Thursday, July 31, 2008

A Clean Face And Overalls


An on-the-air conversation brought this photo to mind.

He was wearing overalls.  Probably hand-me
downs from an older brother. His hair was combed,
at least as combed as an eight year old boy’s hair is
ever combed.  And he was clean as a new
penny.  His mama would never have let him go
to school any other way.  But if you look carefully,
you’ll notice that the overalls are not new,
the shirt is a little worn, and the haircut is
probably done at home.


I know from a note in her diary that his mother was
trying to help make ends meet in 1933.  Her worry
was that this child needed new shoes. She was
making bonnets and selling them to people she knew in
the Mountain View Neighborhood around Laurens
Avenue. 

His dad was a laborer, and then a truck driver
for a freight company in Knoxville. He never had a
car of his own, and when he got a job at Cas Walkers
in the 60’s, he depended on this son to pick him
up after work some nights.

The kid in this picture told me one of the treats
he and his brothers remembered from their
childhood was  doughnuts from The Salvation
Army.  But he said the down-side was they had to
attend a service to get them.

His mom prayed a lot.  He was baptized in a creek
after making a profession of faith at a revival. 

A few years after this photo was taken, this kid
found himself in the Pacific with The Sixth Army.

As an adult, his ideas of right and wrong were
clear, and not a lot of in-between.  They served him
well as he advanced in his career as a civil servant.

The boy grew into a devoted husband and father.

Seventy five years.

The boy in the photo is gone.

The memories fade a bit.

But the values stand strong.

Thanks, Daddy.

Posted by Dave Foulk at 02:01:54 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

A Young Firefighter Laid To Rest

My thanks to Jay Kersting for the heads up on this article 
about a young man who gave his life in the fire service. 

 http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/stlouiscitycounty/story/BDD56A55D1F498828625749300081CEF?OpenDocument

Posted by Dave Foulk at 14:27:04 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Invaders From Mars? Jim Beam Me Up !

When I was a reporter at WSB Radio, I heard this story from
Aubrey Morris.  He’s the smartest reporter I have ever known and a
walking history book of the last half-century in Atlanta.

This is the first account of the story I have seen in decades.

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports key piece of evidence
from the 50’s is on display.


http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/dekalb/stories/2008/07/29/atlanta_alien_monkey.html

I was told the monkey had died from natural causes, and the
people involved offered to dispose of the remains.  But I don’t
know that for sure.

It was not reported in the article, but also indicated to me
by my mentor that the idea of the prank was hatched after what
could be described as oral consumption of ethanol from
distilled grain. 

But you probably figured that one out on your own. 

Posted by Dave Foulk at 02:40:23 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Monday, July 28, 2008

On The Knoxville Church Shootings

One of the saddest things I have ever seen was a box of petunias.

Minutes before I saw them, they had belonged to a woman
who was on Gay Street in downtown Knoxville. 
Minutes before, she had been sitting on a bench,
waiting on a bus to take her home so she could plant her flowers.

By the time I got there, someone had placed a sheet over
her body.  And her flowers were right where she had placed them. 
While waiting on a bus, a man with a rifle had shot her to
death for no reason other than some voice in his head 
told him to kill.  There were others shot to death and wounded
that day, but the woman with the flowers has stayed with me.

One of the hardest things for rational people to understand is that
sometimes bloodshed makes no sense. 

Today those petunias are back in my memory along with
the musky smell of spilled blood from the scores
of killing scenes I have witnessed.  The bloody sheets,
the grim-faced police detectives, and the shredded lives of
those left behind. 

Lives left behind to live and grow on their own. 

Just like those flowers sitting on a bus bench.

Alone.

Posted by Dave Foulk at 00:43:13 | Permalink | Comments (4)

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Flying, Storms, And Fear

I used to be afraid of thunder and lightning.  That was years ago.

It’s strange how life sometimes leads us to the very things that scatter our neurons and make our heart race.  And then, we get used to the threat. 

I can’t decide which scared me the most- being caught in thunderstorms on the ground, or in the air.  I can recall a couple of times when I got drenched with pouring rain that came in sideways because of the wind.  When I was caught on foot in a powerful storm, I understood  just how weak and helpless a person can be against the force of nature. 

Once, I was the last reporter, and I think the last civillian moving around on Tybee Island  before a hurricane blew ashore.  I had never been in a hurricane before.  It was amazing how the wind blew and blew, and never stopped.  The relentless wind of the hurricane was so much different than the bluster, then calm of a Tennessee thundertsorm. After I finished my report I headed to a shelter.  After I got inside and situated to continue my work interviewing people, I decided that I needed something from my car.  I looked outside to see halves of pine trees toppling end-over-end throughthe air.  Whatever was in the car could wait.

The times I was in the air over Atlanta,  and in or near a thunderstorm, I knew what it was like to be a pinball smacking around the inside of the machine from bumpers to flppers and up and down the table, over-and-over again.

What I wanted in either case was to get away from the wind and the lightning.

There is a satisfaction in having to face something that scares the peewaddy (whatever that is) out of you, and come out of it okay.  It’s like riding a frightening amusement ride only tens of times more intense.  Twice, I was pretty sure I was going to die in a storm.  Both times, it was when I was flying in a small Hughes 300 helicopter as a traffic reporter for WSB Radio in Atlanta. 

