Search This Blog

Friday, October 10, 2008

TC Williams 1968 Class Reunion


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/1
T.C. Williams's Class in History
Alumni From 1968 Reflect on Integration and a Triumph Over Turmoil
PHOTOS
Previous
Next

On a tour of the new T.C. Williams High School, 1968 graduates Lucy Meadows, left, and Ann MacNamara reminisce while other alumni inspect the gym. (By Richard A. Lipski -- The Washington Post)
Buy Photo

John Porter, the longtime principal at T.C. Williams, talks with alumni at the new school's entrance before leading them on a tour. (Photos By Richard A. Lipski -- The Washington Post)
Buy Photo

Melvin and Stacey Wanzer of Lorton pose for a picture at his alma mater. (Richard A. Lipski - The Washington Post)
Buy Photo
slideshow_init
» Links to this article
By
Theresa VargasWashington Post Staff Writer Thursday, October 9, 2008; Page VA01
John Mitchell had never gone to school with black students, let alone played sports with any. So in 1966, when he noticed the basketball court at T.C. Williams High School crowded with more faces that didn't look like his than did, he sat alone on the bleachers. Then Sam Zellars, an African American student, reached out a hand and invited him to a game.
This Story
"It was the beginning of my two years playing on the varsity team there," Mitchell said, adding that he is still thankful to Zellars for it. "That moment when you're feeling lost or a bit bewildered by everything around you, and all of a sudden there is a friendly hand, that is a very poignant moment. And it's the way the school was."
This was T.C. Williams's Class of 1968. They were eighth-graders when John F. Kennedy was assassinated and seniors when the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was killed. The civil rights movement, not yet a history lesson, played out every day in their integrated halls.
"I think, as a group, we felt connected and incredibly optimistic about our ability to change things," said Mitchell, who became class president. "You have a theme for graduation every year, and our theme was 'To Dream the Impossible Dream,' which I think was reflective of the attitude we had at the time."
On the first weekend of this month, the class once again came together. Now 58- and 59-year-olds, they celebrated their 40th reunion. They were one of several alumni groups to do so. Hundreds were expected at a joint celebration for the graduating classes of 1958 and 1959 from Francis C. Hammond and George Washington, which were high schools at that time and are now middle schools. Hammond's Class of 1963 also celebrated its 45th reunion.
But the Class of 1968 at T.C Williams stands out.

It was only the second class to graduate from what was a new, state-of-the-art school. And although the movie "Remember the Titans" focuses on the racial struggle of its football team years later, the graduates of '68 describe a time when diversity was already being embraced. Theirs, they say, was the one truly integrated high school in the city at the time.
"T.C. Williams was sort of an experiment. Nobody really knew how it would turn out," said Meg Bryant, who was named homecoming queen. "It was just a wonderful experience right from the start. There was just a real bond between members of our class, and there still is."
The first time she felt any real racial tension, she said, was the day after King was killed.
William D. Euille, who is Alexandria's mayor, said he remembers getting to school early that morning and suggesting to the principal and an African American teacher "that we needed to do something to calm the waters." Euille, an African American, was a student leader and had formed the human rights club at the school.
"We knew people wanted to release their anger," he said. "It was really an opportunity to call for peace."
So as riots erupted in the District, T.C. Williams's students assembled in the auditorium. Euille said there was a moment of silence, an explanation of what it all meant, and then he pleaded for his peers to follow King's message of nonviolence.
Mitchell said he recently came across a letter he wrote to his mother in North Carolina at the time, telling her that the school did not have a riot, as some newspapers had reported.
"I just remember being so taken by what a wonderful coming together in a time of crisis that was," Mitchell said.
On Saturday, before a main celebration at the Carlyle Club, some of the alumni took a tour of the new T.C. Williams, a modern building fashioned in step with the green movement. Then they went to the homecoming game, where Euille was announced as Bryant's escort, just as he had been 40 years earlier.
"As I look back 40 years ago, I have lots of robust and continued enthusiasm and excitement about that high school," Euille said, adding that his class was instrumental in coming up with the words to the school song, its colors and the name Titans. "We were part of all that."
Pam Walkup, who helped organize the event, said that in addition to a mayor, the class produced doctors, lawyers, college professors, economists and at least one children's book author.
"We have many PhDs and people who have gone on to try and make a difference in the world," she said. "By and large, we are a fairly socially conscious class. We were then, and it's interesting to see most of us still are."
0/08/AR2008100801256.html

