendants used a vulgar word toward a customer.



The thing that told me to stop apparently surfaced as I walked back to my car with the corn chips. A man stood on the sidewalk - someone I'd noticed in this corner of Columbus before. He's noticeable because one of his legs is metal and artificial. At least he wears shoes, but he doesn't bother finding knee-high socks to hide his damage.



It took the man two times to get my attention, but the line was familiar when he did. "Can you give me a dollar or two? I'm trying to get something to eat."


"Let's go," I said pointing toward the inside of the convenience store. But as usual, this Money Back store filled with food wasn't good enough for a beggar. Several years ago, a man outside the store made it sound like he had to eat fried chicken -- or else he'd die.



"I'm planning to go to McDonald's in a while," the man explained. The Money Back store across from the Columbus Civic Center has no hot food - not even rotisserie hot dogs like some Spectrum stores do. All that extra space is needed for Keno players, you know.



"Get in the car, and I'll take you to McDonald's."


"But I've got this bicycle." Only then did I notice the bicycle behind the beggar on the sidewalk. Truly Al Gore is right -- even the poorest of us can do something to fight global warming.



"I live three blocks from here," I answered. "You can ride to my house, leave the bike there, and I'll drive you to McDonald's." If you're new to this blog, you'll notice I never simply give money to a beggar. After all, handouts like that from the government haven't seemed to work.



"You don't have to go that far out of the way for me," the beggar with a bicycle said.


"Three blocks," I said pointing toward my home. "Ten blocks," I then pointed toward the McDonald's at 14th and Veterans Parkway. The total distance one-way would be less than two miles -- much less than I offered a beggar two years ago, when he asked for a ride to Hurtsboro.



"That's all right," the beggar said. "I'll get help from somebody else." Translation: I wasn't giving him the "help" the way he wanted it. The customer in business may be "always right," but the beggar on the corner absolutely knows it.



That would have been that -- but then the beggar uttered one line too many. "Maybe I'll go to Burger King," he said half-jokingly.


"That's what somebody else said," I told him. "He was down the street at Spectrum - and he had a bicycle, too." [27 Mar 06]



I don't really think this man knew what I was talking about. But I'd spotted a new variation on the old begging game. People who can't afford lunch somehow can afford bicycles, to use as props to limit your options. Too bad for them that I live too close for their comfort.



BLOGGER BEGGAR #3 showed up a few days later, at that Spectrum I mentioned down the street. But this time, the request was very different.


"Might you be heading down Highway 280?" asked a man standing near gas pumps.


"No, I'm not." It was soda and a one-block drive home for me - so the discussion ended right there. I'll never know if the man needed a lift to a broken-down car in Phenix City, or really was after a free taxi ride to go shopping.



E-MAIL UPDATE: We have plenty of messages to sort through this weekend. One of them touched on several topics:



Richard, In young story about the murder of Lanny Davis's son you referred to the deceased several times as an army "Captain". As I recall his rank was actually "corporal". There is a lot of difference between the two ranks in pay, responsibility and status. A corporal is a low enlisted rank and a captain is an officer. Regardless, his death was indeed tragic. I feel very sorry for his parents and really don't understand why his body has not been released to them for burial.



Reference the mess in Phenix City - One might say that "what goes around, comes around". Wasn't it Bubba Roberts (the city mgr) who fired Max Wilkes (the 29 yr city employee who was acting city mgr while Bubba was gone for two years on National Guard duty in Birmingham) when Bubba returned to town. Now the Mayor wants Bubba to resign. Perhaps it's poetic justice or something like that. I think I read that Max Wilkes is suing the city.



And wasn't it strange that Mayor Harden didn't show up for his usual visit on Calvin's Rise and Shine program on Thursday? He never seemed to miss any programs for the couple of years before he ran for mayor. He sure got thousands of dollars worth of free air time. I suppose he didn't want to answer any questions about this latest issue.



Isn't that just like all the politicians? While running for office they are so accessible but after being elected they sure don't want to answer the public's questions.



I bet Calvin couldn't get any of our state legislators to come on his program and answer questions about the 60% pay raise they just voted themselves this week on a non-recorded vote! It says so much about our state when our citizens are among the poorest in the nation and yet our elected officials are among the best paid!



Your blog is great - keep up the good work. A Smithstation, AL reader



I checked previous blog entries, to make sure of Richard Davis's rank. But an online review shows he's actually listed as "Specialist." My apologies to the family -- but you'll notice none of them ever objected to my giving him a promotion.



(You figured someone HAD to be low on the military pay scale, to throw coins at the Platinum Club stage on that fateful night in 2003....)



I know Max Wilkes was fired last year, but I can't say with absolute certainty that City Manager Bubba Roberts did it. Mayor Jeff Hardin didn't want to talk about that situation, either - perhaps because he smelled a lawsuit coming. At least the City Manager can't sue the mayor. We might need the Phenix City Amphitheater to handle the audience for that trial.



As for Mayor Hardin's appearance on morning TV -- Calvin Floyd answers that, in his own e-mail:



Richard,



Mayor Jeff Hardin did not cancel his appearance on Rise N Shine This Thursday. When Mayor Hardin was on the show two weeks back I ask that He start appearing only once a month. This decision was made before His "Resigning Bout" with "Bubba" started. I enjoy your blog--Keep it Up!!



Sincerely,



Calvin



Admittedly, I did NOT watch NBC-38 last Thursday morning. I went by what Robbie Watson said at 7:00 a.m. on WRCG - but she admitted on the air she was a first-time viewer of "Rise N Shine." These talk show superstars have to keep a certain professional distance from each other....



And we knew Friday's mention of the Columbus NAACP President would bring a reaction....



If we use Bill Madisons argument for not having a Confederate month, then we shouldn't have a black history month either. After all, this town has a black history museum, a black cemetery, and SEVERAL black organizations.



If he wants to use the premise that slavery exsisted in the Confederacy and thats why we shouldn't have a Confederate history month, then perhaps, according to him, we shouldn't teach US history in school at all since slavery was made legal by the US Constitution in the 3/5th's compromise until it was banned with the adoption of te 13th amendment in 1865.



D.B. Thompson



Oh dear - if this keeps up, all these groups might combine their voices and demand The History Channel be removed from Columbus cable systems.



We'll get to some of your other messages another time - but right now let's quickly check weekend news headlines:


+ Our congregation at church watched a DVD on youth camps. The narrator explained the camps practice "immersion education" - yet for some reason, I never heard anyone talk about being baptized.



+ Columbus Police arrested a man on charges of breaking into The Wash Company on Talbotton Road. In fact, the suspect is accused of doing it twice - first at midnight, then returning at 3:00 a.m. Those extra-large washers simply are TOO slow....



(Hasn't this man ever heard the old line about a criminal "always returning to the scene of the crime?" Or are suspects not paying attention to old cartoons anymore?)



+ The Columbus POW-MIA Memorial downtown was the scene of a pro-military rally called "Gathering of the Eagles." My late father might have understood this differently - and dropped by the Fraternal Order of Eagles lodge for a night of pool, pretzels and beer.



(Eve Tidwell led a small group from Columbus to a similar rally in Washington. Group members said they went there to "protect" the Vietnam Veterans Memorial from protesters. I didn't realize the Capital Park Police were busy marching in a St. Patrick's Day parade.)



