Lorillard Tobacco has announced a $1 million donation to the International Civil Rights Center & Museum in Greensboro. FYI, the museum is being built in the F.W. Woolworth building on Elm Street that was the site of a rather famous sit-in.
Monthly Archives: February 2009
Prediction: At Least a 2 Hour Delay Announced by 11 Tonight
Given that we live in North Carolina and that we have a school system that once called off school due to a forecast of snow and stuck to it when the snow didn't appear, and that we have a forecast of 1-3 inches of snow, I'm predicting that we'll have a minimum of a two hour delay announced by the time the news airs at 11 tonight. If we see any precipitation before then I'm guessing we'll have a full-blown cancelation by 11.
Head, Heart, Lungs and Legs
I've spent a good percentage of my life on fields and courts as both a player and a coach. At best I'm average at both playing or coaching, but I've enjoyed the process immensely and over the years I hope that I've learned much through my observations. One thing I've learned through all that participation, and something I've tried to share with the kids that I've coached, is that too much attention is paid to the actualy playing of the game and not enough is paid to how to play the game. My mantra is that the most important contributors to your success in sports are, in this order, the head, heart, lungs and legs.
Senator Burr Visits Guantanamo and Blogs About It
Senator Burr (R. NC) recently visited Guantanamo and blogged about it. Here's an excerpt:
From my visit today, it appears to me that everything from the design of the facilities to the detailed operating procedures of the guard force, medical professionals, and support staff is well thought out and in keeping with our Nation's highest ideals.
If anyone receives mistreatment at Guantanamo, it is the guard force. They must endure frequent verbal and physical attacks from detainees while maintaining the highest standard of care for those same individuals.
Instead of focusing on closing the facility at Guantanamo Bay, we need to think long and hard about where we can hold some of these very hardened and dangerous individuals, many of whom could never be incarcerated in the United States.
I read this just days after reading a column by Karen Greenberg who has written a book about the early days of Guantanamo. She wrote:
The Joint Task Force, advised by U.S. Southern Command, was essentially left on its own to improvise a regime of care and custody for the allegedly hardened al-Qaida terrorists — whom the Bush administration famously called "the worst of the worst" — who would be coming their way. The idea, as Lehnert told me he understood it, was to detain them and wait for a legal process to begin.
In the absence of new policy guidance about how to treat the detainees, Lehnert told me that he felt he had no choice but to rely on the regulations already in place, ones in which the military was well schooled: the Uniform Code of Military Justice, other U.S. laws and, above all, the Geneva Conventions. The detainees, no matter what their official status, were essentially to be considered enemy prisoners of war, a status that mandated basic standards of humane treatment. One lawyer for the Judge Advocate General Corps, Lt. Col. Tim Miller, told me that he used the enemy-POW guidelines as his "working manual."
The task force set to work around the clock, processing the detainees upon arrival, administering medical treatment and providing general care in the cells of the newly built Camp X-Ray. Lehnert's lawyers studied the 143 articles of the Geneva Conventions, paying particular attention to Common Article 3, which prohibits "humiliating and degrading treatment." The head of the operation's detention unit, Col. Terry Carrico, summed up the situation to a team of Marine Corps interviewers several weeks into the mission: "The Geneva Conventions don't officially apply, but they do apply."
She goes on to write that early signs of trouble appeared when the commanders on the ground asked for representatives of the International Commitee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to be sent as was required by the Geneva Conventions. Their request was ignored by Washington and absent any direction from their civilian bosses the military commanders called the ICRC directly to get advice on ensuring the prisoners' safety and dignity as required by the Conventions. That ticked off the folks in DC to say the least. Eventually the military commanders were replaced and the Guantanamo that we came to know in the ensuing years took shape:
Once Lehnert's troops departed, a new Guantanamo took shape — the Guantanamo that an appalled world has come to know over the past seven years. Inmates were kept in isolation, interrogation became the core mission, hunger strikers were regularly force-fed, and above all, the promise of a legal resolution to the detainees' cases has eluded hundreds of prisoners.
As Obama moves to close Guantanamo down, the story of Joint Task Force 160 takes on new significance. Had the United States been willing to trust in the professionalism of its superb military, it could have avoided one of the most shameful passages in its history.
Lehnert still regrets the legal limbo that Guantanamo became — and the damage that did to America's "stature in the world." As he put it, "the juice wasn't worth the squeeze."
I'm not going to dispute Sen. Burr's assessment of the current atmosphere at Guantanamo, but I am going to say that from what I've read and heard over the years it's a political necessity for the facility to be shut down because it has come to represent a lot of very negative perceptions of the US. Undoubtedly there are some very bad people being held there, but we've heard over the years that lots of not-bad people were swept up with the very bad people and were treated much the same way as the very bad. Unfortunately for them, and us, they were held for years without any recourse and now our country has to deal with the black eye that their treatment has given us. It's too bad because Guantanamo probably is the best place to keep the remaining truly bad guys, but because we screwed up we are pretty much forced to shut down Gitmo and move them.
Warning: Your Kids May Be Able to Forge Your Handwriting If You Aren’t Careful
I think every kid has at some point in their lives wished they could pen a note to school that's at least a fairly realistic forgery of their parents' handwriting. Think of the possibilities; endless days of hooky, alibis for missing assignments, realistic alternatives to "the dog ate my homework", etc. For today's youth that fantasy is fast becoming a reality.
Homeschool Nation – North Carolina, Blog by Local Homeschooler
There appears to be a new blog for homeschoolers here in the Triad. Actually, upon further review it looks like it's just new to me. Anyway, Homeschool Nation – North Carolina has posts about homeschoolers' drivers ed (available for free to homeschoolers in Forsyth County at their local high schools), field trip ideas and a link to a Fox8 feature about the homeschoolers' football team among other things. Looks like lots of good information for local homeschoolers.
Lewisville Historical Society Scores $25,000 for Nissen House
Lewisville Photos has a story about the Winston-Salem Foundation giving the Lewisville Historical Society $25,000 for the Nissen House move and restoration. There's a picture of Foundation president Scott Wierman presenting the check, and now I really wish I'd been there. Scott and I were both assistant coaches for girls challenge soccer teams (girls born in 1993) in the Twin City Youth Soccer Association club and I haven't seen him for a while so it would have been nice to catch up.
Winston-Salem Artist Profiled in Paper That Claims All the News That’s Fit to Print
Librarchivist Tweeted a link to an article in the New York Times about the hanging of Peter DeGraff here in Winston-Salem over a century ago for the murder of Ellen Smith, the oral tradition that kept the story alive, the song Poor Ellen Smith and the fact that a descendant of DeGraff, Randy Furhes, wrote a variation of the song and is now performing it in venues like Winston-Salem's The Garage. The Times article mentions the Winston-Salem Journal article about Furches, and also mentions that the day after his performance another descendant who read the Journal article contacted his mother to let him know that she had the family Bible that DeGraff reportedly carried to the gallows and that everyone in the family thought had been lost.