Maya Angelou - Official Web Site
"Always, Always Celebrating the South and Promoting a Positive Mississippi "
Monday, August 6, 2012
Sunday, August 5, 2012
Elvis Statue to Be Unveiled - Elvis Week 2012 - Tupelo, Mississippi
The statue's sculptor, William N. Beckwith, was born in Greenville, Mississippi in 1952.
He graduated from The University of Mississippi and is now the
Adjunct Assistant Professor of Sculpture at The University of Mississippi.
He created the Elvis sculpture in his studio in Taylor Mississippi.
He graduated from The University of Mississippi and is now the
Adjunct Assistant Professor of Sculpture at The University of Mississippi.
He created the Elvis sculpture in his studio in Taylor Mississippi.
On September 26, 1956, a 21-year old Presley returned to Tupelo only a few
years after leaving it to perform at the same fair he had performed at as a
10-year old. This time, as part of the Mississippi-Alabama Fair and Dairy Show,
Elvis performed two shows. A hundred National Guardsmen controlled the crowd
that came out to see the biggest star to come from their hometown.
The statue is based on an iconic image of Elvis singing “Hound Dog,” as
women raise their hands up to him with dreams they may brush his hand. The image was taken that day in September of
1956 by photographer Roger Marshutz and is titled, 'The Hand'.
'The Hand'
Elvis performing in Tupelo Mississippi,
September 26, 1956. Photo by Roger Marshutz
Saturday, August 4, 2012
Gabrielle Douglas - USA Olympic Champion 2012
Gabby gets a big hug from her China-born coach, Liang Chow
August - National Catfish Month
Congress declared August National Catfish Month in the
late 80s to recognize the contributions that the United States catfish industry
made to the economy.
Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi produce the majority of the nations catfish.
Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi produce the majority of the nations catfish.
Friday, August 3, 2012
Elvis Week 2012 - Plans Underway -Tupelo MS
Elvis Week 2012
35th Anniversary
Tupelo Itinerary
35th Anniversary
Tupelo Itinerary
Thursday, August 9, 2012
9 am – Shake Rag documentary at the Lyric with Q&A by Wsir Johnson
9 am – Shake Rag documentary at the Lyric with Q&A by Wsir Johnson
10:45 am – Fan Appreciation Day Ceremony at the Elvis Presley
Birthplace, Ribbon Cutting and Dedication of the addition followed by
music until 3 p.m. and storytellers in the chapel from 12:45 pm – 2:30
pm
6 pm – Down on Main concert/Community Celebration of Elvis with statue unveiling at 8 p.m. – Fairpark District
Friday, August 10, 2012
9 am – Conversation Panel with Roy Turner moderating featuring:
• Sara Patterson Gunter
Sara worked for Tupelo photographer Robert Kingsley. He got her back stage in the tent to meet Elvis. She placed one of the souvenir hats on him and he bent down and gave her a kiss on the cheek. Her photo came out the next month in all the movie magazines and she received letters from all over the country asking, “What was it like to kiss Elvis? Can you help me meet Elvis? etc.”
9 am – Conversation Panel with Roy Turner moderating featuring:
• Sara Patterson Gunter
Sara worked for Tupelo photographer Robert Kingsley. He got her back stage in the tent to meet Elvis. She placed one of the souvenir hats on him and he bent down and gave her a kiss on the cheek. Her photo came out the next month in all the movie magazines and she received letters from all over the country asking, “What was it like to kiss Elvis? Can you help me meet Elvis? etc.”
• Gloria Wedgeworth Reasons
Gloria’s mother chauffeured 7 girls to Tupelo from Alamo, TN to see the concert. One of whom was Judy Hopper, the girl that jumped up on stage and is in the Fox Movietone Newsreel. Gloria was at the foot of the stage with her camera and took photos from a fan’s perspective that day.
Gloria’s mother chauffeured 7 girls to Tupelo from Alamo, TN to see the concert. One of whom was Judy Hopper, the girl that jumped up on stage and is in the Fox Movietone Newsreel. Gloria was at the foot of the stage with her camera and took photos from a fan’s perspective that day.
• Sam Bell
Sam was Elvis’ childhood friend in Tupelo when he lived at 1010 N, Green (up on “the hill”). He has interesting stories of growing up playing with Elvis.
Sam was Elvis’ childhood friend in Tupelo when he lived at 1010 N, Green (up on “the hill”). He has interesting stories of growing up playing with Elvis.
• Barbara Mallory and Linda Hankins
Barbara started the Tupelo Elvis Fan Club in 1956 when she was 15 years old. She and her cousin Linda were at the concert and have fun stories to tell about the day they saw Elvis perform.