+ The Columbus Times reported the House of Mercy is applying to be renovated by "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition." I don't quite understand this. Couldn't the shelter spend its big Black History Breakfast check on something besides a new industrial washer?



+ Four obstetric nurses quit Summit Hospital, apparently due to rumors the childbirth section might close. Hospital officials say they're trying to work something out on Medicaid payments - but at this point, the rumors are coming ten minutes apart.



+ The Columbus Cottonmouths felled Fayetteville 4-2, before a sellout Civic Center crowd of 7,539. I noticed the Fayetteville team buses parked under the Oglethorpe Bridge during the game - apparently afraid a huge St. Patrick's Day hockey crowd might spit green beer on them.



+ Auburn University held its "A-Day" football game, with the Blue team beating the White team 27-7. I honestly didn't keep track of this - so did the Blue team cover the spread?



SCHEDULED MONDAY: E-mail about Ashley Station....



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Friday, March 16, 2007

16 MAR 07: DEAL OR NO DEAL?



The big deal of the day in Columbus Thursday involved the city and the school district, land in Midtown and the Liberty District, two buildings which will fall, at least three more which will rise -- and if we read all the fine print, the trade could include a school board member to be named later.



After years of yakking without much action, a combined panel of Columbus Council and Muscogee County School Board members worked out a proposed land swap. It focuses on the property around the Columbus Public Library - and the first big winner appears to be the Goodyear car repair center on Macon Road. That Firestone business nearby is coming down.



The Firestone business along Macon Road will be given to the Muscogee County School District, under this swap. It appears the district will tear it down, to build a new main office. Jordan High School vocational magnet students simply can't get a break....



The Muscogee County School District also will receive two lots next door to the Mildred Terry Library, in the 600 block of Veterans Parkway. There are plans for an expanded library there -- and based on what I've seen there, this will mean even more computers for people to listen to cutting-edge rap tunes.



In exchange for all this, the city of Columbus will receive the old Sears building -- and apparently it will be demolished as well. At last, we could have a big-time implosion in Columbus....



City Manager Isaiah Hugley told WRBL the area of the old Sears building will have several uses. One of them is a natatorium, which swimming supporters have been demanding for months. It appears city officials will NOT get that invitation to spend a day cliff-diving at Lake Martin.



One of the "Concerned Citizens for a Natatorium" almost cried when she talked about it with WXTX "News at Ten." She declared the enclosed swimming pool would be the "only venue on Macon Road that will bring in out-of-town visitors." This is why the main library still could use a nice statue in front of it....



The six acres where the old Sears building stands also would have parkland, and a "city service center." People could take care of city business such as license applications, without having to go all the way downtown - but hold on here. Where are the Macon Road coffee houses, to make the trip really worthwhile?



This land swap only is proposed at the moment. The School Board and Columbus Council both have to approve it at upcoming meetings -- so there are still a few days for Paul Olson to read it through, and find some reason to challenge it in court.



Richard Hyatt of the Ledger-Enquirer recently dared to compare the Muscogee County School District to a "slumlord," because of the empty properties it holds. Selling Sears and demolishing Firestore won't solve that completely. It will still have the old Baker Middle School, a potentially deserted Bradley Library - but at least the current main office could be turned into scenic condominiums.



E-MAIL UPDATE: Let's hear from you about Thursday's entry -- starting with the main event:



You are right about Milgen Rd and the new CSU apts.looking like a peanut farm..Those beautiful huge trees can never be replaced...Now it is one big hilly mud hole..I noticed yesterday they were stretching that orange plastic fencing to stop the mud from washing down on to the road..What happened to the Columbus Tree Ordinance or are contractors immune?



Based on the new Wal-Mart SuperCenter, I think the tree ordinance applies to planting new trees during the construction process. So it's a bit like that Friday night game show - "1 vs. 100."



And a familiar face is still checking in here....



I hope things are going well for you. I saw my mention in your blog today and figured I'd drop you a line. Life as a reporter in Virginia is much different than being back in Columbus. I think I've done more live shots in the two months I've been here than I did in my 5 ½ years at WRBL. Things are great here... and I hope they are for you too back in GA. Take care... and keep blogging! It's how I stay plugged into things back home.



Best,



Blaine Stewart



Stewart is with a Norfolk-area TV station nowadays. But when I checked its web site the other day, I couldn't find a section with Stewart's biography at all. If web searchers aren't careful, they're going to think he's that other Blaine Stewart - the fictional private detective.



WRBL did have a live event Thursday -- at the new home of the Opelika-Auburn News, which held an open house. The building on Society Hill Road has a state-of-the-art printing press, which can print an entire day's run of newspapers in one hour. And if current national readershp trends continue, before long it could be 30 minutes.



Now for other events and notes from Thursday:


+ Rain prompted me to head to the gym for an indoor run - but I forgot Habitat for Humanity's "Collegiate Challenge" was in town. The St. Luke United Methodist Church gym is being used as a makeshift motel by students from Penn State University. You'd think the students would build extra duplexes first - to live in for a week, then rent out as timeshares for 11 months.



+ Columbus NAACP President Bill Madison spoke out against officially declaring April "Confederate Heritage Month" in Georgia. He said the state has had a Confederate month "for more than 400 years." This shows why the month is necessary - because Madison doesn't realize the Confederacy was formed about 146 years ago.



(Bill Madison suggested a Confederate Heritage Month isn't necessary, because Columbus already has a Confederate museum, cemetery and organization -- which makes you wonder if he tried to talk Antonio Carter out of forming the National Joshua Generation last year.)



+ Phenix City Mayor Jeff Hardin was scheduled to be on WLTZ's "Rise N Shine." But for some mysterious reason, he canceled the appearance. After appearing on this show a few times, I don't think he was concerned about the television lights being hot....



+ "Keep Phenix City Beautiful" planted two maple trees along the city's Riverwalk, near the 13th Street Bridge. So which one is named "Jeff" and which one is named "Bubba?"



+ Instant Message to GPB: Aw, c'mon! I turn on the TV Thursday night to watch "Celtic Woman" as scheduled, and instead there's some woman giving a lecture on menopause. And what's worse: she didn't even sing about it....



(BLOGGER'S NOTE: Daily blogging may diminish over the next couple of weeks, as we work on our annual Serious Spring Cleaning.)



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Thursday, March 15, 2007

15 MAR 07: THE REMAINS OF THE DAY



Wednesday must have been a difficult day for Lanny Davis. It would have been his murdered son's 29th birthday. He met with the local official who still has his son's body. And imagine how surprised Davis must have been, to find the wooded death site has been clear-cut like a Brazilian rain forest.



We've mentioned Lanny Davis's son here before - Captain Richard Davis, who was killed by fellow Fort Benning soldiers shortly after they returned from duty in Iraq. The case became a "Playboy" magazine article, a national TV newsmagazine topic, an upcoming movie - and if someone dares to make a video game out of it, the Davises should have all the royalties.



Lanny Davis and wife Remy came to Columbus from their home in Missouri for several reasons. They left flowers at the spot near Milgen Road where Richard Davis was stabbed to death. It used to be filled with trees, but has been cleared for new Columbus State University apartments. If C.S.U. students say they read about Richard Davis in "Playboy," I'd be a little skeptical.



