Friday, May 26, 2006

26 MAY 06: DEJA VU ALL OVER AGAIN



Two former Muscogee County School Board candidates announced Thursday they're running for the board again. On FM radio, I think they'd call this an "old school jam...."



The most showy announcement was made at the Government Center, as former school board member Linda Parker declared she's running again this year. A good crowd showed up to support her -- or was lunch served after the ceremony, and it wasn't shown on TV?



Linda Parker is running for Muscogee County School Board District 4, the seat she used to hold. She edged Naomi Buckner for that seat in 1998, then lost narrowly to Buckner in 2002. Should we call a possible rematch this year "the brawl to settle it all" ?!



Linda Parker says one of her campaign issues is the need for new schools in South and Southeast Columbus. Aren't officials already planning for that, with all the additional soldiers heading for Fort Benning? These are G.I.'s, after all - so they can't all afford to live near Maple Ridge golf course.



Your blog was able to glimpse Linda Parker's campaign "media package" - and it included her picture on a laminated bookmark. Well, I suppose it beats putting her face on a money clip....



The Muscogee County School Board races are nonpartisan. Yet I'm told Linda Parker's husband became upset, after the evening news mentioned her 2002 announcement that she was becoming a Republican. Parker's husband says it never happened -- so maybe everyone at the airport rally that day was dreaming.



The other school board announcement Thursday came from Cathy Vaughn Williams, who told WRBL she'll try again for the at-large seat. She ran for that seat in 2002 as Cathy Vaughn -- so maybe she added a third name to sound as cool as Mary Sue Polleys.



Remember how strange the at-large school board race was four years ago? Mary Sue Polleys announced her retirement. Cathy Vaughn announced she wanted the seat -- then Polleys changed her mind at the filing deadline and won re-election. Start watching to see if Polleys is wearing flip-flops....



(Cathy Vaughn lost in 2002 despite gaining the endorsement of the Columbus Ledger-Enquirer, over School Board President Mary Sue Polleys. When DOES the new owner plan to shake up the editorial board?)



Cathy Vaughn Williams has been busy for a few years promoting affordable housing in Columbus. She heads the "NeighborWorks Columbus" program -- which is really misleading, because compared with Habitat for Humanity, your neighbors don't work to build the house for you.



(She may support affordable housing - but this campaign apparently shows Cathy Vaughn Williams is NOT a fan of home schooling.)



What's striking about Thursday's announcements is how old names in school board races are coming back around again. Maybe we should color Columbus politics blue -- as in the city recycling bins.



Filing week in Columbus doesn't occur for another month, so there's still plenty of time for new school board candidates to surface. Where are the young parents, concerned about our schools? Are they all waiting for a foundation to propose buying out Superintendent John Phillips' contract?



There's more election stuff, in our quick review of other Thursday news:


+ The Columbus Chamber of Commerce hosted a forum with State Senate candidates Ed Harbison and Reginald Pugh. Pugh told the audience at one point the race "is not a popularity contest." Uhhhhh - it's not?! When did Columbus create an electoral college?



(Reginald Pugh said afterward it bothers him that incumbent Ed Harbison has done nothing as a State Senator for "ordinary people." Is this why Democrat Pugh has been seen at plenty of Republican events in recent weeks?)



+ Roy Moore brought his campaign for Alabama Governor to Opelika. Moore said his campaign is starting to move into high gear - and with only 11 days remaining before the primary, some would say it's a little past time.



(Aides to Roy Moore's campaign say he's been endorsed by former Governor Fob James. This stunned many people - because they'd completely forgotten about Fob James, since he left office in 1999.)



+ Elsewhere, ground was broken at Fort Benning for a new $28 million shopping complex. It will have a Post Exchange, a food court seating 700 people - but for some odd reason, NO Old Navy store.



+ The hottest day of the year so far in Columbus saw the temperature reach 93 degrees F. It was SO HOT that even the "C-Town Hotties" in "The Edge Magazine" were complaining....



+ The American Red Cross showed great timing, choosing a 93-degree day to hold a blood drive at Bruster's on Whittlesey. Blood donors received a free pint of ice cream - but somehow, I doubt many donors asked for a cherry-red flavor.



+ Regions Bank announced plans to merge with AmSouth of Birmingham. The combined bank will rank among the ten biggest in the country - moving ahead of the bank on "Deal or No Deal."



+ Instant Message to Kenneth Lay and Jeffrey Skilling of Enron: OK, you "smartest guys in the room" - did you listen to the prosecutor after you were convicted? You shouldn't hide behind accountants and analysts. Do what Richard Scrushy of HealthSouth did - hide behind the Bible and civil rights attorneys.



COMING NEXT WEEK: A holiday special which will move quickly.... and what should we do for post #1,000?....



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Thursday, May 25, 2006

25 MAY 06: WHEELY SAFE



Well, well - a nationwide study released Wednesday indicates in one way, Columbus IS a relatively safe city after all. And no, Brent Rollins, I don't think the Bob Poydasheff re-election committee paid for this one....



This study examined how safe you are while driving. Allstate Insurance compared close to 200 U.S. cities -- and Columbus finished better than all but one Georgia city. Maybe the J.R. Allen Parkway has the right number of lanes after all.



Columbus scored 70th out of almost 200 U.S. cities, in terms of driving safety. Savannah and Atlanta ranked well below #100 - showing that it pays for our city NOT to have a St. Patrick's Day parade.



The Allstate study ranked cities as driver-safe based on their populations, and the average time between crashes for drivers. If these are the criteria, cities like Atlanta with NASCAR races ought to be well down the list.



The report shows the typical Columbus driver goes 9.8 years between car wrecks. It's admittedly tempting at times to wish the crazy drivers behind me stood at 9.79 years and counting....



Take this recent example: Last weekend near the Columbus Home Depot, I slowed to turn onto the short street west of Sam's Club. But two cars behind me, a metallic orange car cut the corner and hurried away ahead of me! The car had only a paper tag, too - so perhaps the driver just picked it up, maybe from a total stranger.



I tend to let the wild drivers go, with a shake of my head in disbelief more than a shake of the fist in anger. Besides, I drive a 12-year-old Honda which is much too old for chasing down speeders.



(That 12-year-old Honda was bought after I was in TWO collisions in Atlanta. On the same day. After church. At practically opposite ends of the same entrance ramp to the Downtown Connector. Twice the wrecks mean twice the insurance confusion....)



But I confess there are times when I honk my horn at intersections - not because drivers in front of me don't notice the changing light, but because of drivers who speed past me well after the light turns red. If they're not going to alert crossing drivers, someone must....



Oh yes - which Georgia city ranks above Columbus for safe driving? It's Augusta in 59th place. Apparently the only time drivers are at risk there is when the Masters golf tournament shortens the fairways.



But the Allstate study indicates Alabama cities are safer than Georgia cities for driving. Huntsville was fourth in the country, and Birmingham was 15th. I think I can explain the lack of wrecks in Birmingham. Too many drivers are waiting in lines on U.S. 78, north of downtown.



Now for other interesting distractions along the Wednesday path:


+ The Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation had its graduation day at Fort Benning. This year there are 49 graduates, and 29 of them U.S. residents. So is THIS where the U.S. government's finding all the guards at Guantanamo Bay -- the ones accused of being insensitive and unethical?



+ WRBL reported the proposed Columbus city budget would mean the end of METRA bus service to Green Island. Are you kidding me - city buses run to Green Island?! These must be for the country club servers and landscaping crew....



(So much for our two mayoral candidates setting a fuel-efficient example, and taking METRA from their Green Island homes to the Government Center. But then again, I thought that neighborhood had restrictive covenants for things such as buses.)



+ WDAK Radio's Scott Miller rejected suggestions by his "Morning Show" colleagues that he should run for Jack Rodgers's seat on Columbus Council. He'd actually make a good candidate this year - because during Columbus State sports events, he complains about officials all the time.



+ The Columbus Parks Department began offering free summer lunches to children. Remember, youngsters - every long loaf of bread which becomes hard and dry could be used as a baseball bat, to save money.



+ Etowah eliminated Hardaway from the state high school baseball playoffs 6-5. The winning run was scored in the bottom of the seventh, when an Etowah batter was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded. It wasn't a "walk-off home run" - but a walkover to the home team's trainer.



(Columbus High School won its third-game showdown over Cartersville, but Harris County lost 6-5 to Blessed Trinity. Yeah, right - tell the Harris County players that other team is "blessed." They might say it's simply lucky.)



