Blog
Bob Dotson’s Atlanta
Rand McNally picked Atlanta as the best city in the country back in 1982. I lived there at the time and told TODAY viewers why.
The Good Life, Texas Style
In Texas there is an apartment complex so big, it has 26 swimming pools. It is called the Village, a small city really – ten thousand single adults, half of them in their early 20’s, hardly anyone over 34 — young, good looking and well off. Unfortunately, the things that make them happy also make them prime targets for crime. What to do? Well, remember, this is Texas. The Village did what a town’s got to do — it went looking for a lawman on horseback.
The New Fashioned Way
Loraine Metcalf was on welfare. Now she lives in a neighborhood of fine homes. Her daughter does too. No, they didn’t win a lottery. They earned it. The NEW fashioned way. Their tiny band of Native Americans — called the Siletz — does market studies to see what will sell and then bankrolls new businesses.
Aspen Music
Summer in the high country has a sound all its own. Mountain streams unlocked by spring. Animals looking for the sun. Since 1949, the deer and the chipmunks in this valley have moved to different sounds. This is the home of the Aspen music festival. For 9 weeks each summer, musicians gather in the Rockies to study and to play.
Al Lee Gator
Some Americans were fighting crime with the only weapon they had. Fear. Then, they turned to television. Police departments across the country began reenacting crimes, broadcasting them to gather information and help solve the problem. Crime Watch was an electronic extension of the old neighborhood block watch. People looking out for one another. The reenactments sometimes featured the actual victims. During the first four years, the Crime Watch program helped solve 460 major crimes in Orlando, Florida, and recover $4,500,000 in stolen property. The day we tagged along, the cops were taping a show on folks who steal alligators. If you have knowledge of the whereabouts of Al Lee Gator, a green male, 6-2, 68 pounds, contact the Orlando Police department.
A Journey into the Unknown
67-hundred Japanese companies operate in the United States. More than 40-thousand families have moved here. It is pioneer journey that covers more than miles. They will live in a world which to them is both exotic and enticing. When different cultures manage to live together in friendship, they sometimes create something better. It has happened before. In America.
Civil Rights Era’s Forgotten Women
Virginia Durr, born to privilege and high place, battled intolerance whatever its form. She took a Japanese family into her home during World War Two because they had nowhere to live. Was branded a Communist for her compassion and hauled before a Senate subcommittee in the 1950’s. Successfully fought the pole tax that freed the vote for women. And was one of the few, the very few, white southerners who openly resisted the violent currents of her time.
A little Scary
Eric Gray worked nights as a flight attendant, so he could take pharmacy classes by day. His family pitched in to keep him in college. Five of them lived on $22-thousand dollars a year. Eric faced a hard choice. Get insurance or eat. The family opted for food.
Eric Gray got his Phd. But just days before he could take a job that would provide him with insurance coverage, he learned his son, Eric, jr. had cancer. After one hospital stay, two weeks, the bill was $43-thousand dollars.
Devil’s Tower, Church vs. State
One man’s rock climb could be another’s cathedral. 23 Native American tribes hold Devils Tower National monument sacred. In recent years their services have had to compete with noisy climbers. National Park rangers tried to help, steering climbers away. Most left. Frank Sanders did not. “If it’s going to be closed for one set of people, then we should have another week where its closed to everyone, but Frank Sanders.” Native Americans have been coming to Devils Tower for 12-thousand years. Is it protected by the Constitutional guarantee of religious freedom or should the climbers be left alone, exercising their right to keep church and state separate? The Indians feel there are plenty of places to climb. Not enough to look up to.
Job Saver
Jack Copley saw cutbacks coming. That was his job, reviewing budgets for a telephone company. There were 53-hundred empty desks around him. He figured his work, too, might disappear. One thing he had learned. Not to be a victim. Copley set out to find Bell Atlantic a new source of income, enough to maintain his pay. For all the hours Jack worked, he didn’t even make minimum wage. His daughter made more baby sitting. But he bombarded Bell with ideas. One stuck.