It's amazing how the landscape along Milgen Road has changed in the last year, since construction started for new Columbus State apartments. The area looked like it could have part of an expanded Cooper Creek Park. Now it looks like an over-optimistic peanut farmer took over the land, after winning a lottery.



But I digress: Lanny and Remy Davis also met with District Attorney Gray Conger Wednesday about the body of their son. The D.A.'s office has held the remains of Richard Davis ever since his death, because it might be needed as evidence. Let's be thankful the body wasn't left in one of those overcrowded evidence rooms at the Government Center.



The body of Richard Davis never was entered into evidence at the trials of three Fort Benning soldiers. But District Attorney Gray Conger apparently thinks defense lawyers will want to check it during appeals hearings -- as if miscounting the stab wounds somehow will set one of the men free.



Attorney Mark Shelnutt is working for the Davis family, in getting the soldier's body released for burial. Shelnutt admitted Wednesday he doesn't understand why prosecutors need to keep the remains, after more than three years -- and I can see his point. The C.S.I. detectives on television take all sorts of pictures of the body, and they always win.



Lanny Davis admitted to the evening news he feels like he's "still fighting a war," attempting to get his son's body for burial. Let's face it: Iraqi insurgent groups would have released the Captain's body by now - even if it was left along the side of a highway.



In perhaps a small consolation, Lanny and Remy Davis will be allowed to view their son's body today. It will be the first time they've seen Richard Davis in five years, and the first time since he was murdered. Let's all hope two groups stay away from the morgue - Fred Phelps's protesters from Topeka, and local funeral directors with business cards.



As for the fictional movie based on the Richard Davis case: the IMDB web site shows "In the Valley of Elah" is in post-production. It's scheduled to come out this fall, a week after the anniversary of the September 11 attacks. And with Susan Sarandon in the cast, the pro-military crowd which might be interested in this topic might wind up boycotting it.



BLOG UPDATE: Now to what some have dubbed the "Bubba Battle" in Phenix City. City Manager Bubba Roberts spoke out Wednesday about the letter from the mayor, requesting his resignation. He stopped short of putting the letter in a shredder on camera....



Bubba Roberts admitted to WRBL the letter from Phenix City Mayor Jeff Hardin this week "hurts my feelings." This may come as a surprise to some people - the ones who think city managers are so wonky and focused on the bottom line that they don't have feelings.



Bubba Roberts showed off the letter from Phenix City's Mayor. Jeff Hardin writes his relationship with the City Manager has had "peaks and valleys." Only in the South would a new chicken processing plant be considered a peak.



Bubba Roberts expressed hope he can remain Phenix City Manager until the mayor's term ends next year. The more advance time he has to send resumes to other cities, the better....



But Bubba Roberts noted he "serves at the pleasure of the council" in Phenix City. At this point, three of the five council members are pleased to keep him as City Manager. The other two may be wondering why Mayor Jeff Hardin didn't ask them to cosign that letter.



Mayor Jeff Hardin refused to talk about his letter to the City Manager Wednesday. He explained it's a "personnel matter." Given the way this has been handled, I'd suggest the mayor cross "inquire at the White House about the Attorney General's job" off his "to-do" list.



Now a quick check of other news and notes from Wednesday:


+ The Blog Byway Patrol found part of Tenth Street downtown is closed for sewer repair. The big housecleaning some people expected from Mayor Jim Wetherington may be about to start....



+ The evening news went to West Point, one year after the big announcement of the future Kia plant. It found Rogers Barbecue has replaced its carpet with a wood floor, because construction workers have been eating in muddy shoes. Just wait until the barbecue aroma gets overwhelmed by "new car smell."



+ WRBL's "Evening Edition" found Phil Scoggins doubling as both news and sports anchor. This is how you know Blaine Stewart has left Columbus for good....



+ The blog of Ledger-Enquirer writer Sandra Okamoto noted the Columbus Civic Center did NOT sell out, for Tuesday night's performance by Blue Man Group. Apparently word spread that the name had nothing to do with Auburn football....



+ Playboy magazine announced it will be in Auburn next week, looking for college students to appear in a pictorial. This seems SO antiquated and "last millennium." Why doesn't Playboy simply publish the pictures students post on Facebook?



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Wednesday, March 14, 2007

14 MAR 07: THE BUBBA-FREE ZONE?



A Phenix City Council member revealed Tuesday the City Manager has been asked to resign. But the request didn't come from that Council member - it came from Mayor Jeff Hardin. This could be a rare case where loose lips actually save a ship.



Phenix City Councilor John Storey spilled the beans to TV stations, claiming Mayor Jeff Hardin gave a letter to City Manager Bubba Roberts Monday asking for Roberts's resignation. The reason reportedly involves a lack of communication - and if the Mayor is sending letters instead of making phone calls, we may have the proof.



John Storey notes if the Phenix City Manager does not resign, it would take three votes on the City Council to remove him. Storey says the mayor does NOT have those votes right now. This seems to put Bubba Roberts between a rock and a Hardin place.



John Storey admitted to WRBL this is a bad time for Phenix City to have division between the Mayor and City Manager. The Mayor should learn from Columbus about this - because Mayor Jim Wetherington still hasn't found a good time to disagree with City Manager Isaiah Hugley.



Councilor John Storey also said Phenix City Manager Bubba Roberts should be "left alone to do his job." Well, hold on here - doesn't the city manager face job reviews by the City Council? Leave him alone, and he might start working from home in his pajamas.



If all of this sounds vaguely familiar, it should. The Phenix City Council tried to abolish the City Manager's office a few years ago - and attempted it while Bubba Roberts was away, serving in the Alabama National Guard. Roberts left to fight terrorism, and discovered John Murtha and Nancy Pelosi wanna-bes were left behind.



At least this time, Mayor Jeff Hardin is going after the City Manager while he's actually in Phenix City. And this time, he's ASKING for a resignation - so Bubba Roberts can't join one-time Acting Mayor Max Wilkes in a class-action lawsuit.



But this is yet another example of a "power play" by Phenix City's Mayor. Remember the talk last year about quadrupling Mayor Jeff Hardin's pay? [8 Nov 06] It was approved, then taken back. You're left wondering if the mayor is trying to free up money in the city budget to get that raise again.



No one would dare mention another possible reason to change the Phenix City Manager - and that's the man's name. How many visitors have come to our area, learned there's a City Manager named Bubba, and gone home cracking all sorts of redneck jokes?



Let's be real here: Bubba is one of those names which often gets associated with the South - and often not in a complimentary way by Northerners. It takes a certain amount of toughness to go through life with a name like Bubba. And why Bubba Smith isn't in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, I have no idea....



(For the sake of being REALLY real: My late Dad called me "Butch" all the time. I really didn't know why, I didn't appreciate the nickname very much -- and I actually tried to avoid getting in fights behind the junior high school.)



Yet did you hear about the New Mexico truck driver who wants to be called Bubba? He's filed papers to legally change his name to "Ynot Bubba." [True/A.P.] So at formal occasions, he would stand out from everyone else - because he'd be MISTER Bubba.



BLOG CORRECTION: This blog apparently irritated some people Tuesday, and NOT at The Valley Partnership. (At least no one there has written us yet.) So today we'd like to issue an apology. Not a statement of "I regret I opened my big mouth" like General Peter Pace or former basketball player Tim Hardaway, but an apology....