+ Taylor Hicks of Hoover, Alabama won "American Idol." He'll receive a big recording contract - and he probably can name his price for an endorsement deal with "Just for Men" hair coloring.



(This makes two champions of "American Idol" from Alabama, not to mention Bo Bice making the final round last year. All this talk about "Alabama Idols" must be driving Bible-believing Roy Moore crazy....)



+ Instant Message to Rivertown Church on Schomberg Road: Does your pastor go to bed early on Saturday nights? His series on "America's Idols" is almost exactly what Bill Purvis at Cascade Hills Church did a couple of years ago.



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Wednesday, May 24, 2006

24 MAY 06: HITTIN' THE ROAD, JACK

A seat on Columbus Council became open Tuesday, when Mayor Pro Tem Jack Rodgers announced he plans to retire. Do you think this is the real reason why his son left WRBL sports - to keep this seat in the family?



Jack Rodgers has been a Columbus Councilor 24 years. Now at age 63, he says he's ready to retire. He'll leave office in December -- which might be perfectly timed for the new Wal-Mart SuperCenter on Whittlesey Boulevard.



Jack Rodgers says he plans to stay in Columbus after leaving office. Doesn't it seem a bit silly to ask that sort of question to a 24-year Columbus Councilor? Well, no -- not if you remember Fire Chief Roy Waters....



Jack Rodgers says he's been so busy working and serving with Columbus Council that he only recently started traveling. Who knows how stunned he was to find Opelika has Spectrum stores, just as Columbus does.



At age 63, Jack Rodgers says he's even started playing golf a little in recent years. Maybe he started too late - because the PGA Champions Tour still hasn't come back to Green Island Country Club.



The retirement of Jack Rodgers actually creates two open positions - because he succeeded A.J. McClung as Mayor Pro Tem. Which Councilor is in line for that job? Red McDaniel, because he has the longest tenure? Or Evelyn Turner Pugh, to end the "good ol' boy" image?



But the more immediate question is who will fill Jack Rodgers's Columbus Council seat. District 5 is an area around Peachtree Mall and the airport - so a lot of fast-food managers could run, on a platform of providing quick customer service.



Meanwhile, Columbus Council had a spirited discussion Tuesday over where to put a "Goodwill Community Campus" development proposed by Goodwill Industries. Should it be put on Macon Road, as some suggest? Or is that too far away for Ben & Jerry's employees to walk, without their ice cream melting?



E-MAIL UPDATE: Our Monday item on Georgia's incarceration rate may have inspired this message -- but more likely an evening news item about Lee County's packed jail did:



The story about the jails overcrowded has come up again, and again, still - seems no solution is offered.



If memory is right,, same arguments from the sherriff last time elections came around..same problem exsist..does not seem that the State is listening..maybe a different plan is in order.



Wonder what the new cells will hold when finished - maybe....More state inmates...if there are enough cells built....we can just move the State system here...



Alabama's Corrections Commissioner actually has been threatened with jail time by a judge, because so many state inmates are in county jails. Perhaps the state candidates should go there, too - but Governor Bob Riley had a news conference Tuesday about the 2007 Bassmasters Classic.



(Hey, wait a minute. There IS one candidate in Alabama who could wind up behind bars - but it's a federal trial for Don Siegelman, so I guess federal prisons don't count.)



Let's see what else locked our attention, on a Tuesday when admittedly not much inspired us:


+ The Russell County School Board voted to move middle school principal Larry Screws to the elementary school. WRBL reported parents applauded the decision -- so I'll resist the cliched comparison to chairs on the Titanic.



+ A new mobile response center was dedicated for the Russell County Sheriff's Department. It has a bunk bed, a stove, a microwave - and who knows how many residents will see it and say, "Where did they get THAT double-wide?"



+ Georgia gubernatorial candidate Cathy Cox told GPB's "Georgia Weekly" if she's elected, she hopes to seek the "broad middle ground" of voters. I thought Sonny Perdue was trying to get rid of that - by having Georgians lose weight.



+ Columbus High School split a baseball quarterfinal series in Cartersville, forcing a decisive third game today. Cartersville's team is called the Purple Hurricanes. After what Hurricane Katrina, I thought they were colored green - as in big money.



+ Instant Message to the Ledger-Enquirer: About that front-page headline the other day: "BIBLE IDENTIFIES CRASH VICTIM" - you sure fooled me with that one. I thought you had found something not even "The DaVinci Code" had.



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Tuesday, May 23, 2006

23 MAY 06: STARS (OF DAVID) FELL ON ALABAMA



Oh dear - two weeks before the Alabama primary, I've made a candidate for statewide office upset. But at least it's not Roy Moore, so I'm not being threatened with the Biblical lake of fire....



Monday brought an interesting, unexpected exchange with Alabama Attorney General candidate Larry Darby. He was controversial years ago, for opposing the Ten Commandments monument in Montgomery. If he gets elected, he might bring down more religious items than the Taliban.



The exchange actually started with an Associated Press story from last Friday. Alabama's Democratic Party declared Larry Darby "offensive" and "bizarre" for raising questions about the Nazi holocaust of World War II. Why this is an issue in the Alabama primary, I'm not sure. Are any Nazis hiding in Smiths Station?



I posted an article for a local news web site about the "Democrats vs. Darby" issue -- and a short time later, Larry Darby personally e-mailed me demanding a retraction. If he's doing this 15 days before the Alabama Primary, maybe he's the candidate of small campaigns and less government.



(How did Larry Darby find out about the article so fast? I'm led to believe he has a "Google News alert" pegged to stories with his name. And you thought politicians were self-centered and egotistical....)



My bad #1: The article I posted said Larry Darby's Atheist Law Center had challenged the Ten Commandments monument inside the Alabama Judicial Building. Wrong, Darby replied. That'll teach me to trust my memory -- and I won't bother entering the next "Jeopardy" senior tournament.



To quote Larry Darby's reply: "The Atheist Law Center, Inc. was not a part of any legal action against Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy Moore or his monument to Judaism...." To Judaism?! Perhaps if Moore had moved in a monument with the New Testament "beatitudes" on it, it could have been OK.



Larry Darby wrote he has "no issue with Mr. Moore's message that the U.S. government had no authority to intervene." Atheists have no problem with the states' rights section of the Bill of Rights. That first amendment and freedom of religion might be a little different....



Larry Darby wrote the states' rights debate in the Ten Commandments monument controversy was drowned out by "the Jews from New York and New Jersey who commandeered the pro-Moore rallies and the Jewish-owned media for the masses...." What did Darby think when agnostic Ted Turner owned CNN?



Larry Darby went on to say in his Alabama Attorney General "stump speeches I plainly attack the Jewish supremacists who own and operate the Southern Poverty Law Center." Admittedly, I have NOT checked the center's list of board members - but I thought most of their issues involved African-American Christians.



Larry Darby ended the e-mail with this challenge: "Don't lie, and brush your teeth after meals." I certainly try to uphold the first half of that - but for a supporter of states rights, that second part certainly meddles in my individual liberties.



I replied to Larry Darby's complaint, promising to adjust the story I posted to include his comments. After I did so, Darby e-mailed again beginning with these words: "You can't help but distort the truth, can you?" Not even a salutation - just that first line. He and Donald Rumsfeld would make great drinking buddies....



My bad #2: In adjusting the original story, I wrote Larry Darby challenged the Ten Commandments monument on grounds of "church-state separation." Darby answered he never uses such a "politically correct" term. I'd never heard it called politically correct before - and all the networks run by synagogue-attending Jews seem to use it.



Larry Darby says he makes it "a purposeful habit to use the constitutionally correct phrase 'separation between religion and government.'" His point is well taken here, and I'd admittedly never thought of it before. This atheist was caring more about Jews in temples and Muslims in mosques than I was.



Larry Darby went on to write: "I know of no one who denies mass deaths of innocents during the WW2...." Perhaps someday he'll be introduced to the President of Iran.



As Larry Darby explains it: "we so-called deniers simply dispute the LIES of the Jews or the Holocaust Industry." Thank you for clarifying that - but I never considered the Holocaust an "industry" before. It must be working, because fewer states than ever execute inmates in gas chambers.



In his frustration with what I wrote, Larry Darby ended his last e-mail: "JFC!" Hmmmm - what could those initials mean from an ATHEIST candidate for Alabama Attorney General? Maybe "jurisprudence for the citizens...."



