Archive for September 25th, 2006

Daily Journal biz editor on China: ‘Wow’

Monday, September 25th, 2006

Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal business editor Dennis Seid on the week he spent recently with a local delegation exploring trade opportunities abroad: “I could devote a year’s worth of columns about what I experienced in a week in China…My impressions of China are almost impossible to put in a sentence, much less a single word. However this one will suffice for now: “wow.”

Public has a right to know ‘just the facts’

Monday, September 25th, 2006

Writes Sid Salter in his Sunday column for The Clarion-Ledger: “Mississippi’s newspapers aren’t interested in getting forensic criminal evidence details on every crime and they aren’t interested in publishing information that causes crimes not to be solved. But providing basic information about crimes is a central mission of journalism in the role of alerting the public to dangers or potential dangers.

Author: Time for Truth and Reconciliation

Monday, September 25th, 2006

Howard Ball, author of “Justice in Mississippi: The Murder Trial of Edgar Ray Killen,” writes on George Mason University’s History News Network Website it’s high time for a Truth and Reconciliation Committee in the Magnolia State.

Writes Ball:   Again and again…from the Philadelphia Coalition’s Statements; and from journalists such as Donna Ladd, the Editor-in-Chief of the Jackson Free Press, the idea of a TRC-type process in Mississippi is seen as the way to reconciliation and greater equality…

Mitchell profiled in Massachusetts paper

Monday, September 25th, 2006

Clarion-Ledger investigative reporter Jerry Mitchell, fresh from being given the Lovejoy award at Colby College in Waterville, ME, is profiled in this Concord Monitor piece for his “18 years pursuing justice” in the Magnolia State.

Writes columnist Mike Pride: “(Mitchell’s) work has resulted in the jailing of four Ku Klux Klansmen who were involved in some of the most horrific killings of the Civil Rights era. The four are the assassin of Medgar Evers; the man who ordered the firebombing that killed Vernon Dahmer, a leader of the NAACP; one of the church bombers who killed four girls in Birmingham, Ala.; and a man involved in the killings of civil rights workers James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner on the day after they arrived in Mississippi.

Who’s Who among proud Mississippians

Monday, September 25th, 2006

Writes correspondent Pam Firmin in The Sun Herald: A beautiful just-released coffee-table book, “Proud to Call Mississippi Home,” about famous Americans from Mississippi makes the local reader very proud and a little bit crazy at the same time. It’s a post-Katrina effort to show a viable Mississippi. The book is both contemporary and traditional and it uses glitz and glamour as glue. The book’s lyrical theme is that Mississippi is a state of mind and a good place to call home.

Pulitzer-prize winner William Raspberry, a native of Okolona, is referenced in the volume.

State Farm probing engineer’s work

Monday, September 25th, 2006

State Farm has ordered an independent investigation into one of its vendors and suspended work with Haag Engineering Co. based on an Oklahoma jury’s finding that the insurance company used Haag reports to maliciously deny policyholder claims, The Sun Herald reports. The Insurance Journal trade newspaper is following the story.