This blog was singled out by the Sin City Inquisition and Bar B Q blog of Phenix City, for several reasons. For one thing, we used the word "predictions" to describe what the Sin City blogger considered questions based on facts. For leaping to conclusions based on a blog's tone and usual theme, we apologize. We should not look cynically on a writer who uses "cynicism" in his statement of philosophy.



This blog further disappointed the Idle Hour Webs "Redneckin" blog of Phenix City, by suggesting it made predictions about new job development as well. For leaping to conclusions based on a mock billboard with what some might consider a slurring word, we apologize.



The Sin City Inquisition and Bar B Q blog also considers it a "queer habit" that this blog has not specifically named it here on a regular basis. For presuming readers can figure out the name of another blog based on the links we include, we apologize.



The above-mentioned blogs also do not like our occasional references to them as "competition." For misunderstanding that their often-conservative entries actually are in the pursuit of equality and socialism, we apologize.



And for not "being on top of things," as the Sin City Inquisition and Bar B Q blog stated, we apologize as well. In the future, we will reference that blog's post in our next immediate entry - or not reference it at all. After all, blogs should be immediate. If only some public officials acted the same way in releasing vital news....



We'll probably have more apologies to offer in the next couple of weeks, so keep watching for them. Now let's check other Tuesday news:


+ Columbus Police arrested a man on burglary charges - and one of the counts involves ruining the Bradley Theater's air conditioning unit by stealing copper. The damage is estimated at more than $300,000. Maybe now downtown residents will let that theater serve alcohol at parties....



+ Columbus Council approved money to add six more soccer fields to the Woodruff Farm complex. The Ledger-Enquirer reported each field will cost $100,000 - which means they'll apparently use the most expensive oil-based paint for lines on the planet.



+ Russell County Sheriff Tommy Boswell asked the county commission to endorse a proposed $11,000 raise. The raise is part of a bill in the Alabama Legislature - and since lawmakers already voted to give themselves a 61-percent raise, I don't know why the Sheriff really needs to ask the commission for this.



+ Instant Message to my alma mater Kansas's men's basketball team: OK, we now know we're facing Niagara in the opening round of the playoffs. Go forward remembering the infamous words of Senator Robert Kennedy - "It's on to Chicago, and let's win there!"



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Tuesday, March 13, 2007

13 MAR 07: PHENIX A-BLAZE



Another announcement of new jobs was made Monday by The Valley Partnership. A new recycling plant will open on State Docks Road in Phenix City. I assume a statue of Al Gore will be displayed somewhere on the grounds....



The new business is called Blaze Recycling - and that's because it's owned by a family named Blaze. There's no connection with the Phenix City name or seal. And I hope the fire department is ready for prank calls from teenagers, who think that name is funny.



Blaze Recycling will be different from other recycling businesses, because it will focus on used cars. WRBL reported the plant can shred one car every minute. In other places, this might be called a chop shop.



(Shred a car in one minute? This finally would provide a sequel to the movie "Gone in 60 Seconds.")



Blaze Recycling will have about 20 employees at first -- but a year from now, it could have 100. And imagine how busy this place will be, if the Kia plant in West Point makes defective cars....



Blake Recycling is the second big economic gain for Phenix City in seven days. Last week plans were announced for a poultry processing plant with 500 jobs, in the city industrial park. Officials might want to develop a new nickname -- the "city of sharp knives."



So is everybody happy about Phenix City gaining hundreds of new jobs? Of course not. I'm reading predictions by Phenix City bloggers that all the poultry jobs will have low wages, and go mostly to illegal immigrants. Apparently the staff of Gonzoes' Sports Bar isn't big enough to fill all the openings.



Keep in mind that Russell County's unemployment rate is well above the Alabama average, at 5.3 percent for January. I would imagine there will be some overall interest in these new jobs. For one thing, Blaze Recycling staff members might find some surprising forgotten valuables in the glove compartments.



If you're concerned about immigrants (illegal or otherwise) taking these 600 or so new jobs, let me offer some advice which may sound startling. Go apply for them yourself. After all, "equal opportunity employers" probably will need some token white guys - like Charles Barkley used to say about pro basketball.



Another sign of economic growth in Russell County was the opening of a new Waffle House Monday. No big deal, you say? Well, this one is on Crawford Road in Ladonia - long before anyone's started clearing land for Interstate 14.



No, I haven't heard how many employees of the new Ladonia Waffle House are illegal immigrants. Federal agents will have to determine that, I suppose. When they show up, the illegal cooks will be "scattered and covered" like never before.



E-MAIL UPDATE: We have several messages to address today. We begin with new words of Love....



Mr. Burkard,



You are correct that I have signed Concerned Citizen Activist, OAAU [25 Feb]. However, as of the official results of the December 5th runoff in District 1,, in which The Movement was very instrumental, that has changed officially to the Grassroots Unity Movement for Change. The Movement will be focused on social activism in Columbus, probably more human rights than civil rights. Although, many seem to think civil rights is specifically reserved for black people nothing could be farther from the truth. Just as MLK Day is not just for black people neither are civil rights. The Movement will not be focused on political solutions. We will only enter into politics when it is absolutely necessary for the good of the community. In District 5 it was important to awaken the masses to the fact that they had the power to effect change, the power of the vote. The Movement functioned in the same way in the mayoral race earlier that November. The Movement promoted change in both seats throughout South Columbus. We believe politics is not the answer, but is only one of many needed answers. Love and Understanding is the best way we know to bring this community and any community together, as best as humanly possible. We are a movement committed to non-violent social change in the tradition of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Change begins with communication and education. Thank you for allowing the Grassroots Unity Movement for Change this opportunity to do both.



Unity begins with "U"



Be Blessed,



Brother Love



I'll certainly "allow" your group to do whatever it pleases. After all, a little blogger like me doesn't have much power to stop it. If I really had the power, WRCG would have broadcast a Thrashers hockey game Monday night - and not the "Bulldog Hotline" for a basketball team which did well to make the N.I.T.



(I'm a little concerned about this group's new name, though. "G.U.M. for Change?" This sounds like something a beggar might offer downtown.)



But I would ask about last year's District 5 Columbus Council race - weren't the "masses awakened" when Mayor Pro-Tem Jack Rodgers announced he wasn't running for reelection? There's no better way to "affect change" than not have an incumbent on the ballot.



Next we move to the compassion so many people are showing about the March 1 tornadoes.... well, I thought they were....



With the news media still acting like the storm happened last might, why not charge people that drive thru and clog up the streets of the area's that were hit by the storm and give the money to ones that need it for repairs (you know - like a freak show at a circus or amusement park..people stare and talk a lot at things like this...)



The news media are making money off of the storm in advertising dollars, why not add a surcharge to them too? It's a thought.



What is not mentioned much at all is the livestock and pets that have disappered from the storm - like the movie "Twister" with the floating cow.



I can understand how you feel about "aftermath overkill." But keep something in mind - we haven't had any rain since the night of the tornadoes. There's no new damage to cover yet.



And what do you mean, the news media are making "advertising dollars" from the storm? I haven't seen any commercials for roofing companies -- much less discount pricing on weather radios.



My only glimpse of the tornado damage in Columbus occurred last week, when I turned from Interstate 185 onto the J.R. Allen Parkway -- with deer only four miles away [7 Mar]. I've had no reason to drive into the "damage zone." But if I must, I'll buy some Krispy Kreme doughnuts while I'm in the neighborhood and hand them out door to door.