Larry Darby did NOT dispute one part of the original Associated Press story. He says Alabama's Democratic Party did not talk with him before calling his comments bizarre, and thus it is "morally challenged." I'm not sure how an atheist would define such morals - except that he probably wouldn't limit them to ten.



Just as I felt down in the dumps over disappointing Larry Darby, another e-mail came my way -- from one of those "Jewish supremacists" he can't stand, and one who's actually from New York. Yes, a message came from Al Sharpton....



An e-mail statement to journalists from Al Sharpton called for Larry Darby's name to be removed from the Alabama Primary ballot. But state Democratic Party officials say it's too late to do that. And let's face it - they didn't red-flag the Preakness Stakes for Barbaro.



Al Sharpton's statement claims Larry Darby is "running a close second" in the Alabama Democratic race for Attorney General, behind the Mobile County District Attorney. It seems the candidates don't want to debate each other, so one of them took on me instead....



Al Sharpton's statement spelled out why some Alabama Democrats are upset with Larry Darby -- he "claims that no more than 140,000 Jews were murdered during the Holocaust." Many historians put the number at six million. Maybe these two Democrats can agree on a team of Florida vote counters, to get this resolved.



Despite all this heat in the Attorney General's race, the Lee County Election Board predicted Monday the turnout in the Alabama Primary may not top 25 percent. In a Bible Belt state, it's easy to understand why - since this vote occurs on 6/6/06.



(But there are other reasons for low voter interest in Lee County. Maybe local candidates are running unopposed, including Sheriff Jay Jones. If only someone would take on those annoying guys with the bullhorn from Mix 96.7 FM.)



I'm a bit thankful today that this blog is not on the Google News list of media sources. I'm not even sure how to get on it. But if Larry Darby happens upon this entry - thank you for the correction. Thank you for stimulating my thinking. And thank you, Mr. Atheist, for challenging me to be a better Christian.



Hopefully I'll watch my words a bit better, as we check other items of interest from Monday:


+ State Senator Ed Harbison called a Government Center news conference to confirm he'll seek re-election and take on Reginald Pugh. So it appears Calvin Smyre and Sanford Bishop couldn't talk Harbison out of the race, either....



(There was a good reason why Ed Harbison called a news conference to announce his re-election plans. His show "Public Agenda" doesn't seem to be on TV-16 anymore, so he needs the practice.)



+ National cable television ads began, in a drive to have Congress censure former President Carter. Maybe Republicans will attach that to the amendment defining marriage - or some other tax cut extension.



+ Older people in Russell County received a special tour of the Phenix City Riverwalk by golf cart. Hopefully none of them stepped off on the river side of the walkway - because if that area is still off-limits to Fort Benning soldiers, imagine how dangerous it could be for them.



+ The evening news showed contestants preparing for the first "Miss Black Columbus" pageant at the Liberty Theater. The ladies say it's not a racial issue, but a way to expand their opportunities. So who wants to bring back the Kansas City Monarchs, and start a new "Negro League?"



+ The college football publication "Lindy's" ranked Auburn eighth in its preseason ratings. Now hold on here - they're releasing college football rankings before Memorial Day? Next thing you know, they'll play games before the College World Series is over. Of course, they'll be like pro football then....



+ Instant Message to Mayor Bob Poydasheff: Have you called New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin yet? Not only to congratulate him, but to get ideas on how to turn a campaign around.



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Monday, May 22, 2006

22 MAY 06: SUDDENLY IT'S SUMMER



So how did you like the first weekend of summer? If you think that's a trick question, you're right - because some people would tell you it was really the third.



When does summer begin - really? The calendar and the meteorologists would tell you it's not for another month, falling on June 21. But for many of us, it actually begins weeks earlier -- which may prove Sunny 100 FM didn't really start this bad trend, by playing Xmas music in mid-November.



Most Muscogee County school children probably would tell you summer started Friday afternoon. They're now on an 11-week vacation - which means the competition for public access computers at libraries will increase about 30 percent.



But if you play high school baseball in our area, summer vacation really hasn't started yet. Several teams still could play three more rounds of state playoffs. Please forgive some of the players if they have stained uniforms - they had to hurry to the game after working at Bruster's Ice Cream.



For many drivers, summer will start this coming weekend. They'll take Memorial Day weekend trips. They'll take them more by car pool than in past years, but they'll still take trips....



But in other walks of life, summer actually began more than two weeks ago. "Mission Impossible III" was considered the first big movie of the "summer season" - and it came out May 5. I wonder if Carmike employees jumped around like Tom Cruise, when it did well at the box office.



A sportscaster over the weekend referred to the Triple Crown of horse racing as occurring "every summer." He apparently believed NBC's hype that the Kentucky Derby on May 6 was the "first big sporting event of the summer." I guess what happened to Barbaro made the Preakness the first cancellation....



For years, I defined the start of summer as the night the National Hockey League crowned a Stanley Cup champion. I'm old enough to remember when that happened on May 15 - as opposed to this year, when it could happen around June 15.



But last year the National Hockey League had a lockout which canceled the season - and that threw my schedule way off. After all, the Columbus Cottonmouths won their championship on the first weekend of April. You can't have summer while you're still doing spring cleaning....



So who's right in this debate about when summer begins? It appears in Columbus, the school children are right - because the temperature jumped in a hurry Friday, just in time for their last day of class. Hopefully all the low-income students are receiving bottles of sunscreen, to get by....



With high temperatures expected to hover around 90 F. all week, the test of wills is on. How long can I hold out with floor fans, before another sign of summer occurs - and I turn on the air conditioner for the first time? It's me versus Georgia Power, and we'll keep you posted.



In the meantime, let's check other thoughts from a very warm Sunday:


+ The tenth annual "Arts in the Park" event was held at Lakebottom Park. Organizers say they'd like to see Columbus parks become centers for artists on weekends. And while they're at it, maybe the artists can trim trees and bushes for the laid-off parks department employees.



(Do we really want to see artists filling Columbus parks on weekends? Can't we restrict them and their donation buckets to bus stops, between Monday and Friday?)



+ Several Columbus church services focused on "The DaVinci Code" movie - and to me, this seems strange. So many pastors urge worshipers to read their Bibles. So why didn't they focus on "The DaVinci Code" when the book came out? Do they doubt worshipers can read other things?



(After all this debate and fuss, I've made up my mind. I'm not looking at any more artwork by Leonardo DaVinci, until this movie is out of theatres....)



+ A new federal report showed Georgia has the second-highest incarceration rate of any state. More than one percent of Georgia's population is behind bars. [True/NPR] Maybe we're missing the point in Columbus - and we should hire more jail guards first, then the police officers.



(There's one sure way for Georgia to pass Louisiana, and lead the country in incarcerations - and if all the illegal immigrants would turn themselves in today, it would make things a lot easier.)



+ Alabama linebacker Juwan Simpson was arrested on several charges, including "receipt of stolen property." Please don't tell me they're punishing teams this way, for laterals after interceptions.



+ Instant Message to WLGA-TV 66: Please turn off the captioning! I didn't want to read what Halle Berry was saying to Byron Allen Sunday night. In fact, I don't care what she says to Byron Allen. This single guy just wants to see Halle Berry....



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Sunday, May 21, 2006

21 MAY 06: BENNING, BEER, BILLIARDS, BLOOD



The murder of a soldier in Columbus was analyzed Saturday night on the CBS News program "48 Hours." But who told reporter Erin Moriarty that Fort Benning was "in Columbus?" It only looks that way when soldiers are at the mall, or out on Victory Drive....



When two Fort Benning soldiers were tried in January for killing Richard Davis, something looked different about the TV coverage. It became clear Saturday night that "48 Hours" was involved. For one thing, WRBL never would have had more than one camera in that courtroom -- and certainly none facing the spectators.



The CBS broadcast offered several new details about the death of Richard Davis. For the first time, a Columbus police interrogation videotape was shown of suspect Jacob Burgoyne being questioned. Take that, you critics of city budgets.
They actually use videotapes, not microcassettes.



The "48 Hours" report also revealed something I hadn't heard before - that the Richard Davis case was the subject of an article in Playboy magazine two years ago. You never heard about it, of course, because no one in Columbus dares to admit they read such trash.



But we really should start at the beginning. Richard Davis was killed in some woods off Milgen Road in July 2003, only days after returning from Iraq. According to "48 Hours," he was with a group of soldiers who drank beer for hours at Hooters. They were happy to be home - and around women wearing T-shirts and not shawls.



