The Ag Report

Sunday, August 26, 2007

John Barleycorn Lives, Part 2

Last night...I took visiting friend and researcher Carl Carlson-Drexler to Bayou Bistro after a long day looking at Civil War-related sites in Hempstead and Nevada Counties...

and I bought my first legal Magnolia beer! I said I would believe it when I saw it so...John Barley Corn Lives!

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Friday, August 17, 2007

John Barleycorn Lives!

"Prohibition officially ends in Magnolia next week"...these words were met with thunderous applause by those present...the words were even more humorous as they were spoken by Ben Johnson, historian and author of John Barleycorn Must Die: The War Against Drink in Arkansas (The companion book to the Old State House Museum exhibit linked to at the right)...As Johnson himself said, the back of the book claims that "[n]obody knows more about drinking in Arkansas than Ben Johnson."

Ben was talking about the fact that at long last a Magnolia business (other than the Country Club) had obtained a liquor licence....after a public debate that seemed like it lasted forever, The Bayou Bistro (pictured below) has been granted a liquor licence...making Magnolia a better place for archeologists.

BTW: Although it may have been maligned in the press of late, I would point out that The Bayou Bistro was named the business of the month by the Magnolia Chamber of Commerce in March 17, 2006...and it is some of the best food in town (regardless of the fact that it is now wet).

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Saturday, August 11, 2007

One Year Anniversary...

This month is both the one year anniversary of my permanent arrival in Magnolia and the one year anniversary of the discovery of the theft of the Cedar Grove ceramic vessels from the AAS-SAU Research Station facility in the Bruce Center.

I'll be posting a one-year report to the blog in the next couple of weeks...that'll take care of the anniversary of my tenure as AAS-SAU Research Archeologist....but as for the stolen pots...

Last week, the Magnolia Banner-News ran a nice front-page, above-the-fold story that hopefully puts the pots back into the public memory (so they can keep an eye out for them) and may drum up some donations for building our security measures. Look here for a PDF of the article.

The Magnolia Banner-News continues to do a great job of covering both the case and archeology in general.

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Monday, August 06, 2007

Who Are the Hoo-Hoo?

Just a touch north of my station territory in Clark County is the town of Gurdon, Arkansas. Gurdon seems to be known for two things--the mysterious Gurdon Light and the International Concatenated Order of Hoo-Hoo.

I'll write a bit about the Gurdon Light in a later post (maybe around October), but let me explain a bit about the Hoo-Hoos...

The International Concatenated Order of Hoo-Hoo, Incorporated is a fraternal and service organization whose members are involved in the forests products industry (not just lumber, but also truckers who ship the stuff, journalists who print on the stuff, etc.)...The organization was founded in 1892 in Gurdon and now has members in such far flung places as Australia, New Zealand, Maylasia and South Africa...The order publishes the Hoo-Hoo Log and Ta1ly Magazine quarterly. There were 7,300 members in 1994.

The order was founded by a group of timber industry men who were trapped on a train in Gurdon tring to get to a Yellow Pine Industry conference in Camden, Arkansas...While they waited for their delayed arrival, they formed a new order...It was decided to call the new order the "Concatenated Order of Hoo-Hoo", and not the "Ancient Order of Camp Followers" as one founding father suggested.

These guys were way ahead of their time in terms of post-modern-style humor...the Hoo-Hoo was designed to be a parody of a faternal organization and was intended to fight superstition and conventionalism...What I love about the Hoo-Hoo is that they have a sense of humor about their organization...The chief executive officer of Hoo-Hoo is the Snark of the Universe (formerly the Grand Snark of the Universe). The Board of Directors includes the Chairman, Vice-President, Secretary-Treasurer, the Seer of the House of Ancients and the Supreme Nines. The Supreme Nines include the Supreme Hoo-Hoo, Senior Hoo-Hoo, Junior Hoo-Hoo, Scrivenoter, Bojum, Jabberwock, Custocatian, Arcanoper and Gurdon. The Hoo-Hoo emblem is a black cat with its tail curled into the shape of a figure nine.

If you ever go by Gurdon...stop by the International Headquarters...

Hey...I've done lots of timber-sale-related archeological surveys...I wonder if they'd let me in the order?
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Hoo-Hoo Links

http://www.hoo-hoo.org/
http://www.hoo-hoo.org/pdf/HHI-History.pdf
http://www.encyclopediaofarkansas.net/encyclopedia/entry-detail.aspx?entryID=1199

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Sunday, August 05, 2007

Vashti McCollum and the Columbia County Connection

When you think of activists for the separation of church and state you probably think of Madalyn Murray O'Hare--the founder of the American Atheiest movement who was murdered in 1995 in Austin, Texas (one of my former hometowns...In fact, I recently learned that I rented a storage unit in the same complex that the O'Hare's stolen gold coins had been stashed)...

But before Ms. O'Hare there was another woman who fought for the separation of church and state...and that woman, Vashti McCollum (shown to the right), has an unexpected connection to Columbia County...and as we are coming up on the one year anniversary of her passing, I thought it would be appropriate to revisit Vashti's story.

Vashti Cromwell McCollum (November 6, 1912–August 20, 2006) was the plaintiff in a landmark 1948 Supreme Court case that struck down religious education in the public schools. She had been born and raised in New York...Her father, a disabled World War I vet, was an architect and an atheist who successfully lobbied the state of New York to end religious classes in public schools there...Vashti moved to Champaign-Urbana in order to attend the University of Illinois...there she met Dr. John P. MCCollum, a professor of horticulture, whom she married in 1933.

James McCollum (shown to the left), the first of Ms. McCollum's three sons, was in fourth grade in a Champaign school when he was required to take religious classes during school. The classes were held on campus, were taught by a former missionary to China, and were mainly a Protestant program...Ms. McCollum, of course, did not approve and fought a long battle in the courts...the US Supreme Court eventually agreed to hear the case, and on March 9, 1948, it delivered an 8-to-1 decision saying that the religious education classes in Champaign's public schools violated the constitutional provisions for separation of church and state.

Writing for the majority, Justice Hugo Black stated that "The First Amendment has erected a wall between the church and the state which must be kept high and impregnable." According to James McCollum "the significance of the decision was that it was the first case of impression that held the several states accountable to the strictures of the establishment of religion clause of the 1st Amendment of the U.S. Constitution under the aegis of the due process clause of the 14th Amendment." All cases, involving school prayers, aid to parochial schools, sectarian religious displays on public property and other such incursions into Jefferson's wall of "separation of church and state" by the states and their municipalities, descend from this case.

The McCollums have historical connections to southwestern Arkansas and Columbia County (The family name is listed in the Goodspeed's History in 1889)...and James McCollum, the child that Vashti acted on behalf of, has returned to the area...Jim, a retired lawyer, now lives in Emerson just south of Magnolia. He is an employee of SAU, a student in the Agricultural program and he remains active in Americans United for the Separation of Church and State...He and his wife (who, interestingly enough, teaches religious studies at SAU) have become friends of mine...hell, Jim was even my sponsor into the Magnolia Rotary.

On last thing...Jim is fond of pointing out that Vashti was named for the queen of Ahasuerus in the first book of Esther who was one of the few biblical women to stand up for women’s rights. I think that's a pretty cool fact.

Check out the brief biography of Vashti written by Jim here:
http://www.inmccollum.org/JIMMC/vashti_mccollum.htm

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Other links
Americans United for the Separation of Church and State
James T. McCollum's Home Page

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