KLBJ-AM kicked Paul Pryor, its popular right-wing radio talk show host, off
the air Monday. The Austin American-Statesman reported that Pryor, who
has battled drug- and alcohol-related problems for years, said in a
hand-written note to KLBJ management that he is “fighting depression, relapsed,
and gone into treatment.” Pryor was fired after missing work for four
consecutive days. See this week’s “Media Clips” on page 34 for more on Pryor…
Congratulations to Brigid Shea and her husband John Umphress, who
welcomed 8.5-pound Eamon Brennan to the world on Monday — all three are doing
fine. Shea is the first to give birth while serving on the city council… A
1991 IRS claim for nearly $750,000 in back taxes against the Austin-based
American Atheists, Inc., was settled last week for just a fraction of that
amount. Perhaps the news will coax American Atheist founder Madalyn Murray
O’Hair out of hiding. O’Hair made history in the 1960s when she brought the
lawsuit that led to the banishment of school-sponsored prayer, but now she and
her two children, who are also principals in the corporation, are making news
for skipping town. Lord knows where the trio have been since early October…
Another Democrat has declared his candidacy for Travis County Sheriff Terry
Keel’s job: Charlie Littleton, who served as chief deputy under former Sheriff
Doyne Bailey. One of Littleton’s campaign promises is to work to eliminate
“unnecessary expensive lawsuits…” — A.D.
Despite a possible legal flap over its name, the Texas Freedom Alliance
continues to roll forward on its promise to become the antidote to the radical
right in Texas, regularly staging events throughout the state. At a December 13
forum designed to increase awareness of hate violence, the group aired a
30-minute, PBS-produced film entitled Not in Our Town, which highlighted
the successful efforts of the citizens of Billings, Montana against white
supremacist activity. A panel comprised of local religious leaders led a
discussion afterward. “We should stop hate long before it becomes crime,” said
Rev. Joseph Parker, pastor of David Chapel Missionary Baptist Church in Austin. — R.A.
Cliff Olofson, longtime manager of the Texas Observer, died last
Saturday of cancer. He was 64. He often worked late into the night on the
bi-weekly publication, on weekends and holidays, and frequently did so without
a salary, to keep the Observer solvent. So for years, with no money to
afford an apartment or home, he slept on a mat in the Observer‘s office.
His work was his life, and he went about his work with a devotion that bordered
on the religious. Someone once said that an institution is often the lengthened
shadow of one man. The Observer, for all the distinguished writers who
have graced its pages, is the lengthened shadow of Cliff Olofson.
— R.B.
Cunningham Caves In
Robert S. Boyer was subdued. “My friends tell me I should be happy,” he said,less than two hours after University of Texas Chancellor William Cunningham had
announced his resignation from Freeport-McMoRan’s board of directors. But
Boyer, a professor of computer science and philosophy at UT, wasn’t happy.
Instead, he verged on the morose. His reason: the new molecular biology
building on campus is still to be named for Freeport CEO Jim Bob Moffett. Until
that name gets changed, Boyer said, he will not do any celebrating.
Cunningham’s resignation came the day after Freeport sent letters to Boyer, UT
computer science professor Alan Cline, and anthropology professor Steven Feld,
threatening legal action. The letter, which was also sent to Bill Bunch of the
Save Our Springs Legal Defense Fund, Lori Udall of the International Rivers
Network, former Austin Chronicle writer Daryl Slusher, and this
reporter, was apparently the last straw for UT president Robert Berdahl.
According to several sources on campus, after Boyer and Cline got their
letters, they forwarded them to Berdahl, who reportedly told the professors
that he would put an outside law firm on retainer to defend them against any
legal action from Freeport. Two UT sources say that Berdahl then called
Cunningham directly to voice his displeasure.
Although Cunningham’s resignation from Freeport had been sought by students
and others for weeks, it was not public pressure that finally forced him to
tender his resignation. Instead, it was a major blunder by Freeport. By
threatening UT professors, the company put Cunningham in an untenable position:
His part-time employer was threatening the staff of his full-time employer.
In his statement to the press, Cunningham was defiant. “A few highly vocal
opponents of Freeport have distorted the facts and used personal attacks in a
continuing campaign to discredit the company,” he said. “I am convinced that
the charges of human rights and environmental abuses levied against Freeport
are totally unfounded. I have maintained that no conflict of interest arose
because of my membership on the Freeport board while also serving as
Chancellor. I have never been more confident of that fact.”
While Cunningham, who will not talk to this reporter, has terminated his board
membership at Freeport, there are still a number of unanswered questions:
* What happens to Cunningham’s stock options and how much are they worth?
* Does he still support the naming of the new building after Moffett?
* Will the company pay him his full $40,000 annual director’s salary even
though he didn’t serve a full year?
As for Boyer, he remains focused on a single issue: the naming of the Moffett
building. “I walk to work from my home,” says Boyer. “And along the way, the
natural course is to go by the Moffett building. So I pass in between the
Moffett building and Moore Hall. R.L. Moore was the best professor I ever had.
And I just kept getting sicker and sicker, and decided I just couldn’t stand it
any more.”
Boyer and several other faculty members favor naming the building after H.J.
Muller, a Nobel Prize-winning geneticist who once worked at UT. (For more info
about the building naming or Muller, check out Boyer’s Web page at
http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/boyer/fp).