After quaffing at Hooters, the four soldiers went to the Platinum Club on Manchester Expressway. The CBS broadcast indicated they went there to play pool. This was shocking in and of itself - you mean strip clubs have billiard tables?!



Fellow soldiers say Richard Davis was "very drunk" while they were at the Platinum Club, so he was taken to a car for a while. Only hours later, Davis was murdered by an enraged soldier - which may prove friends with drunk friends simply should keep driving.



Jacob Burgoyne told "48 Hours" he was in an argument with Richard Davis at the Platinum Club, and beat him a few times in the car. But he says when they stopped along Milgen Road, a red-eyed Alberto Martinez pulled out a knife and "just stuck him" 33 times. If only Columbus had a 24-hour paintball club....



It turns out Jacob Burgoyne had beaten up Richard Davis months before, at another Columbus strip club. Before they went to Iraq, Davis apparently embarrassed a group of soldiers by throwing coins on stage. What IS the minimum bid at these clubs - one dollar or two?



Jacob Burgoyne admitted to "48 Hours" he tried to kill himself in Kuwait days before the death of Richard Davis, by overdosing on prescription drugs. Now he's serving a 20-year sentence for voluntary manslaughter - and only hears about prescription drugs when network newscasts are on TV.



Fort Benning received plenty of criticism in the "48 Hours" report. The father of Richard Davis says Benning listed his son as AWOL after he disappeared in July 2003, and didn't search for him for months. For all we knew, he could have been conducting controlled burns to feed an arson habit.



The CBS broadcast also noted Jacob Burgoyne was recommended for psychiatric care as he returned from Iraq in 2003 -- but after a chat with a doctor at Martin Army Hospital, he was allowed to walk out and return the next week. Those SOA Watch protesters had better be very careful, come November....



(Fort Benning had no direct comment on the criticism - but don't be surprised in a few days if CBS News is added to the "off-limits" list for soldiers.)



District Attorney Gray Conger admitted to "48 Hours" he lacked much evidence to convict Alberto Martinez in the killing of Richard Davis. Yet a jury found Martinez guilty after less than three hours - so maybe it was because the prosecutor in the case looked so much like Antonio Carter of the National Action Network....



The end of the CBS broadcast revealed Alberto Martinez is seeking a new trial. He wants to use post traumatic stress disorder as a defense. This must be the new form of "temporary insanity" -- and it sounds a lot more scientific than eating Twinkies.



Another "48 Hours" first was a look inside the sentencing hearing for Jacob Burgoyne. The father of Richard Davis was allowed to speak, and let him have it - saying: "There's not a man in this world who's man enough for you." Now hold on.
When did homosexuality come up in this?



Lanny Davis admits he'll never forgive the soldiers who killed his son. In fact, he and his wife keep a small memorial to Richard Davis in the woods off Milgen Road where he died. So much for that land ever being rezoned for military housing....



The CBS broadcast also dared to mention something no one in Columbus wants to say a lot about - that the Third Brigade already is planning for a third tour of duty in Iraq. I'm hearing a training exercise will take place in California next January. So if you have a used car to sell, the clock is ticking.



BLOG UPDATE: But now to the HUGE news of the weekend - that Candace Cook is leaving WRBL. The woman who won the vote of blog readers for the best hair in Columbus [20-28 May 04] is moving out of town! And we never even learned the name of her stylist....



I'm told Candace Cook and her husband are moving back to their home area of Philadelphia. Maybe they'll run into Maria LaRosa there - and they can swap stories about how primitive Columbus is, with only one or two restaurants selling cheese steaks.



E-MAIL UPDATE: He's baa-ack....



Bob thinks we are blind not to notice all this is taking place just before his defeat, I mean campaign against Jim Wetherington. I know Bob reads my emails that I send him because he gets very angry at me for telling the truth. Well here is one more truth Bob, you are outta here. You had your chance and you messed it up. Do you think that ANYONE that works in Public Safety is going to believe anything you have to say and vote for you? You are sadly mistaken. Like I said, the best thing for you to do is fake an illness or say you are not running in order to spend more time with your family. That way you can slide out of office with the very small bit of dignity you have left.



Registered voter and non-Bob supporter,



Brent Rollins



At least Mayor Poydasheff can save money on his campaign signs - by simply putting "Bob" on them. Apparently everyone knows who that means.



"IsOurCitySafe" Brent Rollins included with his taunt an article from Saturday's Ledger-Enquirer. Almost all the reporters covering Friday's Crimestoppers party apparently overlooked a comment by Sheriff Ralph Johnson, warning plenty of police officers could leave next year. And in the last three years, I only recall him firing one....



Mayor Bob Poydasheff responded to the Sheriff's warning by saying Columbus only has the money right now for 92 percent of the salaries recommended by an independent pay study. Where I come from, 92 percent is an A grade - but some people apparently only are happy with perfection.



The political mix continued Saturday at Lonnie Jackson's "pre-Memorial Day celebration" on Buena Vista Road. Some people were disappointed by the turnout - but Mr. Jackson should have told Muscogee County schools to hold a couple of commencement ceremonies on Sunday, to accommodate him.



Mayor Bob Poydasheff spoke at the pre-Memorial Day ceremony. Then someone spotted Jim Wetherington in the audience, and invited him to make a speech as well. And on top of that, Jerry Barnes used the event to announce he'll run against Nathan Suber for Columbus Council. It's nice to see we're putting our soldiers first....



Columbus NAACP President Bill Madison attended the pre-Memorial Day ceremony as well -- only he wasn't running for anything. Instead, he talked about how people forget veterans as war "becomes a distant past." Distant past?! I thought the Third Brigade returned home less than six months ago.



By the way: did you see Richard Hyatt's column in the Ledger-Enquirer on the mayor's race? He noted both "Jim-Bob" candidates live in Green Island Hills. The last time they really had to worry about public safety was when detectives visited Eric Buffong's house.



Before I get in any deeper trouble, let's quickly wrap up other weekend headlines:


+ A Kia official confirmed construction on the West Point plant is being delayed. A statement blamed it on legal problems involving Hyundai executives in South Korea. Aw c'mon - did that stop Martha Stewart from publishing a magazine?



+ The Columbus Public Library hosted a "Bike Safety Rodeo," in which youngsters were given free bicycle helmets. Now if someone please will tell them to ride on the street - so they don't mow down joggers like me on the sidewalk....



+ The first Ben & Jerry's ice cream shop in Columbus opened near (duh) Columbus Park Crossing. Republicans who want an ice cream stand of their own should ask Shooters firing range to expand a bit.



+ The "Real Time" telecast on NBC-38 found Bill Purvis discussing "The DaVinci Code" - and the upper deck at Cascade Hills Church looked almost empty. Do you think members expected Purvis to read from Dan Brown's book, and not the Bible?



+ Columbus State's baseball team was eliminated from the NCAA playoffs, in a game where the Cougars committed five errors. When they have more mistakes in a game than some radio talk shows have in a week, it's not a good sign.



+ Instant Message to Tiger Eye Martial Arts Academy on South Lumpkin Road: You mean TIGER Eye, right? So why does the banner on your window show not only your name, but an eagle?



BURKARD'S BEST BETS: Gas for $2.60 a gallon at Summit, 15th and Veterans Parkway.... FREE "Arts in the Park" today at Lakebottom Park.... and based on history, rain falling on Arts in the Park at some point....



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Friday, May 19, 2006

19 MAY 06: PRANKS FOR NOTHING



Commencement weekend in Muscogee County Schools begins this afternoon. The Columbus Civic Center will hold eight ceremonies in about 36 hours - and the school with the smallest turnout has to return to South Commons and watch a Catfish baseball game.



It's apparently the season not only for seniors to graduate, but for students to pull pranks. WRBL's top story Thursday night was the pouring of paint on doors and signs at Shaw High School. Wow -- when vandals spray-painted an insult on my old high school's wall, I'm not sure it even made the school newspaper.



Someone went to Shaw High School and poured white paint on several doors, as well as the sign pointing to the school from the J.R. Allen Parkway area. This seems like a very strange way to promote "Arts in the Park" at Lakebottom this weekend....



Shaw High School faculty members do NOT think any Shaw students spread the white paint. Hmmmm - which high school IS the art magnet, anyway?



But Shaw High School officials admit they're not sure who poured the paint in several places. So how did WRBL seem to know it was a "senior prank?" After all, vandalism like this is a sophomoric thing to do....



