Thursday, March 26, 2009

LeRoy Underwood turned 98 this week!!!!!


He's got to be one of the oldest active members of Rotary anywhere. We are so proud of LeRoy and glad to have him among us that we stood and sang Happy Birthday. He turned 98 this week on Tuesday March 24. He is still very agile mentally and physically. The rest of us can only stand in awe and admire the remarkable genetics and good fortune that have brought an unassuming retired mail carrier this far. Thank you Lord for the blessing to our community snd our club of LeRoy and give him many more birthdays to celebrate.

Our Club Eases Hunger in Kenya


Cheryl Kirby-Stokes reported to the club that monies earned from the sale of Kenyan baskets was used to buy 7,000 pounds of grain to help feed the people of the villages that made the baskets. Elephants had destroyed the local crops leaving an already impoverished people with even less. Our club has been very supportive of Cheryl in her endeavors there and she wanted to let us know how that has translated into some very needed and humanitarian efforts. I am often asked what Rotary does, well here is one good response. Thank you Cheryl for the report and your continuing efforts in Kenya.

Dr. Andrew McMichael talks about Thomas Jefferson


Culminating a fabulous month of programs on U.S.Presidents Dr. Larry Pack brought WKU professor Andrew McMichael today. Andy spent two years in the National Archives pursuing original material on Thomas Jefferson. He had free reign of the place and opened many "Miscellaneous" boxes. He said his most revealing find were documents that revealed incidents where T.J. borrowed money from his slaves. T.J. lived in an era where he inherited the debt of his in-laws and it took him 30 years to pay that off. Later he used his own money to help furnish the White House. All in all he died heavy in debt and his assets were sold to satisfy his creditors including Monticello.

Dr. Andy talked about T.J. being enigmatic and contradictory. He told us that T.J. was a consummate politician who could embrace both sides of an issue at the same time. He was opposed to slavery but owned slaves for example. Then Andy examined Thomas Jefferson's views on religion. According to Andy, Jefferson's thinking reflected the Enlightenment philosophy of the day. Jefferson thought Christianity was an acceptable form of moral governance but he rejected all the basic tenets of Christianity. T.J. published after his presidency his version of the N.T. which ends with Christ in the tomb. The rest T.J. held as superstition.

Thank you Dr. McMichael for a very interesting and enlightening program.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Dean David Lee talks about Harry Truman



Well we've had a lively discussion prior to Dr. Lee's arrival as to whether or not the "S" in Truman's name has a period after it. I read McCullough's book on Truman and the "S" doesn't stand for anything. Nevertheless you see it both with the period and without it. Dr. Lee had a print out from the internet that did have the period.
Now that we've got that important issue out of the way we ought to thank Larry Pack again for inviting History Professor Dr. David Lee to speak today about the Harry Truman presidiency. Dr. Lee is Dean of Potter College and Sally Ray's boss. He is an expert on Sargent York and has spoken to our club about his exploits.
Today David reviewed a lot of the mental images we have about Truman. He recalled the photo of Truman holding the Chicago Tribune declaring Dewey the winner. We remember his early morning walks with the press and his sign that asserted that THE BUCK STOPS HERE. In a recent ranking of the country's greatest presidents Turman was ranked 5th yet he finished his presidency with a 22% approval rating. David said that Truman was the only president in a 112 year span with no college education. He had planned on going to West Point but his eyesight was so horrific he couldn't pass the physical. He ultimately got into the Missouri National Guard by memorizing the eye chart. He served with distinction in WWI.
David talked about the unlikely path Truman took to the White House. He rose through Missiouri polictics in the 1920's including an affiliation with corrupt machine boss Tom Pendergrass. After being elected County Judge he went on to the U.S. Senate and ultimately became FDR's VP in his fouth term. Truman had distinguished himself in the Senate by ferreting out waste and corruption among military contractors during the war. He made the cover of TIME in 1943. FDR needed a running mate that had few enemies. Truman neither saught nor wanted the post but was finally persuaded to join the ticket.
Truman was sworn in January 20, 1945 and met with FDR a couple of times before being called to the White House on April the 12th. Eleanor Roosevelt told him that she had received word that her husband had died. Truman asked her if there was anything he could do to be helpful. She assured him that it was he who would be needing help.
Sam Rayburn's summary of Truman was that he had been right about most of the big things and wrong about a lot of the little things. Dr. David Lee said Truman had said that "I did my damnedest and that's all there is to it". In my lifetime I have seen an appreciation for Truman grow. I read David McCullough's book on Truman and it made me appreciate the man a great deal. David did a wonderful job in bringing to memory so many of the attributes of this Citizen President. Thank you David.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Dr. Glen LaFantasie talks about the Lincoln Presidency