The idea of charging people to drive through the tornado damage is interesting, though. Especially since the Pope Farm "haunted hayride" is only open in October....



Our last message today goes completely off the board, in terms of our recent topics:



Did you see Newt's explaination in the paper ..He said he was different Clinton because Clinton lied under oath...duh..What does Newtie think marriage vows are?



Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich of Georgia, you mean? The man who went to "Focus on the Family" the other day to confess his sins? I think that group applies the "two strikes law" to divorces -- and he's at two and counting.



In case you missed this story: Newt Gingrich admitted to Focus on the Family last week he had an adulterous affair during the 1990's, while he went after President Clinton for having an affair with Monica Lewinsky. There's nothing like having advice from counsel from someone who's sharing your experience.



But Newt Gingrich claimed he's NOT a hypocrite for going after President Clinton, because the former President lied under oath to a judge. It's a bit like the convenience store robber claiming he at least had enough sense not to rob a bank.



Keep in mind this is the same Newt Gingrich who filed divorce papers against his last wife, while she was in a hospital. Yes indeed, he had what he calls a "period of weakness." And callousness, and.... well, where was Brother Love when this House Speaker really needed a lesson in it?



At the risk of getting too Bible-based here, I'll repeat a comment I wrote to someone else's blog about Newt Gingrich saying he's not a hypocrite. Verily his sin remains. And if Republican voters don't panic, they probably can find a better choice for a Presidential nominee. Such as.... hmmmm.... what's Bob Poydasheff doing these days?



We thank all of you for writing us - and maybe the Monday news will inspire you some more:


+ The Muscogee County School Board discussed a proposal to rename Eastway Elementary School after the late Lonnie Jackson. Finally there would be a large enough trophy case for all his plaques....



+ A Marion County Judge threw out a petition drive to recall Commissioner Frank Powell [27 Feb]. The judge said the campaign came close to abusing the judicial process. So the critics will need to borrow those allegedly high-powered microphones from Talbot County, to pick up what commissioners are whispering.



+ LaGrange Police claimed Jonathan Buckingham robbed a Charter Bank - but then was arrested on Interstate 85, after he stole a taxi to make his getaway. You don't think he was even dumber, do you? Such as trying out the cab's two-way radio?!



+ The AAA champion Jordan High boys' basketball team received a surprise victory rally, including cake. When I was in high school years ago, a state title like this would have earned the entire school a day off for celebration. Thank you, Mr. President, for being such a killjoy.



+ The Georgia rock band R.E.M. was inducted in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. If you're not sure where this hall of fame is, simply listen to one of the band's songs. Stand in the place where you work. Now face north....






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Monday, March 12, 2007

12 MAR 07: TAGGED, THEY'RE IT



"1440 FOLK SLOB NATION KILLA." Those words greeted me Sunday afternoon, when I stepped onto a Columbus racquetball court. No, they weren't spoken - in someone's local equivalent to "Kenneth, what is the frequency."



Those words were spray-painted on the left wall at Benning Park's west racquetball court. Someone apparently stopped by in the last two weeks and decided to leave his or her mark on the walls. At least when an animal left its own (ahem) mark on one side of the court, I was able to clean that up.



Black spray-painted words were on all three walls of the west court -- and even on the court itself. "King David" was written on the floor. There must be a better way to promote Bible reading than this....



The right wall of the racquetball court had a few more words, along with a spray-painted "star of David." I'm sorry, but I really don't think radical Jewish gangs are operating in South Columbus.



I'm assuming the marks which were left on the racquetball court were put there by some kind of gang. Police call this sort of conduct "tagging," to mark out a gang's turf. I'd rather young people stuck to leaving tags dangling from their new hats.



Let's try to figure out that message I encountered on the left wall of the racquetball court. It's located at 1441 Benning Drive - so the Baker Village Apartments would be across the street. Is this some kind of statement against the planned bulldozing of the complex for new housing? Or is it a statement that we should show more appreciation for slobs?



This is not the only unusual place where I've spotted tagging lately. Walk around the backside of the Trade Center parking garage along the Chattahoochee Promenade, and you'll see graffiti as well. I know Columbus State Riverpark students want reserved parking spaces, but this is the wrong way to do it.



I couldn't figure out what the graffiti outside the Trade Center parking garage says. But does this mean the Historic District is considered "turf" for gangs, like other parts of Columbus? You'd think the attorneys with offices around the neighborhood could settle this with paper and pens....



Despite the bad case of tagging, there's a little optimism for racquetball or handball players like me. The EAST court at Benning Park was left unmarked. And both courts probably will get a new coat of green paint on the walls in the weeks to come -- because the old coat is starting to peel badly.



E-MAIL UPDATE: You can read about Columbus here, then talk about it somewhere else....



Richard,



W enjoy your blog everyday and miss it when you do not get to post--but everyone deserves a day off. I just keep thinking there must be a way you can make money with it. You are extremely talented and your blog is being read all over the world now. You are very funny and you should be writing tv comedy.



There is a new yahoo group for Columbus, everyone can join anonymously. Member list is not revealed. It is a great way to discuss, archive docs, plan activism, follow a discussion/thread, or local political action/reaction.



I'm in a busy time of year, so I can't check on this group at the moment. But if some construction company goes there and announces plans for a coup at the city landfill, please let me know.



Oh yes - it WOULD be nice if I could make money off this blog. PayPal donations are always welcome. So if you see that Dalton truck driver who won Mega Millions, please tell him about us....



BLOG UPDATE: No, we haven't forgotten the fact that this is Hurtsboro Monday. But we don't have much new to report this week. Maybe this small Russell County town actually is acting small again.



Russell County records show the "contempt of court" trial of Constable R.J. Schweiger is now scheduled for next Monday. This is for giving legal advice to a suspect, without being an attorney. Do you realize if he's convicted, anyone who tells his neighbor, "You ought to sue him" could get put in jail?



Now let's wrap up other notes from a very springlike weekend:


+ I turned on my nine-month-old computer for the first time since the time change, and everything was correct. If you're in Columbus and your computer didn't adjust, why not pretend you're in Alabama and work on central time for three weeks?



+ Phenix City police arrested a suspect in a Wednesday robbery. Authorities say Cordero Smith held up Tyler's Grocery on Opelika Road while he was out on bond, while awaiting sentencing for another robbery. This is taking the phrase, "Get while the getting's good" to a whole new level.



+ The Muscogee County Sheriff's Office ended a three-day fund-raising drive for the Georgia Special Olympics. It was held at the Krispy Kreme doughnut shop on Veterans Parkway - and I say everyone assigned to this event should face a mandatory weigh-in.



+ The Ledger-Enquirer reported Muscogee County Superintendent John Phillips wants to name eight new principals, including last week's shakeup at Baker Middle School. One place in line for a new principal is Jordan High School. So much for winning a state basketball title....



+ A regional "fantasy convention" ended in Columbus. I think one of the conventioneers passed me downtown the other night. He held a glowing thing in his hand, turned toward me and said something I didn't understand. Was he imitating something in "Star Trek" - or is that how Blackberry devices work?



+ Oxbow Meadows held its annual Reptile Fest - and this year for the first time, there was a reptile "beauty pageant." Why do I have the funny feeling that this will never become a part of "Miss Georgia" week?



