
Athens Against the War
New Fall Festival Takes Iraq as its Focus
originally published October 10, 2007
Kelli Guinn
Elite tha Showstoppa
There are a couple of basic parameters to organizing large public events in Athens. One: they all happen in the spring and fall, with the notable exception of AthFest. Two: in the fall, they all crowd onto the Saturdays that aren’t already taken by UGA home football games. It often makes for an odd arrangement in which everything civic-minded seems to happen at once, wearying the citizenry.
This year, though, the entire month of October is free of Georgia football in Athens, and the month naturally has a different flavor from the norm. In addition, a small crew of veteran organizers-scenesters has prepared a downtown fall festival taking place at the west end of Washington Street on Saturday, Oct. 13 from 12 p.m. until 10 p.m.
What’s the occasion, besides it being autumn? The “Fall Into Athens” fest takes as its theme - for 2007, at least - the Iraq War. Specifically, that is, strident opposition to the war.
“First there was an idea for a festival, and I think from the beginning, the idea was to make it a current events-relevant festival, mixing current events with music,” says Jeff Hannan, who along with Randy Keen, Drago Tesanovich and Ed Vaughan got the ball rolling on Fall Into Athens just as this year’s spring festival season was winding down. “Then it evolved into focusing on a single current event, and if we focused on a single current event, I don’t think there’s any denial that the war is the most pressing one of the year.”
Keen explains, “It was after a pool game with me and Jeff, and we were just discussing what we were doing. Jeff came up with the idea…” (“At that point I was just the t-shirt guy,” Hannan offers.) Keen continues: "From that moment on, it just exploded with a life of its own, and we’ve been kind of chasing it ever since.”
Says Tesanovich, “It was going to be kind of a smaller, laid-back kind of affair, but once you get involved in doing something like this, it starts to have a mind of its own, and grows and gets bigger. I’m hoping this’ll grow and get bigger than even I have imagined.”
Hannan adds: “It was screaming ’big,’ so we tried to make it big.”
Ralph Roddenbery
The guys now hope to get a Fall Into Athens festival going each autumn, filling a seasonal gap in street fests, and they plan for each year’s edition to take a different “single-issue” focus. They stress the singularity of focus of this first installment: other topics may inevitably come up, but the idea is to spur dialogue and activism about the Iraq War in particular. They’ve assembled a roster of local, regional and national anti-war activists, notably Phil Aliff, a board member of Iraq Veterans Against the War, who served in 2005 and 2006 at Abu Ghraib prison and outside Fallujah. In addition to Gulf War veteran Major Kelley Culver and Vietnam War Merchant Marine vet John Heuer (also a conscientious objector in the ’70s), state Representative Tyrone Brooks and Georgia-based “Department of Peace” campaign organizer Cheryl Tarr will speak. Then there are the locals, including Flagpole contributor Eugene Wilkes and Tesanovich himself, who many know as “the button man,” as he’s often seen handing out anti-war and anti-Bush buttons near the UGA Arch. Tesanovich will be bringing his hand-made white wooden crosses, one for each Georgia soldier who has died in Iraq. They now number 109.
Where is the anti-war movement now, four and a half years into the Iraq War? Here’s Tesanovich’s take: “You know, I can tell just from being on the street… The number of negative comments I get is half of what I used to get. And the number of positive comments have increased proportionally. You know, more people are saying, 'Yes, this is the right thing.' I give away more buttons now than I did in the beginning.
“So people, I think, they see the fallacies, you know, the charade that’s been put before us, and they’re ready to do something about it, but it’s hard to decide what to do. So, this festival - that’s going to be my thing, too, when I talk - I’m going to say, again, 'Do something. We’re doing something here today; continue to do something. We’ll get the whole thing to grow to the point where people will listen.'”
He adds, “I think the time for this is good, because people need to see that there are other people feeling and thinking the same way locally.”
“Education and entertainment: that’s how we’re billing it,” Hannan says. In addition to information booths and the mix of speakers and music onstage, there will be a beer tent and artists’ market. The organizers note that booth spaces - which are free - for the artists’ market are still open, with the requirement that all goods brought for sale be made by the artists or craftspeople themselves. This is in keeping with the festival’s grassroots nature; volunteers are more than welcome, too, and sponsorships are still open - Fall Into Athens does have 501(c)3 nonprofit status thanks to the Common Ground Athens resource center. Contact information for the organizers is at www.fallintoathens.org.
On Drought
Or: Will Our Children Ever See Rain Again?
originally published October 10, 2007
Creative Commons / Diliff
Cousin (“Cudd’n” to us) Luther Cobb was a perpetually irascible and disgruntled sort, known to complain in wet weather that the rabbits were “miring up in the woods” and in dry weather that his children would “never see it rain again.” Well, wherever you are, Cudd’n Luther - and I definitely have my suspicions that it’s a pretty dry place - there have been no reports of rabbits sporting muddy feet, much less miring up, anywhere in these parts for a mighty long time. As for the children, they have just about stopped asking their parents what this “rain” stuff they keep talking about actually is. It’s gotten so bad here in Athens, that not only is all outdoor watering banned, but they’re not even watering the sacred turf of Sanford Stadium, much to the dismay of some of the boys over on the Dawgvent online forum who think UGA should be able to do whatever it damn well pleases because it brings so much money into Clarke County. I reckon they haven’t pondered the prospect of football games being canceled because someone has his priorities all screwed up and thinks that it’s more important to have enough water to keep the hospitals and schools open than to dedicate it to flushing away all the recycled Bud Light that hits the local sewer system on gameday.