Dr. Larry Pack continued an All Star line up of WKU history professors. Today Dr. Glen LaFantasie spoke about the Lincoln Presidency. He had spoken to us last month about other aspects of Liuncoln's life. This is the 200th Anniversary of Lincoln's birth just a few miles up the road in Hodgensville. Dr. LaFantasie said that many scholars and much of the public regard Lincoln as our greatest president. Being a native Kentuckian and a member of Lincoln's party I would readily concur.

Some of the things I learned today is that Lincoln did not have a rich baritone voice as Hollywood has portrayed but rather a high shrill voice that carried well over large crowds. He was not affiliated with any particular religion though was fatalistic in his thinking which would identify him more as a Calvanist. Lincoln's cabinet was a "team of rivals" consisting of both Republicans and Democrats. The scheme didn't work well. On important matters and in running the war he didn't rely on their advice and pretty much followed his own counsel. Dr. LaFantasie noted how much Lincoln aged during his four years in office. That contrast is so easy to see in photographs.

The very last photo of Lincoln was taken by Alexander Garnder was on February 5, 1865 ten weeks before the assassination. The photograph labeled O-116 was recently colorized by sculptor James Nance and is on the cover of the February 2008 issue of Kentucky Monthly magazine. You can see it at www.abrahamlincolnartgallery.com Thank you Dr. LaFantasie for a wonderful program about one of Kentucky's greatest sons.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Dr. Robert Haynes talks about Andy Jackson



March's Program Chair Larry Pack always brings us interesting programs. In recent year's he has invited history professors from Western Kentucky University to talk about US Presidents. This month we are scheduled for Dr. Robert Haynes on Andrew Jackson (today), next week Dr. Glen LaFantasie on Lincoln, followed by Dr. David Lee on Harry S. Truman, and on the 25th Dr. Andrew McMichael on Thomas Jefferson.

Dr. Pack introduced Dr. Haynes and mentioned that he is transferring his membership from the A.M. club to the Noon Club so will be with us from now on. Bob is no stranger to our club and has held our members in rapt attention talking on previous occasions about other presidents. He speaks with no notes and brings out historical perspectives that would be difficult or impossible to ascertain from a biography.

Bob appears to be in his early 80's and I presume has retired first from a Texas University and now from Western. He speaks without notes and doesn't falter in his presentation. In case you weren't present I took notes. Here are some of the things I wrote down. Jackson was our seventh president and the last one to be directly associated with the American Revolution. He was born in one of the Carolina's but which one is in dispute. He ultimately ended up in Nashboro, TN now known as Opryland. He married well into the wealthy Donnelson family although he had to wrest Rachel from another man. He married her first in Mississippi but learned that she was not properly divorced so married her a second time four years later. This fact would become a political liablity later.

With the backing of a powerful Tennessee politician of the time (I didn't write down who it was) he started his rise in Tennessee politics. His earliest grandest claim to fame was the Battle of New Orleans which culminated the second war of independence against Britain and better known as the War of 1812. Dr. Haynes says it was the use of artillery that won the battle and not so much the much admired Kentucky Long Rifflemen. By 1824 Tennessee politicians entered Jackson in a crowded field for US President. Their aim was not so much to get him elected as to promote their own security and power in State Politics. To their amazement Jackson was popular throughout the land and ended up with the plurality of the votes but not the majority. The US House selected John Quincy Adams who in collusion with Henry Clay of Kentucky (another candidate) pulled off the upset. Clay was made Secretary of State and Jackson was ticked off by the shenanigans.