An assistant principal at Shaw High School says they actually expect "rolling" with toilet paper as the school year ends. Those future Auburn students consider it spring practice.



The strange thing about this prank is that Muscogee County Schools claimed to have increased security for the last days of the term, to guard against trouble. Maybe by next year, they'll heal the wounds with the city and hire some off-duty police officers.



Year-end school pranks apparently have been common in Columbus for some time. I recall a morning jog in the late 1990's, when I found soap suds filling a fountain near the Space Science Center. Of course, maybe this was NOT a prank - simply how the city cleaned water stains years ago.



For commencement weekend, of course, the concern is NOT about pranksters. It's about something even more potentially dangerous - the threat of someone applauding when they're not supposed to....



It hasn't received much attention this year, but I'm assuming the graduation rules remain unchanged for the audience - and interruptions of the ceremony will NOT be tolerated. Regis Philbin can walk onto the set of "Deal or No Deal" anytime he wishes, but in Columbus he could be arrested.



Muscogee County school officials explain graduation is a solemn occasion, and whoops and hollers for certain seniors only detract from the moment. I'm amazed school board member Joseph Roberson hasn't tried to change this - because he asks for "amen's" from his church congregation often.



So are any senior classes in our area planning a trip outside the country - especially after what happened to Natalee Holloway last May? Oops, I forgot. This is Columbus. The only big trip here might have Brookstone seniors going to The Cheesecake Factory in Atlanta.



BLOG UPDATE: The Reuters news service claimed Thursday Kia is postponing construction of the new plant in West Point. City leaders there said they'd heard nothing about it - but then again, you wonder how many of them had heard of South Korea six months ago.



West Point Mayor Billy Head said as far as he knows, Kia construction is still on schedule. If he says it, we probably should believe it - because after all, he's the Head guy.



A spokesman for Georgia's economic development office also dismissed the Reuters report about Kia. To the contrary, he said -- several Hyundai executives are in the state right now, with more coming next week. Jeff Foxworthy has plenty of land in Harris County, where they can hide....



The rumors about Kia are swirling because Hyundai's chairman was indicted in South Korea this week, and Asian reports suggest his son will be indicted soon. And to make things more amazing, I haven't heard Ralph Nader complain about Kia cars even once.



Three South Korean automotive groups announced a petition drive Thursday. They hope to gain a million signatures, to get the Hyundai Chairman free from jail until his embezzlement trial. If this approach was allowed in the U.S., Kenneth Starr could have had President Clinton arrested years ago.



Now let's sign off on other news from Thursday:


+ The late news showed the Columbus Fire Department's new exercise equipment, which was purchased mostly from a federal Homeland Security grant. This is money designed to protect us from terrorism - and it's being spent on treadmills?! Are public safety employees going to drop them on local sleeper cells?



+ A winning ticket in the Georgia Lottery's "Win for Life" game was sold in West Point. This makes four big lottery prizes in Troup County in six months - and no, I'm not counting the Kia plant in that number anymore.



(The strange thing about "Win for Life" is that the game promises $1,000 a week for life, but the money is paid quarterly. Isn't this asking a lot from some lottery players - to actually have a three-month budget?)



+ Spencer High School graduate Ed Hill finished second on the reality show "American Inventor." He does NOT win one million dollars for his "Word Ace" idea -- but he'll probably gain a lot of uncomfortably close friends, the next time he attends a Spencer reunion.



+ Pacelli advanced in the Georgia high school baseball tournament by pounding Portal 16-6. So you might say the Vikings disconnected Portal, and now it's shut down.



+ Our Burkard Bulk Mail Index (see below) closed above 12,000 for the first time, and now is several hundred points ahead of he Dow Jones Industrial Average. I say it's time to bail out of stocks, and invest in low-priced Cialis and Ephedra.



+ Held-over curious quote of the day: "What does [Taylor Hicks] do? Does he sing?" - Mayor Bob Poydasheff on WDAK radio's "Viewpoint" 7 March.



+ Instant Message to Lonnie Jackson: Yes, we know. We know your "pre-Memorial Day celebration" is Saturday morning. We know you want a big crowd there. But we also know how you create guilt clouds - and if we have other things to do, it does NOT mean we're slapping all veterans in the face.



COMING SOON: A big pig, without the jig....



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Thursday, May 18, 2006

18 MAY 06: ALL FOUR IT



Today marks a big day for drivers in east Alabama. U.S. 280 becomes a four-lane highway, all the way from Phenix City to Birmingham. Does this mean the Columbus area doesn't have the "world's longest cul-de-sac" anymore?



Governor Bob Riley will take part in a ceremony, celebrating a completely four-laned U.S. 280 in east Alabama. So?! Zell Miller would have had a north Georgia highway named after him by now....



The last section of U.S. 280 to be widened from two lanes to four was between Alexander City and the Waverly area. It includes a tiny corner of Chambers County -- where officials may be more concerned about making U.S. 431 so wide that no one ever wrecks there again.



It's taken decades to widen U.S. 280 all the way from Phenix City to Birmingham. That's partly because some landowners along the way in Lee County either didn't want the encroachment, or didn't want to leave their homes. But Roy Moore didn't surface in time to protect their traditions....



There are 141 miles between Phenix City and Birmingham, and regular drivers on U.S. 280 say a completely four-laned highway will save them about 20 minutes in travel time. If the speed limit doesn't change, how can this be? Unless, of course, these drivers are ignoring the speed limit....



But make no mistake: U.S. 280 is NOT an interstate highway. Stop lights await at various towns along the way, between Phenix City and Birmingham. Linger at one of them in Alexander City or Sylacauga, and you might be tempted to admire an abandoned textile mill.



Parts of U.S. 280 in Alabama actually have more than four lanes, and that's a good thing. The Mountain Brook-Vestavia Hills section needs the extra space for all the suburban Birmingham traffic -- not to mention the fancy things people buy at those upscale shopping malls.



But there are other sections of U.S. 280 which could use widening beyond four lanes. I'm starting to think six lanes are needed in north Phenix City, between Wal-Mart and Kmart. The southbound lanes get packed in the late afternoon -- and with a new Bruster's going up along U.S. 280, a lot of ice cream is going to melt.



Next week will mark one year since my last drive on U.S. 280, from Birmingham to Phenix City [30 May 05]. I can't give you a fair estimate of how long the trip took -- since I made the mandatory stop at Kroger in Opelika, to buy low-priced groceries.



Now that we've fixed U.S. 280 all the way to Birmingham, the next project is making a straight four-lane highway to Montgomery. The proposed Interstate 14 would provide that -- and even let you travel all the way to Mississippi. But if you're not going to Biloxi to gamble or Tupelo to tour Elvis Presley history, why go?



E-MAIL UPDATE: Speaking of roads, this message reached us Wednesday:



New routes



The Lee County school system says they are changing the bus routes of the buses that go thru that intersection (HWY 169 and lee road 240) .



That is a good move, Now, asking for the interesection to be redone to make it available for school buses to make south turns onto HWY 169. this will be interesting to see if the D.O.T. responds to this before OR after maybe some law suits are filed by Parents or not.



This is referring to the place where more than a dozen students were hurt in a collision last week. I'm not familiar with this intersection -- but if lawsuits are pending, I suppose Ken Nugent or Micki Beth Stiller will know it before long.



Now let's pull into a parking lot, to review other items from Wednesday:


+ Columbus Technical College students began a clothing drive, for residents of the Open Door Community House. Remember: your old clothes actually may be newer that what those residents wear now - and I suspect they smell better, too.



+ Alabama State Senator Gerald Dial began his own television commercial, in response to Kim Benefield. Dial calls the Benefield accusations of recent days "untrue attacks funded by trial lawyers." You'd think lawyers would state untrue attacks themselves, instead of paying for others to do it for them.



+ Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue said he'll call the legislature into a special session, if the state Supreme Court doesn't review the constitutional amendment on marriage by August 7. It's nice to see he's waiting until the sales tax holiday is over - though I can't quite understand why.



(Supporters of same-sex marriage accuse Governor Perdue of planning to make the marriage amendment an election year issue. Huh?! If their side hadn't challenged the constitutionality of the amendment in court, this never would have happened.)



+ The U.S. Senate approved an amendment to the immigration reform bill offered by Alabama's Jeff Sessions. It would build a "triple-layered fence" along the U.S.-Mexican border. That was a stunning setback for Schick, which lobbied for a Quattro
system.