Publicity pose with a much nicer helicopter than the actual machine


Thank God for the skill of pilot Mike Ward during one experience.  One summer afternoon those powerful Georgia storms popped up, and we were caught in a sandwich of heavy rain and wind.  Any direction we took seemed to be into bad weather, so we continued to fly north along Interstate-75 in northwest Atlanta.  We were approaching Howell Mill road when a powerful downdraft hit us.  It seemed like a big hand was shoving the helicopter toward the ground.  Mike skillfully kept the helicopter under control and managed to fly us out of the powerful wind.  We ended up nearly skimming the tops of the trees in a driving rainstorm.  We gained some altitude, then beat it back to the airport.

The other time, we flew into rain that just got heavier and heavier. Flying in rain was no problem for the little Hughes helicopter.  It is actually a fairly powerful and very sturdy machine.  But this stuff was like the sky opened up.  The rain drove us lower and lower, and slower and slower.  The visibility dropped to near nothing.  Mike talked about setting the helicopter down somewhere to sit out the storm, but it was hard to see much beyond the interstate. We kept going, and eventually flew into safer skies.

There was one early morning when pilot Carlos Layon and I took off at 6:00 AM for the morning tour.  Storms had mounted west of Atlanta and were headed to the city.  By the time we reached Buckhead, lightning strokes were blasting the ground.  Just ahead of us one bolt hit a power substation or a big transformer and the sky lit up with a green fireball unlike anything I have seen before or since.

I have been flying near storms and watched as bolts of lightning hit buildings, broadcast towers and  sometimes just streaked across the sky.  It’s fascinating to see a storm from the nearby sky.  But all the time I was watching it, my sphincter was a bit tight as I waited for lightning to hit the aircraft.  It never did.  I am thankful for that.

Were we foolish to fly in those conditions?  Probably.  But being in the air certainly gave the listeners a good first hand account of what was happening.  I think there are some folks still flying who would do the same thing. The first to come to mind are the helicopter reporters in the mid-west who do such a great job tracking tornadoes.

Now that those days are over for me, I carry a certain familiarity with big storms.  And I have a healthy respect for their lethal power.  But the roar of thunder can now be a lullaby and the flash of lighting a punctuation mark, rather than a potential period, end of sentence to my life.

Some flights,  I would be drenched with nervous sweat when I got got of the helicopter.  Often, the storms would still be grumbling.  Since then, covering them from the ground doesn’t seem so bad.  And the blinking night-light of lightning on a summer evening can even be a comfort. 

Because I can look, and know that I don’t have to be up there.

Posted by Dave Foulk at 00:50:14 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Monday, July 21, 2008

Has It Been That Long?

Thanks to my friend, Jim who sent these images to me.  They brought back a lot of memories from my high school days in west Knox County. 

Images form the 1960’s-

CEDAR BLUFF ROAD


MABRY HOOD ROAD (NOW PELIS. PKY.):

WEST HILLS:

LOVELL ROAD:

Posted by Dave Foulk at 12:15:59 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Friday, July 18, 2008

Take The Pledge, Please

There have been some recent unspeakable cruelties done
to animals in the U-S.  Help these people find the
abusers before they move on to a bigger twisted
thrill of hurting a human.

Pledge to Fight Animal Cruelty 

Posted by Dave Foulk at 20:35:47 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Looking For A Term Paper Jump-Start ?

School is about to start for thousands of youngsters.  Many of you might be searching for a topic for a term paper, or some research project.  Here is a website a friend of mine from our WSB Old Timers  group pointed out to us.  It would be a great start toward a piece on the civil rights movement from the ’50’s to the late 60’s, with lots of archive video:

http://crdl.usg.edu/voci/go/crdl/home


For those of us out of school…it makes for some interesting browsing into our American History.

Posted by Dave Foulk at 01:48:14 | Permalink | No Comments »

Life In A Rose Perspective

Here is a photo I took of flowers from my daughter’s wedding recently: 

Luke 12:27- Consider the lilies how they grow: they toil not, they spin not; and yet I say unto you, that Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.

Julie had asked me to hold them for a second while she attended to something else.  As I held the roses and turned them in the light, I was again amazed at the complex forms of curves and circles that make rose petals.  And with a slight breeze their fragrance seemed to stream from each flower. 
Each gentle swirl in the petals represent a turn in our lives, some into darker shades, and some reflecting the sunlight.  Like life itself, the rose is appreciated best when you try to see it as a whole; light and dark shades, petals away from, and toward the light- all working to make something unique and wonderful in both its simplicity in design, and complexity in execution.

Posted by Dave Foulk at 00:24:42 | Permalink | Comments (2)

Monday, July 14, 2008

Bliss

I had wrapped up the day at the station.  I was ready for a nice nap on a rainy and stormy afternoon.  Jake (The Shredder) had the same idea, but he beat me to the bed by about a half-hour.  He looked so content with himself and the world that I decided to take his picture.  He roused for a bit, snorted, and then closed his eyes for a nice air-conditioned nap.

 

Posted by Dave Foulk at 02:40:53 | Permalink | No Comments »