Jackson almost immediately started running for president in the new Democratic party organized by Martin Van Buren. In 1828 Jackson became president without a real agenda. He was obsessed with the public debt (over the war) and by 1835 was able to announce that the country was out of debt. He subscribed to a prevailing theory of Indian Removal to move all Eastern Tribes west of the Mississippi. This was done obstensibly so they could preserve their culture and not be assimilated. Dr. Haynes says much of the stigma came from performing this with private contractors whose peripheral (if not main) goal was to profit from selling Indian land. Nevertheless, Jackson's name is forever linked infamously to the Trail of Tears. [My own g-g-g-g grandmother was a N.C. Cherokee named Nancy. She is the grand dam of nearly every Embry you meet in this part of the country.]

Jackson was upset with the National Bank. It was ten times bigger than the U.S. Government and when policical foes introduced a bill behind his back to extend its charter 15 years, Jackson vetoed the bill. He then instucted his Secretary of the Treasury not to deposit US funds into it. That treasurer refused saying it was against the law so Jackson replaced him with a Treasurer that would. Ultimately Jackson's actions were partly to blame for the Panic of 1837.

Finally he took a stern stand against Nullification. It was a protest by the State of South Carolina to act in its own best interest to ignore federal tariffs that made purchasing items needed to raise cotton, etc. expensive to buy while they had to sell on an open international market. Jackson saw himself to be the tribune of the people not the Congress and elevated the presidency to a more powerful position. He became a bitter enemy of John C. Calhoun regarding the States ability to pick and choose which federal laws to obey. Ultimately there was a Compromise of 1833 which prevented an immediate call for secession. As a matter of fact Dr. Haynes noted that of the original Jackson people who were around by 1860 and the advent of the Civil War (or as I was taught the War Between the States) seemed to stand united against the advocates of states rights and their ability to secede. This included among other notables Sam Houston.

In summary Bob concluded that an evaluation of Jackson's presidency would have to be mixed. He governed on impulse not principle and on personalities. Once you became his enemy you were an enemy for life. Thank you Dr. Bob for such a great program.

Kevin Simpson a new Paul Harris Fellow



Kevin Simpson a local banker was inducted as our Club's newest Paul Harris Fellow on Wednesday March 4, 2009. Here our Club President Mac Jefferson is getting ready to present Kevin with his "lustrous" medallion.

Finally a New Blog with My Apologies



Our blog does have a following although not as big as I would like. I know one of our members Margaret Curtis reads it in China. She is a retired professor from Western Kentucky University and is teaching English in University settings in China.
Another professor, this one from Atlanta, found my mention of the program I did on Dr. J.N. McCormack and contacted me to share some of her research on Dr. McCormack. So while I have gotten some feedback most of the time it has been deafeningly silent.

The Rotary Magazine had a suggestion a few years ago that local clubs should explore doing a blog. I accepted the challenge on my own and have been generating the Bowling Green (KY) Noon Club's blog ever since. In the beginning I would report on each week's program and give a brief bio and photo of new members. After doing this for a number of months I found that virtually no one in our club was actually reading it. I continued because I thought the articles gave a valuable archive of our club's activities and a few more tech savvy members were following our blogs.

Since I am a physician in private practice I'm primarily interested in making a living and paying my bills. In recent month's I've seen a slacking of my usual base and have tried to broaden my outreach. I had been doing primarily an Occupational practice doing pre-employment physicals, DOT exams, and workman comp injuries. As a matter of fact I am the current president of our state organization. I have become acquainted with a large Hispanic population in Bowling Green doing pre-employment physicals and since I was their first medical contact they returned to me for their regular medical care. (I've also tried to learn Spanish.) I charged them $40 a visit in order to accommodate their economic situation. More recently the wife of a Bosnian truck driver asked what I could do for Bosnian families that didn't have health insurance and I told her that I could do $50 office visits. From that I have tried to expand to serve the working population that is not covered by health insurance. I am marketing in the name of Dr. Embry's Neighborhood Clinic and we're doing $50 office visits with marked down pricing for shots and lab tests. I have been spending a lot of my time and energy trying to move this forward so I have not had the time to spend on this blog. I don't know how much time I will have to devote to it in the future. I'll do the best I can and hope that if you find the blog to be of some benefit to please let me know.