“Many people are going to view the threat of lawsuits against the Freeport
Seven as an attack on everybody’s free speech rights,” Boyer said. “That in
itself may be sufficient grounds for many faculty members to ask the regents to
change the name.”
And that, Boyer said, would make him very happy indeed. Finally, he offered a
bit of unsolicited advice. “To me, the graceful thing for Moffett to do is to
withdraw his name from the building. That would end a controversy whose end
otherwise is not visible.” — R.B.
Keep That Bottle Corked
Seven South Korean business leaders were indicted on bribery charges in Seoul,reported The New York Times on December 6, including Lee Kun Hee,
chairman of the Samsung Group, as part of an anti-corruption sweep by the new
reformist Korean government. Former president Roh Tae Woo was also indicted,
and jailed, for allegedly setting up a “slush fund” for bribes paid by the
Korean company heads. The Times article notes that the company heads are
suspected of giving up to
$30 million each to the fund, in exchange for
lucrative government contracts, and other favors.
The indictment of the Samsung chief will not affect the company’s plans to
build their first U.S. plant here in Austin, contend company spokespersons from
Edelman Public Relations in Washington, D.C. Samsung PR counsel Jeff Lender
said on December 15 that Samsung Electronics, the world’s largest maker of
computer memory chips, remains “committed to Austin,” and the proposed $1.3
billion plant that would employ up to 1,600 workers and further Austin’s
growing status as one of the country’s leading centers for the semiconductor
business. The original construction starting date was set for the end of this
year, with production beginning in 1997, and Lender said there will be “no
changes. We are going ahead as scheduled.”
This latest development, however, adds to a series of questions regarding the
company’s project here in Austin. Nearly a year ago, Samsung announced that it
had narrowed its location choices down to Austin and Portland, Oregon, and both
cities scrambled to offer the biggest incentives. Negotiations between Samsung
and local elected officials and business leaders at the Chamber of Commerce led
to the City of Austin’s offer of tax abatements and other incentives totalling
$76 million over a 10-year period, while Travis County kicked in extensive
infrastructure improvements. The offers paid off when Samsung finally scheduled
a press conference on September 27 to announce their intention to locate here.
Yet, even while the city and county planned the event and stocked refreshments
for the reception to follow, the company backed out on the announcement with
hours to spare, citing “internal planning deadlines” that had to be met before
a formal announcement could be made.
Lender could not say when the company would be able to make the formal
announcement as promised. Samsung is “still in the process of completing
internal requirements in the planning and development division. But the recent
events in South Korea do not affect Samsung’s global initiatives,” he said.
— L.C.B.
Slowing Down the Ozone Machine
The Austin Transportation Study (ATS) may soon ask the Texas Department ofTransportation (TxDOT) to slow down its area road maintenance activities on
days when high ozone levels are predicted. The proposal was presented to the
ATS at its December 11 meeting by Scott Johnson of the Austin Air Force, a
coalition of business, government, and environmental organizations dedicated to
reducing air pollution. Johnson noted that diesel construction equipment and
related road building machinery produce 20% of Austin’s nitrogen oxide, one of
the two main ozone precursors. Scott said that TxDOT began a similar policy
earlier this year in San Antonio, where, on ozone warning days, the highway
department postpones or reduces use of asphalt materials, mowing, and road
maintenace activities that create traffic congestion.
However, State Representative Michael Krusee of fast-growing Williamson County
demanded a cost-benefit analysis of the proposal. “How much is it going to cost
TxDOT if we have 25 or 30 ozone action days?” asked Krusee, “and do they they
have to keep paying workers on days that they shut down?”
“How much will it cost if we have all that stuff in the air?” retorted State
Senator Gonzalo Barrientos. “The bottom line is that we need to step back and
look at the whole broad picture of what we’re doing to the air.”
State Representative Sherri Greenberg added that another cost to consider is
that of becoming a non-attainment area according to federal air standards,
which would place expensive federal controls on the region.
Both the Austin Air Force and TxDOT are supposed to provide estimates of costs
and benefits at ATS’s February meeting. Johnson commented that health benefits
derived from preventing ozone exceedences might be hard to evaluate in purely
monetary terms.
Dan Krause, Office Manager of the Sierra Club, told the ATS that the key to
solving air pollution is to build mass transit instead of roads. He noted that
no Texas city has yet used powers granted by the 1991 Intermodal Surface
Transportation Efficiency Act that allow shifting federal money from the
National Highway System (NHS) to transit. (See transportation story, p.18.)
“Capital Metro can’t afford to build light rail,” said Krause, “Why can’t we
set a precedent and help Capital Metro?”
Barrientos rejected Krause’s suggestion, explaining that the Texas
constitution prohibits using NHS funds for transit. Krause argued that while
Texas’ gasoline tax may be constitutionally dedicated to road building, the
same does not apply to NHS money, which comes from the federal gasoline tax.
After the meeting, TxDOT’s Urban Transportation Administrator, Ed Collins,
confirmed that Texas metropolitan organizations like the ATS can, in fact,
request transfers of NHS funds to transit. — N.E.
Editor’s note: In light of UT Chancellor William Cunningham’s recent
resignation from Freeport-McMoRan’s board, the Chronicle will not run a
transcript of the chancellor’s remarks to KOOP “Austin Air Waves” host Jim
Ellinger concerning the developer’s Indonesian mining operations.
n
This article appears in December 22 • 1995 and December 22 • 1995 (Cover).