(So why does Jeff Sessions want a triple-layered fence along the U.S.-Mexican border? From the news of several months ago, the Russell County Jail could use that first.)



+ Pacelli High School split a doubleheader in the state baseball playoffs with Portal, forcing a third game today. I hope Portal High School lives up to its name -- and offers not only e-mail, but real-time stock quotes and a chat room.



BURKARD'S BEST BETS: Gas for $2.66 a gallon at Dolly Madison on Victory Drive.... Oreo cookies 2-for-1 at Publix.... and someone selling duct tape outside the Civic Center, so no one interrupts this weekend's high school graduation ceremonies....



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Wednesday, May 17, 2006

17 MAY 06: FOUNTAIN CITY OF WAYNE?



Nope, at least not this year. Columbus Councilor Wayne Anthony announced Tuesday he will NOT run for Mayor. Perhaps this minister noticed how successful Roy Moore's campaign is going in Alabama....



Wayne Anthony announced his decision not to run for mayor during the Columbus Council meeting. Anthony revealed some people in his district had approached him about seeking the top job. How many of them do you think were police officers, wanting their own candidate in his current job?



Wayne Anthony gave several reasons why he isn't running for mayor. For one thing, he says two qualified candidates already are in the race. That's open to debate - and I'm sure the Chamber of Commerce will hold one sooner or later....



Wayne Anthony also noted a three-way race for mayor probably would result in a runoff, which would cost the city about $100,000. So if all the Parks Department employees hold a caucus meeting and determine their slate of candidates, there might be money to keep all their jobs.



Qualifying for Columbus city offices doesn't occur until the last week of June. So there's still time for rumors to percolate about someone else entering the mayor's race -- but I really can't imagine Bobby Peters giving up his judgeship.



So where are the rumors about possible African-American candidates for mayor? Does no one in that community want the job? Or does that community believe City Manager Isaiah Hugley gives them all the clout they need already?



Meanwhile, have you seen the first "attack ad" of the election year? It surfaced Tuesday from the Kim Benefield State Senate campaign. Well, she never said one of the values in "our part of Alabama" was being nice....



The attack ad accuses incumbent State Senator Gerald Dial of offering special favors to "payday loan" shops, which charge "455 percent interest." After hearing this, I might never grumble at a gas pump again.



If Gerald Dial is running his own commercials for re-election, I haven't seen them on Columbus television. But perhaps we shouldn't be surprised by this -- since we all know how slow "Dial-up" can be.



BLOG UPDATE: Russell County Middle School was back in the spotlight Tuesday. This time, a 13-year-old student caught with a razor was suspended for a year. By comparison, any teacher who noticed this and said nothing can return to class in one day, after posting bond.



Michael Whitehead was upset, after his daughter appeared before a Russell County school tribunal. He says his daughter cut a classmate by accident with a razor last week, and even the classmate agrees with that -- so he contends a one-year suspension is too harsh. But then, if the daughter had a gun, it could have been called manslaughter.



Michael Whitehead told one journalist the one-year suspension is unfair, because his daughter has had perfect attendance and grades of "straight B's and A's." Can someone have a "straight" in TWO grades? It doesn't work that way on that televised "Heads-Up Poker" tournament.



In response, Russell County school officials say they have a "zero tolerance" policy when it comes to weapons. The "three strikes" rule there only seems to apply to reporting abuse cases....



The Whitehead family plans to appeal to the Russell County Superintendent and school board, on behalf of their daughter. After what happened to the arrested teachers and middle school principal, the big challenge for the audience at the appeal hearing might be trying not to laugh out loud.



E-MAIL UPDATE: The discussion continues about last Wednesday's severe weather, and how television stations handled it. As we wrote Tuesday:



This writer may not realize how territorial some television viewers around here can be. When severe weather threatens Alabama, some viewers on the Georgia side can't stand having their favorite programs interrupted for updates. For them, "One Columbus" can't possibly include Phenix City or Lanett.



This sounds correct..........



Also..when notices are given out from power company's on power outages...some turn to portable TVs and have you tried to look at the screen of a small portable TV and try to see what that image is in the lower left corner...it's not a bug on the screen..it's that image of severe weather in the area...where's the magnifying glasses....



Maybe guys can't see that weather map in the corner of that small screen - but they're somehow able to see whether or not the official blew the big call at the game.



There's an alternative in severe weather cases such as this, which no one has mentioned. But then again, the only Columbus radio stations I've heard interrupt their programs for storm warnings are the noncommercial stations hardly anybody likes.



Now from last week to this week, and headlines from Tuesday:


+ Which local business leaders reportedly went on a hunting trip to Fort Benning? This week? I'm hearing it did NOT go well - mainly because they were NOT hunting for land to build new homes, if you know what I mean....



+ Columbus Council approved new rules, punishing bars and restaurants which overcharge alcohol taxes. Is THIS what really caused all that gunfire outside The Fire House?



+ Twelve former drug users graduated from the Muscogee County Drug Court. I doubt any of them will take graduation trips to Aruba. In fact, their parents might not even let them visit Alabama.



+ Atlanta outfielder Kelly Johnson spent a second night in Columbus, getting three hits again against the Catfish. This "rehab assignment" in Rome may be improving his health, but it's downright painful on the opposing pitchers.



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Tuesday, May 16, 2006

16 MAY 06: THE VALUES MENU



Cathy Cox unveiled her first television campaign commercial in the Georgia Governor's race Monday night. I have to say it was shocking - because Cox actually spoke for herself.



(Of course, if she REALLY wants to be Governor, Cathy Cox should note what Sonny Perdue did at the mansion the other night - and challenge him to a karaoke contest.)



But another campaign ad has been on my mind, as we reach three weeks before the Alabama Primary. It's the one for State Senate candidate Kim Benefield of Randolph County. First of all, I didn't realize men like her husband wore cowboy hats so close to the Georgia state line....



Kim Benefield's commercial lists several "values," which supposedly make her worth your vote. And "list" is the key word, because she actually tells you what the values are. For many Republican candidates, "values" automatically is understood to mean Ten Commandments and a tax cut.



But Kim Benefield is a Democrat - so maybe that's why she specifically names the values she's for. Her commercial has two lists of four, with one value mentioned twice: "hard work." It's what people like in "our part of Alabama" - as opposed to those lazy bums in Birmingham and Mobile.



According to Kim Benefield, "our part of Alabama" also likes the value of community. Maybe so, but remember what Bill Cosby told the senior class at Spelman College in Atlanta the other day: there are prostitutes and criminals in the village, too.



You'll be relieved to know Kim Benefield's part of Alabama also embraces "doing what's right." To find the part of the state that prefers to do what's wrong, visit the Don Siegelman trial.



At the end of her television ad, Kim Benefield lists more "values of a real Alabama Democrat." In addition to hard work, she mentions "fairness, family, faith." Hey, wasn't F the grade Alabama voters gave a lot of Democrats in the last election?



I'm struck by these six distinctive values because - well, because I'm not so sure they're distinctive at all. Is there really any place where people are AGAINST hard work, community, doing what's right, fairness, family and faith? Even if you're an unmarried criminal who steals big-money lottery tickets, you still have faith that you'll win.



Perhaps the great debate in U.S. politics really isn't about what the values are. It may be about how we define them....


+ Republicans say it's only fair for hard workers to keep their income. Democrats say sharing the money with the community is doing what's right - and so far, we still have income taxes.



+ Democrats have "faith" in the government to solve our problems. Republicans have more faith in families - as long as you agree with them on what a family is.



+ Republicans say the right-wing does what's right. Democrats say the right-wingers are wrong. And the truth may be somewhere in the middle - but Independents don't win elections that often.



E-MAIL UPDATE: Since we're talking politics, let's start with Monday night's big Presidential address - well, sort of:



Burkard,



I know you're a Producer over there in ABC/FOX land, so I want to ask you a question: should the Commander of Blubbering's speech cut into valuable "24" time, will FOX re-air tonight's episode? Thanks for your help!



AR



Hey, wait a minute - Commander of WHAT?!?! With the cancellation of "The West Wing" and "Commander in Chief," he's about the only national leader we have left.



It turned out Fox moved back its Monday night lineup to accommodate the Presidential speech. So "24" appeared for the entire hour, about 20 minutes later than usual. But how many women were in mourning, because they have to wait another entire week for Oprah Winfrey's Legends Ball?