Barbara started the Tupelo Elvis Fan Club in 1956 when she was 15 years old. She and her cousin Linda were at the concert and have fun stories to tell about the day they saw Elvis perform.
• Allyson Adams
Her father Nick Adams accompanied Elvis from Hollywood to Memphis and on to Tupelo for the concert. Allyson found a box marked “Nick’s Stuff” among his things. In the box were the photos he made that day and a manuscript titled 8 Days with Elvis. It is an account of his journey with Elvis to Tupelo for the Homecoming Concert.
Her father Nick Adams accompanied Elvis from Hollywood to Memphis and on to Tupelo for the concert. Allyson found a box marked “Nick’s Stuff” among his things. In the box were the photos he made that day and a manuscript titled 8 Days with Elvis. It is an account of his journey with Elvis to Tupelo for the Homecoming Concert.
11am – Fan Appreciation Day ceremony at Elvis Presley Birthplace followed by music until 3 p.m.
Special Exhibit at the Tupelo Convention and Visitors Bureau
The “Embroidered Eagle” and “Black Vine” jumpsuits were both worn by Elvis in the early 1970’s and are on exhibit in the CVB lobby. The CVB is open 8am-5pm, Monday through Friday and located at 399 East Main Street, next door to the Hilton Garden Inn.
The exhibits are free.
The “Embroidered Eagle” and “Black Vine” jumpsuits were both worn by Elvis in the early 1970’s and are on exhibit in the CVB lobby. The CVB is open 8am-5pm, Monday through Friday and located at 399 East Main Street, next door to the Hilton Garden Inn.
The exhibits are free.
The statue was sculpted by Mississippi native, William N. Beckwith based
on a September of 1956 photograph by Roger Marshutz, titled 'The Hand'.
Thursday, August 2, 2012
Ole Miss at 2012 Olympics
University of Mississippi students
past and present
Competing & involved in the
2012 Olympics London
Competing & involved in the
2012 Olympics London

The University of Mississippi was chartered on February 24, 1844.
It opened its doors to 80 students four years later, and for 23 years it was
Mississippi's only public institution of higher learning.
For 110 years, it was the state's only comprehensive university.
Known affectionately as Ole Miss, Mississippi's flagship university established the fourth state-supported law school in the nation (1854) and was one of the first in the nation to offer engineering education (1854). It was one of the first in the South to admit women (1882) and the first to hire a female faculty member (1885).
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
Olympic Equestrian Sport

The US horses traveled from
Newark NJ in a FedEx
cargo plane in specialized cargo boxes.
The horses are accompanied on the 7 hour flight
by a veterinarian and groomers.
They travel right beside the horses. The
horses travel
in the same type of conditions as humans as far as
temperature in the pressurized cabins.
They are given hay and water while someone stays
with them at all times.
Always, Always Celebrating the South and Promoting a Positive Mississippi
DID YOU KNOW... Fred Smith Founder of FED EX
(Federal Express)
is from Marks , Mississippi
Born: August 11, 1944, in Marks, Mississippi.
Education: Yale University, BA, 1966.
In 1971 Frederick Wallace (Fred) Smith came up with a revolutionary idea: delivering packages reliably overnight. With the creation of Federal Express Corporation, Smith not only offered an alternative to the mail and more traditional and slower delivery services, but he also created an industry that almost single-handedly changed the way business was conducted. In the process, Smith's company became the first American business to earn $10 billion in profits. By 2004 FedEx was delivering to 210 countries using over six hundred aircraft, 46,000 vehicles, and 141,000 employees.
![]() |
Boyd Martin & Horse Otis Barbotiere |
Martin had started out in the equestrian competition and had
completed 2 parts riding Otis Barbotiere. The final event came up and Otis Barbotiere
had developed a swollen leg. After Otis was sent to
the holding box during inspection, Martin withdrew him from competition. Equestrian fans on twitter lauded Martin for his
concern for his horses.
Last year, Martin saved Otis and several other horses from a barn fire in suburban Philadelphia. Several other horses perished in the fire that was thought to have started from an electrical problem.
Last year, Martin saved Otis and several other horses from a barn fire in suburban Philadelphia. Several other horses perished in the fire that was thought to have started from an electrical problem.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Can you spot something in this logo? The FedEx logo, designed in 1994 by
Linden Leader & Landor Associates, at first appears simple and
straightforward. However, if you look at the white space between the "E"
and "x" you can see a right-facing arrow. This "hidden" arrow was
intended to be a subliminal symbol for speed and precision.