Monday, October 6, 2008

Acorn Report by IBD





ACORN's Senator>> By INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY Posted Tuesday, September 30, 2008 4:20 PM PT>> Election '08: Barack Obama wasn't just the second-largest recipient of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac political contributions. He was also the senator from ACORN, the activist leader for risky "affirmative action" loans.>> ________________________________>> Read More: Economy>> ________________________________>> Despite efforts to blame the rescue bill's failure on the GOP, it should be remembered that 95 Democrats — some 40% of the Democratic Caucus — withheld support. Obama himself also deserves blame — not only for the bill's failure, but also for the crisis it was designed to solve.>> As the New York Times reports, "Aides to Mr. Obama said he had not directly reached out to try to sway any House Democrats who opposed the measure." Is the reason the fact that the slush fund for ACORN in the original bill, siphoning off 20% of any future profits for such activist groups, was trimmed from the tree?>> Obama, who once represented ACORN in a lawsuit against the state of Illinois, was hired by the group to train its community organizers and staff in the methods and tactics of the late Saul Alinsky. ACORN would stage in-your-face protests in bank lobbies, drive-through lanes and even at bank managers' homes to get them to issue risky loans in the inner city or face charges of racism.>> In the early 1990s, reports Stanley Kurtz, senior fellow at the Ethics and Policy Center, Obama was personally recruited by Chicago's ACORN to run training sessions in "direct action." That's the euphemism for the techniques used under the cover of the federal Community Reinvestment Act to intimidate financial institutions into giving what have been called "Ninja" loans — no income, no job, no assets — to people who couldn't afford them.>> CRA was designed to increase minority homeownership. Whenever a bank wanted to grow or expand, ACORN would file complaints that it was not sufficiently sensitive to the needs of minorities in providing home loans. Agitators would then be unleashed.>> Chicago's ACORN used Alinsky's tactics against institutions such as Bell Federal Savings and Loan and Avondale Federal Savings. In September 1992, the Chicago Tribune described the group's agenda as "affirmative action lending.">> Obama also helped ACORN get funding. When he served on the board of the Woods Fund for Chicago with Weather Underground terrorist William Ayers, the Woods Fund frequently gave ACORN grants to fund its activist agenda.>> In 1995, Kurtz reports, Obama chaired the committee that increased funding of ACORN and other community organizers. The committee report boasted that the fund's "non-ideological" image "enabled the Trustees to make grants to organizations that use confrontational tactics against the business and governmental 'establishments' without undue risk of being accused of partisanship.">> The CRA empowered regulators to punish banks that failed to "meet the credit needs" of "low-income, minority and distressed neighborhoods." It gave groups such as ACORN a license and a means to intimidate banks, claiming they were "redlining" poor and minority neighborhoods. ACORN employed its tactics in 1991 by taking over the House Banking Committee room for two days to protest efforts to scale back the CRA.>> As a former White House staff economist writes in the American Thinker, Obama represented ACORN in a 1994 suit against redlining. ACORN was also a driving force behind a 1995 regulatory revision pushed through by the Clinton administration that greatly expanded the CRA and helped spawn the current financial crisis.>> Obama was the attorney representing ACORN in this effort. Last November, he told the group, "I've been fighting alongside ACORN on issues you care about my entire career." Indeed he has. Obama was and is fully aware of what ACORN was doing with the money and expertise he provided. The voters should be aware on Nov. 4 of the roles of both in creating the current crisis.>>>>> Bryan K. Jones> bjones2@san.rr.com