Bob Dotson’s Atlanta
Rand McNally picked Atlanta as the best city in the country back in 1982. I lived there at the time and told TODAY viewers why.
The Good Life, Texas Style
In Texas there is an apartment complex so big, it has 26 swimming pools. It is called the Village, a small city really – ten thousand single adults, half of them in their early 20’s, hardly anyone over 34 — young, good looking and well off. Unfortunately, the things that make them happy also make them prime targets for crime. What to do? Well, remember, this is Texas. The Village did what a town’s got to do — it went looking for a lawman on horseback.
The New Fashioned Way
Loraine Metcalf was on welfare. Now she lives in a neighborhood of fine homes. Her daughter does too. No, they didn’t win a lottery. They earned it. The NEW fashioned way. Their tiny band of Native Americans — called the Siletz — does market studies to see what will sell and then bankrolls new businesses.
Aspen Music
Summer in the high country has a sound all its own. Mountain streams unlocked by spring. Animals looking for the sun. Since 1949, the deer and the chipmunks in this valley have moved to different sounds. This is the home of the Aspen music festival. For 9 weeks each summer, musicians gather in the Rockies to study and to play.
Al Lee Gator
Some Americans were fighting crime with the only weapon they had. Fear. Then, they turned to television. Police departments across the country began reenacting crimes, broadcasting them to gather information and help solve the problem. Crime Watch was an electronic extension of the old neighborhood block watch. People looking out for one another. The reenactments sometimes featured the actual victims. During the first four years, the Crime Watch program helped solve 460 major crimes in Orlando, Florida, and recover $4,500,000 in stolen property. The day we tagged along, the cops were taping a show on folks who steal alligators. If you have knowledge of the whereabouts of Al Lee Gator, a green male, 6-2, 68 pounds, contact the Orlando Police department.
A Journey into the Unknown
67-hundred Japanese companies operate in the United States. More than 40-thousand families have moved here. It is pioneer journey that covers more than miles. They will live in a world which to them is both exotic and enticing. When different cultures manage to live together in friendship, they sometimes create something better. It has happened before. In America.
Civil Rights Era’s Forgotten Women
Virginia Durr, born to privilege and high place, battled intolerance whatever its form. She took a Japanese family into her home during World War Two because they had nowhere to live. Was branded a Communist for her compassion and hauled before a Senate subcommittee in the 1950’s. Successfully fought the pole tax that freed the vote for women. And was one of the few, the very few, white southerners who openly resisted the violent currents of her time.
A little Scary
Eric Gray worked nights as a flight attendant, so he could take pharmacy classes by day. His family pitched in to keep him in college. Five of them lived on $22-thousand dollars a year. Eric faced a hard choice. Get insurance or eat. The family opted for food.
Eric Gray got his Phd. But just days before he could take a job that would provide him with insurance coverage, he learned his son, Eric, jr. had cancer. After one hospital stay, two weeks, the bill was $43-thousand dollars.
Devil’s Tower, Church vs. State
One man’s rock climb could be another’s cathedral. 23 Native American tribes hold Devils Tower National monument sacred. In recent years their services have had to compete with noisy climbers. National Park rangers tried to help, steering climbers away. Most left. Frank Sanders did not. “If it’s going to be closed for one set of people, then we should have another week where its closed to everyone, but Frank Sanders.” Native Americans have been coming to Devils Tower for 12-thousand years. Is it protected by the Constitutional guarantee of religious freedom or should the climbers be left alone, exercising their right to keep church and state separate? The Indians feel there are plenty of places to climb. Not enough to look up to.
Job Saver
Jack Copley saw cutbacks coming. That was his job, reviewing budgets for a telephone company. There were 53-hundred empty desks around him. He figured his work, too, might disappear. One thing he had learned. Not to be a victim. Copley set out to find Bell Atlantic a new source of income, enough to maintain his pay. For all the hours Jack worked, he didn’t even make minimum wage. His daughter made more baby sitting. But he bombarded Bell with ideas. One stuck.
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