The show which WXTX wound up sacrificing was "The Insider" - which was "joined in progress" 19 minutes late, after the 10:00 news. Of all the nerve! There could have been an 11th day of screaming and yelling, in the Amy Fisher special event.



As for the President's immigration speech: I was out running when he gave it - and I didn't notice any National Guard troops along the Riverwalk, guarding against invading hoards from Alabama.



Regular TV programming resumed after I finished running - and when I turned on NBC-38, I thought of Alabama Senator Jeff Sessions. After all, the President's immigration proposals have him saying "No Deal."



Speaking of TV, we heard again from the e-mailer who criticized last week's severe weather coverage [14 Sun]:



Channel 3 did do a better job than 9,, longer coverage, more in-depth to start the 5 pm news



Channel 9 I believe had the purple on top of the red area's on the radar indicating something severe.



This is where comments come in..When severe, why not stay with it in the corner or part of the screen. It did come across like because it was still some 20 to 30 minutes away from Columbus that only a mention here and there was needed..



I remember the "Bow and Arrow" <g>



This writer may not realize how territorial some television viewers around here can be. When severe weather threatens Alabama, some viewers on the Georgia side can't stand having their favorite programs interrupted for updates. For them, "One Columbus" can't possibly include Phenix City or Lanett.



If there's one valuable lesson to be learned from last week's storm, it's this - purple is very bad. Of course, I learned this when I was young. I chose to attend the University of Kansas, not big bad Kansas State....



Our last e-mail combines several items into one:



I know I'm getting older so my memory might be failing me but I recall Bobby Peters serving as a Deputy Sheriff rather than as a member of the Columbus Police Dept. By the way at 5 p.m. ET in Smiths Station on Wed. we had hail, very dark skies and enough wind to blow down many large trees. At my house we had hail again Sat. night. By the way I have relatives in Kansas City. What station did you work for there? Barbara Jordan



Oops - your memory is actually quite good, Barbara. A double-check of the Bobby Peters web site shows he actually was a Deputy Sheriff years ago. But he directed the Columbus Police Academy for a while. Why Charlie's Angels spurned him back then is a mystery to me....



So Smiths Station has had hailstorms twice in the last seven days. Did anyone sing the second time, "Hail! Hail! Rocks that roll"?!



It's been 25 years since I worked for Kansas City radio station KJLA-AM [31 Mar]. I joined that station as it was moving away from an "all-disco music" format - including dance music playing during the newscasts. There's nothing quite like
reporting on a plane crash to the beat of a drum.



We thank all of you who write and comment - and now let's see if Monday's news inspires you further:


+ The Muscogee County School Board approved a five-year plan for acquiring new technology. You hopefully won't mind if some classrooms have high-definition flat-screen TV's before you do....



+ Talk show host Doug Kellett returned to Columbus radio. His first day on WRCG included an interview with a longtime buddy, Councilor Red McDaniel. We'll see if Councilor Nathan Suber shows Kellett any mercy, and does the same thing.



+ The late-night news revealed there have been "Bigfoot" sightings over the years in Lee and Russell Counties. Was it really a mysterious monster - or simply a heavy hunter, using up his last week of vacation?



+ A luncheon was held for the nine contestants in this year's "Miss Columbus Senior" pageant. All of them are at least 60 years old - and I imagine at least one of them has a "platform' with a built-in wheelchair ramp.



+ Fort Valley State University announced its head football coach has been fired. Your blog has learned Fort Valley athletic director Gwendolyn Reeves is spending the week in Kansas - so the coach can't complain, because the Kansas state song says "seldom is heard a discouraging word."



+ Instant Message to Atlanta first baseman Adam Laroche: So that slow-footed fielding play may be partly because you have attention deficit disorder?! I wish I'd thought of that excuse years ago - when I was afraid to catch hard line drives.



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Sunday, May 14, 2006

for 15 MAY 06: THE BOOK OF JUDGE'S



BLOG EXCLUSIVEs sometimes come from readers like you -- and today we have another one, directly from the InBox:



Richard,



During a recent google search for information about Columbus, we came across a website for Judge Peters. According to the website he has written a book. Have you heard anything about this?



Here's the link....



Well, thank you. And well, what do you know - Superior Court Judge Bobby Peters has a book in the works. But I'm a bit surprised and disappointed that it has nothing to do with dating tips.



Judge Bobby Peters' upcoming book is called, "Some Call Him Pig! I Call Him Sir!!" If you didn't look at the cover, you might conclude this is a story of football linemen....



But the cover of "Some Call Him Pig! I Call Him Sir!!" indicates the book will be about police officers. At least, I assume the officer is saving someone's life. Take that uniform off, and it could be Bobby Peters practicing a move for "Dancing With the Stars."



Newcomers to Columbus may not know Bobby Peters served with the Columbus Police years ago. Yet I seem to recall public safety groups complaining about their pay, even when he was Mayor. Have these officers even asked Jim Wetherington any budget questions yet?



(Don't forget Judge Bobby Peters wrote a letter to the Ledger-Enquirer backing Mayor Bob Poydasheff for a second term. Of course, that was more than a year ago. If he can change homes and offices since then....)



The Bobby Peters web site notes the book "Some Call Him Pig! I Call Him Sir!!" is being written with help from Betty Reese. Perhaps she's the editor - guiding the former mayor by removing all the "whereas" and "hereby proclaim" phrases.



Dick McMichael wrote his memoirs last year, and now Judge Bobby Peters has a book coming out. So should other Columbus celebrities write books? Imagine what their titles might be....


+ "Fire House Who?" - written by Al Fleming.



+ "The China Syndrome" - written by the managers at W.C. Bradley.



+ "How Stella Never Got Her Sense of Humor Back" - written by Kaffie Sledge.



+ "Which Group Wants to Feel Like a Millionaire?" - written by AFLAC's Dan Amos.



+ "Gone to Tampa With the Wind" - written by Brian McClure.



+ "Get 'er Done" - written by Russell County Commissioner Ronnie Reed.



+ "Some Call It a Pig, and I Really Don't Mind That" - written by Jim from Country's Barbecue.



E-MAIL UPDATE: The Sunday InBox had a reply to the complaint we posted about severe weather coverage:



Richard,



I hope this note finds you well. I'm writing to "clear the air" about last week's severe weather coverage. I can only speak to what we aired on WRBL, obviously, since I was on the air at the time. Here's what I know:



*In the 4pm hour, Chief Meteorologist Jeff Donald broke into programming to warn viewers of the approaching severe weather. At that time, there were no severe weather warnings in effect for the vieweing area. Jeff warned that Lee, Russell and Chambers counties would be hit first.



*Just a couple minutes before our 5pm newscast began, a severe thunderstorm warning was issued for either Lee or Chambers county (I can't recall which). Our "crawl" system was up and running and warned viewers in that area of the approaching storm.



*Less than 5 minutes later, our 5pm newscast began. We led the broadcast with weather. Jeff first spoke about the warnings for the East Alabama counties, and then warned viewers in Columbus that this weather was headed our way.



*By 5:03, warnings were issued for Harris and Muscogee Counties. We broke from the regular news block and went back to Jeff to get those warnings across to viewers. Jeff also continued to cover the severe weather threat in our Alabama counties as well.



*At 5:25-ish, I personally delivered the Flash Flood Warning for Lee and Chambers Counties on the air.



*Our severe weather coverage continued through the end of the 6pm newscast. Obviously, by that time, more focus was on Georgia, since the threat had passed our Alabama friends.



*At 11pm, we covered storm damage and power coutages with crews in both Columbus and Lee County.



I am very proud of the job Jeff Donald and the First Alert Weather Team did during last week's severe weather outbreak. WRBL News 3 is committed to covering ALL of our viewing area, both Columbus AND East Alabama. I'm sure you'll agree our daily coverage reflects that. I personally invite the blog reader who emailed you to give WRBL and First Alert Weather another try during the next severe weather event. Perhaps while flipping channels, which I know I do obsessively, he/she may have missed some of our alerts. The reader (or anyone) can email me at: bstewart@wrbl.com with any suggestions on how to improve our coverage.



Thanks for your time.



Best,



Blaine Stewart



5pm Anchor/Reporter



WRBL-TV



Thanks for the update -- Blaine Stewart in the WRBL newsroom. Hey, that's almost how a news anchor actually would say that.