+ Auburn won another NCAA swimming and diving championship. Yet they're building a new practice pool on campus which will NOT be open to the public. Maybe the natatorium supporters should go before Columbus and Phenix City Council, and have part of the Chattahoochee River roped off for swimming and not kayaking.



+ Georgia Tech was the only team from this area selected to the NCAA men's basketball tournament. When Nevada has two teams in the running and Alabama has none, it's time for Charles Barkley to get off the golf course and hold some summer camps.



+ Instant Message to the NCAA selection committee: Thank you. Two years ago, my beloved Kansas lost in the first round to Bucknell. Last year, the Jayhawks lost to Bradley. So thank you for a first-round matchup against either Florida A&M or Niagara - not another "killer B" like Belmont.



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Sunday, March 11, 2007

11 MAR 07: AIR JORDAN



After a wait of several years, "Jordan basketball" returned to prime-time TV Saturday night. But it looked a little strange - because no one on the Jordan High School team wore number 23.



Jordan eliminated East Hall 65-53 to win the Georgia AAA boys' basketball title. There's only one bad thing about the Red Jackets' big win. The earlier start of daylight time means they lost an hour for celebrating.



The Red Jackets bring home Columbus's first state basketball title since Carver High in 1971. And the last time Jordan won a state basketball title.... well, I think that was the era when Dick McMichael was the school drum major.



The Jordan-East Hall game was fast-paced - so much so that Jordan led 6-5 after one MINUTE. There are some Ivy League games where that might be the halftime score....



And speaking of which - how about Jordan junior point guard Winford Ivey? He controlled the basketball better than most teenagers control sports cars after school.



Jordan won the title with quickness, outmaneuvering what the GPB broadcasters called a "scrambling" defense by East Hall. Leave it to the guys from the home of the scrambled dog....



Jordan had to rely on quickness, because none of its players are taller than six-foot-three. Platform shoes may be making a comeback, but they're not really good for shooting jump shots.



The Jordan Red Jackets put the AAA final out of reach rather early, by going on a 16-0 run over seven minutes of the first half. East Hall was so cold, you would have thought Buck Ice was down the street from THEIR school.



It was a bit disappointing to dial around the radio, and find no Columbus station carrying the Jordan championship game. But I really wasn't that surprised - because no station carried the opening home game of the Columbus Lions, either.



Thankfully, GPB showed the AAA boys' final on television across Georgia. But of course, that meant dealing with broadcasters who didn't really know the teams that well. Stu Klitenic coined the phrase "three guards and a cloud of dust" - but pinned it on the wrong team. So much for the online rumors about him returning to Atlanta television....



Analyst Herb White usually is reliable, when he fills in on University of Georgia radio basketball. But he mispronounced Jordan High School's name a couple of times before correcting himself. The Red Jackets didn't help, though -- because putting a player named Tim Jordan on the team simply asked for trouble.



The GPB announcers noted Gerald Turner is not only Jordan's head basketball coach, but the track coach. And did you see him go out on the court in the first quarter with a towel, to mop up sweat from the floor? That's how you know Jordan doesn't have the athletic budget of Columbus High or Shaw.



Jordan won every quarter in terms of scoring, and built the lead to seven at halftime. But Coach Gerald Turner admitted at that point he was concerned about missed free throws and too many turnovers. If basketball coaches didn't worry about something in the middle of a game, their bosses probably would reduce their salaries.



Jordan's Athletic Director appeared on TV at halftime, and showed off the ring he received when the Red Jackets won a state baseball title in 1971. He said for the last month, players have been touching it "like a holy grail." And then people wonder why we need Bible classes in public schools....



Did you see the game before Jordan-East Hall? Franklin County's girls wore uniforms with the word "team" on the back, where you'd expect player names to be. I'm not sure if that's an inspirational idea to provoke teamwork - or an intriguing way of saving money on buying new uniforms next season.



Because the game was shown on public television, there were a couple of breaks asking viewers to become GPB members. The offers were quite "old school," including a mug and a tote bag. I kept waiting for them to offer a leftover CD by the Three Tenors.



It's tempting to point a finger at Columbus TV stations and the Ledger-Enquirer and say, "Shame on you." This blog posted the final score of the Jordan championship game first, and no late newscast made it the top story. Maybe it's because I'm from a big basketball state - while in Columbus, basketball traditionally has been something to fill time until baseball season starts.



By the way, the Northern Little League baseball champions now have a monument in their honor. It was dedicated at Psalmond Road Friday evening, on the opening night of the new season. So is it too early to ask the managers, "What have you done for me lately?"



I received an invitation to attend the opening night of Northern Little League, by someone who promised it would include a fireworks show. I read the e-mail too late to change my schedule to attend. But wow - the only fireworks you normally see in youth baseball come when parents complain about their children not starting.



BLOG SPECIAL EVENT: The nomination time has ended -- and beginning today, you get to vote for the name of the Aflac duck! Since Aflac hasn't mustered its corporate might to sue us yet, apparently the insurance company does not object.



THE BIG BLOG QUESTION gives you five choices - three of which we've already mentioned here:


1. Alfred - making the duck potentially a servant on the order of Batman's butler.



2. Dinkles - inspired by TV meteorologist Derek Kinkade. Thankfully, Kurt Schmitz never called him that during the night of tornadoes.



3. Leaving the duck nameless - so we can focus more on the important word the duck is saying. He only wears that Aflac scarf on the dolls, for some reason.



Your other two options are named today for the first time - and both relate to Aflac's management:


4. Dan -- as in Aflac's CEO. Wouldn't that make for some interesting confusion, at board and shareholders meetings?



5. Amos -- which admittedly was my original idea. This keeps the duck in the corporate family.



E-MAIL UPDATE: Back to the schools we go, with a reply to Thursday's topic about allowing HOPE scholarship waivers:



I think college students who have the Hope Scholarship and flunk out should pay back what the interest would be on the amount of money they were given...There should be some penalty for taking the money under false pretense.. Can you believe there are remedial courses in college?..



Well, hold on here - the college students pay a penalty already, if they don't keep up their grades. Ask any parent who has to bail them out for a sophomore or junior year. And ask any student who gets chewed out by that parent.



Now a quick check of other weekend headlines, before we get to bed early:


+ A series of wrecks slowed Saturday afternoon southbound traffic to a crawl on Interstate 85 in Meriwether County. One witness told your blog there first was a car on fire, then a five-car pileup behind it - and then a three-car minor wreck in the wake of that. The way he described the scene, it was almost like a NASCAR race broke out.



+ Talbotton Road reopened to through traffic, after being closed several weeks for sewer work. But WRBL didn't tell the full story of the reopening - because 12th Avenue remains closed just north of Talbotton Road. Some of us DO look both ways as we cross intersections.



+ Chapman's on Wynnton Road announced it's going out of business. I'm assuming there will be some kind of farewell party - since this store has plenty of favors in stock right now.



+ Winn-Dixie announced it will rebuild the tornado-damaged store in Americus. Given the renovations this chain already has made at several stores in Columbus, that rumor of a sellout to Kroger seems to be fading like old supermarket signs on the Phenix City Bypass.



+ High school lacrosse made its Columbus debut, as the Columbus High girls downed Decatur 14-3 at Britt David Park. How on earth did Columbus High have a lacrosse team before Brookstone or Glenwood? Have plaid preppy skirts become that scarce?