Even this crowd doesn’t seem as removed from reality as the folks over at Stone Mountain who cooked up this plan to make snow - you heard me right - for 30 days to the tune of about a gazillion gallons of DeKalb County water per day so that visitors to the park could experience some frosty frolicking even with temperatures still in the 80s. A huge public outcry has temporarily aborted this artificial blizzard, and it’s a good thing, too, for the ol’ Bloviator was fully prepared to fill his tank to the brim with some of the aforementioned Bud Light, and - after the fashion of the old joke about Pat Nixon and Henry Kissinger collaborating to produce some crude graffiti about Pat’s husband - make a statement about the snow, directly on the snow, you know. (In case you still don’t get it, should the folks at Stone Mountain actually decide to pursue this fool idea and your kids want to go see it, just remember the old Eskimo maxim: “Don’t eat the yellow snow.”)
There is a serious lesson here, of course, about the absolute necessities of life that most people simply assume will always be available in inexhaustible quantities. In a way, I think growing up as a sure-enough country boy has at least made this water crisis a little less traumatic for me. When I was a kid, our water came from a hand-dug well that I’m sure was no more than 30 feet deep. I know this because every so often the water would run out and we’d have to get somebody to come and dig the well out for us. (I’m not one to dispute old folk sayings, but, for the record, I don’t recall this fellow ever complaining about his rear end being cold.) Saturday night baths - and barring special occasions, that’s exactly when my daddy and I took ‘em - consisted of a couple of inches of water in an old galvanized wash tub. Needless to say, the governor’s call for shorter showers doesn’t impress me very much, because I’m sure I set some world-class bathing speed records on those crisp winter nights on the back porch. Beyond that, we always saved both our bathwater and the water from my Mama’s old wringer washer. My daddy thought washing a car was a waste of time as well as water, so on those rare occasions when I actually had a date, I was sometimes reduced simply to wiping as much of the mud and dust off the old love-mobile as I could. Finally, since we didn’t get around to indoor plumbing until I was a teenager, the idea of allowing “yellow” to “mellow” doesn’t really pose much of a problem for me.
Back in those days, of course, a long dry spell would lead to jokes that we weren’t paying the preacher enough - which was true, wet or dry - and on Sundays we’d belt out the unofficial dry weather anthem of all good Southern Baptists:
There shall be showers of blessing:
Oh, that today they might fall,
Now as to God we’re confessing,
Now as on Jesus we call!
Given the severity of current conditions, I’m inclined to amend the foregoing lyrics after the fashion of the old G.I. who ended his prayer for God’s help with “…and God, please come yourself. Don’t send Jesus. This is no job for a boy.” Back in the old days, of course, getting the rain we needed was not a matter of “if” but “when,” so long as we simply did what the Bible taught:
There shall be showers of blessing,
If we but trust and obey;
There shall be seasons refreshing,
If we let God have His way.
That song was great comfort to my family and our hardscrabble farm neighbors, but when I look at the environmental crisis we’re facing now, locally and globally, I have to question whether “God’s way” actually included more subdivisions with bigger houses than we could ever afford or even inhabit, more coal-fired power plants to electrify them, and more big, inefficient, environmentally-unfriendly vehicles to get us to and from all the places that we suddenly needed to go. I realize that helping people get out of the messes they made for themselves is a major component of God’s job description, but my sense of His M.O. is that if we expect Him to get involved, He’ll expect us to do a little more than whine and complain like old Cudd’n Luther always did.
Jim Cobb is Spalding Distinguished Professor of History at UGA. This bloviation is reprinted, with permission, from his blog at http://cobbloviate.com.
Flagpole Halloween Short-Short Story Contest
originally published October 10, 2007
What's The Scariest Problem Around? WATER!! So, write a scary story about it!
1000 words dripping with fear, submerged in horror, wet with anxiety, drowning in devilment (graphic stories okay, too*)
First Place: $100
Second Place: $50
Third Place: $25
Honorable Mention: Priceless
Deadline: Wednesday, Oct. 24 at 5 p.m.
Submission: Preferably by email to editor@flagpole.com or by mail or hand delivery to 112 S. Foundry St., Athens, GA 30601
Winners will be published in the Halloween Day Flagpole.
(*The illustration must be made proportionate to a vertical layout of 13.15 inches tall by 4.875 inches wide or a horizontal layout of 6.375 inches tall by 10 inches wide. The artwork can be made in gray tones or in color for reproduction on our website. Submissions can be mailed, hand delivered or emailed. Digital files should be created at 600 dpi at the dimensions listed above. We recommend saving digital files as TIF with LZW compression or JPG for emailing. If the file is too large to email, you may drop off a CD or contact us at for FTP instructions.)
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