Perhaps our earlier writer wasn't watching Judge Judy and Judge Joe Brown on WRBL that afternoon. Let's face it, Judge Marilyn Milian on "The People's Court" at NBC-38 looks hotter than both of them....



It's nice to see Blaine Stewart kept a log of everything that went on last Wednesday. But then again, we shouldn't be surprised -- since he was acting meteorologist at WRBL only a few weeks ago.



Severe weather threatened parts of the Columbus area again Sunday - and here's what else came to our attention:


+ Columbus Urban League President Reginald Pugh told the Ledger-Enquirer several big-name local Democrats tried to talk him out of running for State Senator against Ed Harbison. State Rep. Calvin Smyre and Cong. Sanford Bishop denied it. Perhaps they really wanted Pugh to move into Seth Harp's district.



+ CBS News announced next weekend's "48 Hours Mystery" will examine the murder of Fort Benning soldier Richard Davis. That's just what the Columbus Convention and Visitors Bureau needed, to promote summer tourism....



+ The Columbus Public Library marked Mother's Day by holding a "Teddy Bear Tea." By comparison, Abercrombie and Fitch sold potential teenage mothers Teddy Bear T's - as in shirts asking for steamy hugs.



+ The Auburn Police began a new seat belt crackdown, called "Buckle Up in Your Truck." If more young couples did this on dates, the number of sexually transmitted diseases might drop dramatically.



+ Columbus State won the Peach Belt Conference baseball tournament, taking two games over top-ranked Georgia College and State University. This was the first conference baseball tournament since 1998 - perhaps waiting for Kennesaw State to go away, so C.S.U. could start dominating again.



Today's main topic was the result of a blog reader's tip. To offer a story tip, make a PayPal donation or comment on this blog, write me - but be warned, I may post a reply.



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14 MAY 06: FRIDAY'S ON MY MIND



The Ma Rainey blues festival opened Saturday at the Liberty Theater. If enough people attend this event, perhaps we'll qualify for a Columbus Hard Rock Café.



A lot of new restaurants have come to Columbus in recent years - but few big-name restaurants have opened as quietly as T.G.I. Friday's on Whittlesey Boulevard. It had no big ad campaign, and no grand opening bash. It's as if the owners expected a big crowd automatically - but if they don't sell pancakes or waffles....



I paid a visit to the new Friday's a few weeks ago - and was surprised right away by my ability to find a parking spot near the door on a weeknight. At the Olive Garden, I think that still requires several laps and burning a gallon of gas.



The second strange thing I noticed about Friday's occurred at the entry doors. They have giant F's for pulling - which means you probably shouldn't take a group of teachers there.



Only once before had I dined at a T.G.I. Friday's - and that was during a vacation, on a Monday night in New York. That restaurant was practically across the street from Madison Square Garden, but not even Monday Night Football brought out a crowd. Back then, a San Diego-Indianapolis game somehow didn't thrill people.



The TV sets for sports events were in a different part of the Columbus Friday's from where I sat. That's just as well, because I had big windows to watch events outside. If this restaurant was downtown, there might actually be something
interesting to watch.



In fact, look through the window the other way and you'll find Friday's has a well-marked kitchen area. I'm not sure why this marking is part of the decor. It's not like a Japanese restaurant chef is throwing around Ginsu knives.



At some point in the last few years, I heard Friday's gain a reputation of being a "homosexual restaurant." I didn't notice anything like that during my trip to the Friday's on Whittlesey. In fact, there was a family with small children near my table - well, I mean I assumed the man and woman were married....



The menu at Friday's back in the 1990's wasn't that much different from what I encountered on Whittlesey. But there seemed to be a definite emphasis on steaks, served with three distinctive house sauces. Why the server asked if I wanted A-1 in addition to it, I have no idea.



(And some of the steak cuts at Friday's have rather obscure names. The menu offered "flat iron steaks" - and I hope no one used the flat irons on their hair first.)



The wine sauce was sufficient for me, and added some flavor to what was otherwise a run-of-the-mill steak. With salad and a beverage (no dessert), I had dinner at Friday's for less than 20 dollars -- but it struck me as being like the red-and-white stripes which abound there. It's only memorable if you bring an engagement ring.



BLOG UPDATE: After an early rush of support for Jim Wetherington, the backers of Mayor Bob Poydasheff finally may be speaking out. Your blog has obtained second-hand e-mails supporting the mayor, sent around town from someone who considered running himself. Before you ask - no, we have NOT found Dylan Glenn.



Jeremy Hobbs ran for Columbus Council two years ago, and lost to incumbent Red McDaniel. He says he thought about running for mayor this year, but health problems prevented it. Lifting all those babies for kissing could require some weight training, you know....



Since he's not running for mayor, Jeremy Hobbs has decided to back the incumbent. He writes in part:



Right here in Columbus we have a Mayor who has done a remarkable job. A Mayor who has integrity and honesty and fairness. We have a Mayor who hasn't just given up and raised taxes on people just because we could not find a solution to the public safety pay raise issue. We have a Mayor who has stuck by his word and has achieved a great many things here in Columbus. We have a Mayor who has
promised NO job cuts in his upcoming 2007 budget.



Now hold on a minute - Bob Poydasheff hasn't "given up and raised taxes?!" Well, he didn't sign an executive order raising them....



Jeremy Hobbs apparently missed the one-cent sales tax vote a couple of years ago, which Mayor Poydasheff backed but the voters turned down. The incumbent has promised to put that back on the ballot if he wins re-election -- and he's a Republican. Will Democrat Jim Wetherington try to top it, with a two-cent increase?



And if you believe the TV news reports, the mayor's proposed budget DOES have job cuts. While they may not be in public safety, they're certainly in the parks department. But then again, increased sales of home basketball goals could improve our economy....



E-MAIL UPDATE: As severe weather rumbled across Columbus Saturday night, we pondered a message about what happened three days before:



It's dark out



The TV stations did a real lousy job of reporting the storm comin' into Lee and Russell co. Wednesday.



When the 5 o'clock news came on, both 3 and 9 did the weather that a not so good looking storm is headed for columbus, and mentioned that Auburn was having it then.



But as I flipped back on forth to see updates on the storm -nothing more until almost the bottom of the hour when the 5:30 edtion started and both then Mentioned the storm moving in on Columbus and Harris county getting some nasty stuff. After that,, Whamo,, No power until Thursday Morning..



If the the News stations claim to want business money from businesses and support from the west side of the river, all of them need to do more on storm reporting in advance and not just because it will hit Harris county of columbus.



Sadly - we have to rely on channel 12 out of Montgomery to keep stuff that is up to date on the west side,, many days the picture is fuzzy.



We're sorry you were disappointed - but didn't you like the "bow echo" shown on the radar screens? One station even added an arrow of direction, making it seem almost like archery.



As I recall, Wednesday's storm was considered only a "severe thunderstorm" as it moved toward Columbus. But then a tornado warning was issued for Harris County, and that changed the mood of things. And when it looks like nighttime at 5:30 p.m. right outside your window, that can get your attention.



The TV stations tend to rely on their "watchers" and "trackers" for updates on what's happening outside Columbus. Maybe many of them lost phone service Wednesday -- and they need their own wireless contracts.



There are rare evenings when I can pick up WSFA in Montgomery on my home TV in downtown Columbus. I feel a bit guilty when I do - because my "sofa" for watching a station with those letters is in another room.



Now other items from a magnificent weekend....


+ For the first time, Columbus State University needed two ceremonies for its graduation day. Yet there were only 600 graduates -- so these seniors must have had a lot of groupies.



+ Waddell Elementary School was evacuated for a time because a gas line ruptured nearby. WRBL's Candace Cook declared the evacuation was difficult because it was "a hot day." With temperatures only in the 70's, in May?! Well, she IS from the Northeast....



+ The Springer Opera House presented a drama called "Proof." Why this wasn't suspended after the rapper of that name was killed in Detroit is a mystery to me....



+ The Chattahoochee Valley Vipers assaulted Augusta 60-46 - but did I see it right on WRBL? The halftime entertainment at the Civic Center was a ventriloquist?! Is every high school dance team in the area on vacation?



+ Instant Message to the Sonic on Victory Drive: Wow - you're open until 4:00 a.m. on weekend nights? Do dancers at The Gold Club want slushies, after they get off work?



COMING MONDAY: E-mail about a local judge's new project....



Your PayPal donations can build a better blog, and keep it independent-minded. To make a donation, offer a story tip or comment on this blog, write me - but be warned, I may post a reply.



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