+ Instant Message to Sarah Matthews of "Peanut Network News": OK, I think I know everything about Optimize Lift. Now please start investigating what put the salmonella inside the peanut butter plant in Sylvester.



(BLOGGER'S NOTE: Because of the breaking basketball news and the transition to daylight time, our story about the one-legged man will be postponed until another day.)



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UPDATE 1....


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Friday, March 09, 2007

9 MAR 07: BAKER MUDDLED



The staff of Baker Middle School had an after-hours meeting Thursday afternoon, and learned their Principal is being replaced. In fact, she reportedly considers it a demotion. So has anyone checked for her name yet in the police blotter?



Dr. JoAnn Thomas-Brown says she was called into Superintendent John Phillips's office Thursday, and told she was being reassigned. She leaves the Baker Middle School Principal's job after today, and becoming a teacher at the Woodall Learning Center. Wow -- a couple of Russell County principals never had to give up their titles, and they were arrested.



(The Muscogee County Schools web site shows Baker Middle School actually is affiliated with a "Woodall Satellite Program." So I suppose it could have been worse - and the Principal could have been told to go coach the cheerleaders.)



The Muscogee County School District refused to give a reason for the change, calling it a personnel matter. But one teacher told me Dr. JoAnn Thomas-Brown is being moved out of Baker Middle School on the grounds of "low morale." What could that mean -- poor sales in the school magazine drive?



There seemed to be plenty of support for JoAnn Thomas-Brown at the after-school meeting. In fact, a few people made quickly-written signs protesting her transfer. One said, "What about the children" - as if a transfer from Baker Middle School actually would be bad for them.



It's a sad but true statement that Baker Middle School does NOT have the best reputation in Muscogee County. The administrators tried to make it a year-round school, but that was abandoned due to poor attendance in the summer. You'd think the students would realize the new school building has air conditioning.



The school district has tried year-round school at Baker Middle. It's tried uniforms and hundreds of computers. It's tried after-school programs and Saturday "academic camp." Yet students still have trouble meeting Georgia education standards - as if "average yearly progress" in that part of Columbus takes two or three.



Some principals play extra-large roles in a school's success, and become legendary for it. (Phyllis Davis at Rigdon Road Elementary comes to mind.) But others tend to have more of an "office personality," and really don't play that big a role in the success of students. Perhaps that was JoAnn Thomas-Brown's undoing. If you don't know her name, she's getting the blame.



Baker Middle School teachers made it clear Thursday -- they do NOT believe changing principals is the answer. One said a switch will destroy school morale, instead of improving it. But hold on here - Pat Riley stepped in as Miami Heat basketball coach last season, and the team won a championship.



I can't help thinking of sports comparisons, when I consider the shifting of Baker Middle School's principal. The "season-ending" CRCT exams are only a few weeks away - and let's face it: Superintendent John Phillips can't trade away low-scoring students for future draft picks.



Is the Muscogee County Superintendent acting like a latter-day George Steinbrenner, in removing the Baker Middle School principal only weeks before test time? Or is there a deeper reason for this change that no one's revealing? If she hustled her office computer into her trunk Thursday night, that might be a clue....



Another Baker Middle School teacher may have been closer to the truth, when she told the late TV news it's time for parents to become more active. She may have meant rallying around the principal, but perhaps Baker parents should be more involved in their children's education overall. If they do that, the initials "A.Y.P." would mean something other than "average yearly pain."



A new, still-unnamed interim principal will be on duty at Baker Middle School Monday. But I'm not sure that person will make that big a difference on the upcoming CRCT exams. After all, Harry Truman stepped into a much bigger job in 1945 - and he didn't fumble away World War II.



Now for other notes from a marvelous Thursday:


+ Georgia NAACP President Ed DuBose called on the state legislature to approve a formal apology for slavery, similar to what Virginia lawmakers did. Talk about thinking big! DuBose still can't get Columbus Council to apologize for the Kenneth Walker shooting.



+ The Alabama Legislature voted to give itself a raise of more than 50 percent. Some lawmakers noted they haven't had a pay increase in 15 years - so it's either act while the economy is strong, or apply for work at that new poultry processing plant in Phenix City.



+ Hardaway High School had its first-ever "Hawk Walk" - a parade in the hallway, preparing for today's semifinal game in the Georgia girls' basketball tournament. Now that's a display of school spirit! Not to mention being careful not to ruin that new running track....



+ Georgia assailed Auburn 80-65 in the Southeastern Conference men's basketball tournament. Auburn coach Jeff Lebo called it a "road game." Yet the attendance at Atlanta's Georgia Dome was less than 15,000 - and one-third of them probably were Kentucky fans with nothing else to do.



+ Instant Message to the Columbus Sports Council, wherever you are: If Dothan can host a division-one conference basketball tournament, isn't it time we tried again to have one? Or is one night with the Harlem Globetrotters more entertaining than three days of Mercer and East Tennessee State?



COMING THIS WEEKEND: A man with one leg and a bicycle.... and the finalists are announced in our Blog Special Event....



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Thursday, March 08, 2007

8 MAR 07: HOPE SPRINGS ETERNAL?



A Dalton, Georgia truck driver claimed part of the record Mega Millions jackpot late Wednesday. Eddie Nabors wins more than 116 million dollars - which may be enough to fuel his 18-wheeler for an entire year.



Some of the money from Georgia Lottery games goes to HOPE college scholarships - and Columbus State Rep. Carolyn Hugley says the time has come to change the rules for those scholarships. Since she's a Democrat, you can guess which way she wants to go. She's more HOPE-full than HOPE-less.



Carolyn Hugley told GPB's "Lawmakers" last week about a bill in the Georgia Legislature which I haven't heard discussed at all. It would allow college students an opportunity for a "one-time waiver" to keep HOPE scholarships, should they fall below a 3.0 grade point average in a semester. Political politeness calls it a "waiver." Most college students would say, "do-overs."



Carolyn Hugley's proposal would let HOPE students have this "one-time waiver" from a weak semester if they mentor young children. I'm not sure exactly what she means by "mentoring." Can college guys sell out for football season in the fall, then teach touch football in a physical education class during spring?



Carolyn Hugley's one-time waiver idea apparently stems from the fact that a large number of students enter Georgia colleges with HOPE scholarships, then quickly lose them because they can't keep their grades up. But is a mentoring program the right way to resolve this? Or will this push marginal college students into becoming education majors and teachers?



You may recall one goal of the HOPE scholarship in the 1990's was to encourage Georgia's youth to finish high school. Yet more than a decade later, about 30 percent of those youth still drop out without graduating. Come to think of it, it probably wasn't very smart to encourage teenagers to "stay in school" by promising them more schooling.



The high school graduates who receive a HOPE scholarship and "free" college education should realize the opportunity they have. So should they receive a second chance, if they can't keep up their grades? Is this taking Georgia's "two strikes" law to a very different level?



I can understand cases where college students might be eligible for a "hardship waiver" to keep a HOPE scholarship. It could be similar to injured athletes receiving an extra year of eligibility. But I would limit that to exceptional cases - not to students whose grades drop because they're too busy studying how to get around the legal drinking age.



To borrow a word from a blogging buddy, this proposed one-time waiver for HOPE scholarships strikes me as "wussification." At some point, youth turning into adults need to learn life doesn't always give them second chances - although I suppose the dating process is teaching them that already.



