Get News Updates RSS RSS Feed
General
Dining & Entertainment
Home
Religion
Automotive
Health
Editorial October 21, 2004
Search Archives

Tackling the 10 Commandments

MONTGOMERY—The decision by the U. S. Supreme Court to hear two cases relating to the public display of the Ten Commandments was no victory for Roy Moore, who was ousted as Alabama’s Chief Justice after he refused to remove a Ten Commandments monument from the State Judicial Building. No matter how the court rules on the two pending cases...one from Texas, the other from Kentucky...it will have no impact on Moore’s ouster as chief justice.

Moore called the high court “hypocritical” for not hearing his case while agreeing to hear two others of a similar nature.

********

The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled that President Bush did not act improperly when he appointed former Alabama Atty. Gen. Bill Pryor to that court during a recess of the U. S. Senate.

By a vote of 9-2, the court ruled that the Pryor appointment was constitutional. However, the jurists who voted for the seating of Pryor noted that the U. S. Supreme Court could review the decision.

U. S. Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass, the most outspoken opponent to the Pryor appointment, said he disagreed with the ruling but was pleased that the door was now open for the Supreme Court to consider recess appointments.

********

Veteran State Rep. Jack Venable, D-Tallassee, has confirmed he is now undergoing treatment for leukemia but is confident of a complete recovery. Venable, a former member of the Auburn University Board of Trustees, says he expects to be back in the House chamber when the Legislature returns to Montgomery early in 2005. He chairs the powerful House Rules Committee.

The long-time lawmaker is owner and publisher of the Tallassee Tribune.

********

The some-times unpredictable Board of Trustees of Alabama State University has reversed itself on a court-approved teacher testing plan.

Several weeks ago the ASU Board...after indicating it would buy into a new program to test prospective teachers...abruptly reversed its position and rejected the proposal.

But after taking a terrible pounding in the press for its reversal the same trustees did an about face and have approved the proposal.

********

Two obscure but remarkable Alabama women have been elected to the Alabama Women’s Hall of Fame and will be inducted into that hall next spring at Judson College.

The new inductees are Vera Hall of Sumter County and Juliette Hampton Morgan of Montgomery.

Mrs. Hall, while little known in Alabama, was an internationally acclaimed blues and black folk singer. Many of her recordings are now preserved in the Library of Congress.

Ms. Morgan, a Montgomery librarian, led a lonely and persecuted life as a white Civil Rights activist from the mid-1930s until her death in 1957 at the age of 42. She was a prolific writer of letters to newspapers, and her unpopular views on racial segregation resulted in constant harrassment including threats and cross-burnings in her yard. Appropriately she will be honored during the 50th anniversary year of the Montgomery Bus Boycott, which she strongly supported.

Bob Ingram has been covering Alabama politics for over 50 years.

Alabama

Scene

Bob Ingram


Reader Comments
No comments have been posted. Be the first!


Other Stories With Comments:
ArticleComments
Grove Hill couple celebrates 60th wedding anniversary 3
Mr. Ben motors along 1
NOTICE OF PUBLIC TEST FOR AUTOMATIC TABULATING EQUIPMENT FOR THE GENERAL ELECTION 1
Gene & Ellen's burgers rated among best in southwest Alabama 1
Rally to be at courthouse Aug. 29 in support of black property rights 1
Crimson Tide's B. J. Stabler to receive BA degree Saturday 1
Naval base building named for C'ville native 1
Alston to celebrate 103rd birthday July 6 1
Godbold-Fleming marry in British Virgin Islands 1
Longtime county lawman retiring 1


Click ads below
for larger version