And before you head for that "write me" link and point a finger: I speak as someone who kept my grade point average well above 3.0 throughout college. I took my classes seriously, even before college. And admittedly, I was quite surprised when my Reporting I instructor had to give classmates remedial grammar lessons for a couple of weeks.... [True!]



Suppose we add this one-time waiver, and the HOPE scholarship "drop-off" rate doesn't change. What would Carolyn Hugley propose next? Will the high school "graduation coaches" follow students into college, to make extra money as tutors?



I could expand further on this, but I'm out of time - so let's quickly wrap up other news items from a splendid Wednesday:


+ The annual "Drug Free, You and Me" conference for sixth graders began at the Columbus Trade Center. You can tell times have changed from a few years ago - because the McDonald's arches logo is a bit more subdued on the children's T-shirts this year.



+ WRBL showed the Third Brigade taking one last group run at Fort Benning, before it leaves for Iraq. Some people wondered if it was really a practice session - and the next group run will be across the Iranian border.



+ A makeshift "emergency room" with tents opened near the tornado-damaged Sumter Regional Hospital. It's located on Mayo Street in Americus. This is not exactly the way you want to see a "Mayo Clinic" come to town....



+ Shaw High School's baseball team was embarrassed at home by class-A Schley County 4-3. Maybe now the Raiders will give those red uniforms back to Hardaway or Jordan, where they belong.



+ Online reports indicated the Atlanta Falcons are signing former New Orleans wide receiver Joe Horn. In New Orleans, he fit well as a "jazz Horn" - but in Atlanta, he might have to become a "car Horn."



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Wednesday, March 07, 2007

7 MAR 07: STILL A WAYS TO GO



"It's a refill cup," I told the man behind the convenience store counter Tuesday afternoon, as I held 32 ounces of Diet Dr. Pepper.


"You brought it in yourself?!" the man answered. As if people bring executive assistants with them inside convenience stores.



"In fact, I brought it all the way from Columbus."


"Where they don't have a Quik Trip!" The store employee was absolutely correct. I was on the road, at a Quik Trip in the Atlanta suburb of Union City. So it really was a Long Trip - but they don't have stores with that name.



I confirmed that indeed, Columbus has no Quik Trips. If it did, the employee told me, "I'd be working there." I suppose it's because he has relatives in the area -- unless maybe he's a disgruntled former manager of a Spectrum.



A couple of stops in metro Atlanta had brought me to this Quik Trip. It was the longest road trip in my humble Honda since I had back-to-back tire blowups last summer, to doom the dream of Power Frisbee. Thankfully, nothing like that happened Tuesday - although a steep downhill ride to a gas station may have saved me from emptying my tank in Cobb County.



Is it possible that almost ten years have passed since I moved from metro Atlanta to Columbus? Indeed it's true - and this month marks my first trip to Columbus for a job interview. My Honda actually still had a working cassette player then....



Some things in metro Atlanta have not changed since 1997. For one thing, an afternoon wreck Tuesday blocked all the lanes of Interstate 285, near one of my stops. But a traffic message board warned me about it well in advance -- so I could have a short slowdown on the Downtown Connector.



But some things have changed in the ten years since I left a duplex in College Park for my current home. A few became obvious to me only Tuesday....


+ The closest Atlanta-area shopping mall to Columbus has changed its name. "Shannon Mall" is out. "Union Station" is in. Either the Union City Council demanded this, or the mall now is filled with stores selling toy trains.



+ A Wal-Mart store on Cobb Parkway which looked new and modern in 1997 looks outdated now. That's what happens, when you don't have a SuperCenter.



+ A radio traffic report included a lottery commercial - on one of the area's leading Christian music stations. Some of us already know church members playing "fast and loose" with that one.



+ Columbus seems to have lower gas prices. I filled my tank in Vinings for $2.37 a gallon, while the Marathon station on Second Avenue in Columbus posted a price of $2.33. So of course, the critics now are comparing Columbus with Macon instead.



The gap between Atlanta and Columbus has narrowed in ten years, when it comes to big-name stores. Columbus Park Crossing has made sure of that. But we still lack Quik Trips. We lack Beef O'Brady's, the family sports bar chain which is in metro Albany. And as for Ikea -- come see us in about 100 years.



The drive to and from Atlanta was noteworthy in a couple of ways. For one thing, the weigh station along southbound Interstate 85 is far too close to the I-185 exit. I simply followed the 18-wheelers in that extra lane - but thankfully I didn't have to pay excise tax.



The biggest surprise was that a couple of deer were out grazing along I-185 near Smith Road . They seemed to be in no mood to race across the highway - so perhaps somehow they know hunting season is over.



Only four miles beyond the deer, I received my first close-up look at last week's tornado damage when I turned from I-185 onto the J.R. Allen Parkway. Tim Chitwood was right when he wrote in the Ledger-Enquirer about how much you could smell the pine - and I think it was from fallen trees, not people disinfecting open-air homes with Pine-Sol.



But I was home around sundown from metro Atlanta, in plenty of time to watch the latest "must-see TV" show for single guys like me. If you missed it, CW-66 will rerun the search for the next Pussycat Doll tonight.



Because of our road trip, we didn't catch a lot of local news Tuesday. But here's what we noticed....


+ The Federal Emergency Management Agency added Muscogee County to its "disaster area" list. Those of you who for some odd reason were envious toward Americus can calm down now.



+ Mayor Jim Wetherington waived city landfill fees for two weeks, for people with tornado damage. I thought Columbus elected a "law-and-order" mayor - not someone who suspends the rules, and risks depriving police officers of raises.



+ A political campaign sign from Enterprise, Alabama was found in a Stewart County field. It apparently was blown there by last week's storms - or else it was released by a District Attorney candidate, who's looking for free advertising anywhere he/she can find it.



+ Phenix City officials announced a new AlaTrade Foods poultry processing plant will open in an industrial park later this year, employing 500 people. The number of daily specials at KFC had better increase.



+ A strange odor from a library delayed the start of class at Loachapoka High and Elementary Schools. Teachers actually climbed aboard school buses during the delay, to teach children waiting inside them. You can tell the "No Child Left Behind" tests are getting close....



+ Instant Message to any local lottery player who might have the winning Mega Millions ticket: Do you realize you could give $1,000 to every resident of Columbus, and still have enough money to retire comfortably? It's just a suggestion.



CLASSIC BLOG: Lewis "Scooter" Libby was found guilty of federal perjury and obstruction charges Tuesday. It reminded us of a "song of the day" we wrote about the case 04 Nov 05, to the tune of "Boot Scootin' Boogie:"



To invade Iraq, some folks took it to the line -


Then someone went too far, talking with The New York Times.


A reporter went to jail for weeks, before it all went down.



They formed a grand jury, which heard from Karl Rove.


Then somebody else got the shove -


Let's boot Scooter Libby!



Oh, who named Valerie Plame?


Whoever did, it's a shame -- boot Scooter!



Don't say any day/ who's with the C.I.A.


No names, Libby.



Bob Novak knew jack,


Then turned his back - to boot Scooter Libby!



This blog has thousands of visitors each month, from people in Columbus and around the world. To advertise to them, offer a story tip or comment on this blog, write me - but be warned, I may post your e-mail comment and offer a reply.



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