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Monday, July 30, 2012
National Cheesecake Day
Praline-Crusted Cheesecake
(Pictured in the photo above)
Crumbled pralines and sugared shortbread make an out-of-this-world
crust for classic cheesecake.
Ingredients
- 2 cups crushed shortbread cookies (about 28 cookies)
- 3 tablespoons butter or margarine, melted
- 4 Pralines, coarsely crumbled
- 5 (8-ounce) packages cream cheese, softened
- 1 3/4 cups sugar
- 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
- 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 4 large eggs
- 2 egg yolks
- 1/3 cup whipping cream
- 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind
- 2 (8-ounce) containers sour cream
- 1/3 cup sugar
- Garnish: crumbled Pralines Pralines, coarsely crumbled
Preparation
- Combine cookie crumbs and butter. Press into bottom and up sides of a greased 10-inch springform pan.
- Bake at 350° for 8 minutes. Cool on a wire rack. Sprinkle coarsely crumbled Pralines over crust.
- Beat cream cheese at medium speed with a heavy-duty electric mixer until creamy. Gradually add 1 3/4 cups sugar, flour, and vanilla, beating until smooth. Add eggs and egg yolks, 1 at a time, beating just until yellow disappears. Stir in whipping cream and lemon rind. Pour in crust. Place on a foil-lined baking sheet.
- Bake at 350° on lower oven rack 10 minutes. Reduce oven temperature to 325,° and bake 1 hour and 20 minutes or until almost set. Cool on wire rack 1 hour.
- Stir together sour cream and 1/3 cup sugar; spread over cheesecake.
- Bake at 325° for 10 minutes. Cool on a wire rack. Cover
and chill 8 hours. Remove sides of pan. Garnish, if desired.
Southern Living
NOVEMBER 1999
NOVEMBER 1999
Sunday, July 29, 2012
Saturday, July 28, 2012
Olympic Poetry - 1912 Winner
Ode To Sport
Georges Hohrod, & M. Eschbach
(Pseudonym Pierre de Coubertin)
Awarded a prize in the sports literature
competition in the V Olympiad - Stockholm 1912.
Ode to sport
Oh Sport, pleasure of the Gods essence of
life, you appeared suddenly in the midst of the grey clearing which
writhes with the drudgery of modern existence, like the radiant
messenger of a past age, when mankind still smiled.
And the glimmer of dawn lit up the mountain tops and flecks of light dotted the ground in the gloomy forests.
II.
O Sport, you are Beauty! You are the
architect of that edifice which is the human body and which can become
abject or sublime according to whether it is defiled by vile passions or
improved through healthy exertion.
There can be no beauty without balance
and proportion, and you are the peerless master of both, for you create
harmony, you give movements rhythm, you make strength graceful and you
endow suppleness with power.
Ill.
O Sport, you are Justice! The perfect
equity for which men strive in vain in their social institutions is your
constant companion. No one can jump a centimetre higher than the height
he can jump, nor run a minute longer than the length he can run.
The limits of his success are determined solely by his own physical and moral strength.
IV.
O Sport, you are Audacity! The meaning of all muscular effort can be
summed up in the word ‘dare’. What good
are muscles, what is the point of feeling strong and agile, and why work
to improve one’s agility and strength, unless it is in order to dare?
But the daring you inspire has nothing in common with the adventurer’s
recklessness in staking everything on chance.
Yours is a prudent, well-considered audacity.
V.
O Sport, you are Honour! The laurels you bestow have no value unless
they have been won in absolute fairness
and with perfect impartiality. He who, with some shameful trick, manages
to deceive his fellow competitors feels guilt to his very core and
lives in fear of the ignominious epithet which shall forever be attached
to his name should his trickery be discovered.
VI.
O Sport, you are Joy! At your behest, flesh dances and eyes smile; blood
races abundantly through the arteries.
Thoughts stretch out on a brighter,
clearer horizon. To the sorrowful you can even bring salutary diversion
from their distress, whilst the happy you enable fully to savour their joie de vivre.
VII.
O Sport, you are Fecundity! You strive
directly and nobly towards perfection of the race, destroying unhealthy
seed and correcting the flaws which threaten its essential purity.
And you fill the athlete with a desire to
see his sons grow up agile and strong around him to take his place in
the arena and, in their turn, carry off the most glorious trophies.
VIII.
O Sport, you are Progress! To serve you, a man must improve himself
both physically and spiritually.
You force him to abide by a greater discipline; you demand that he avoid all excess.
You teach him wise rules which allow him to exert himself with the maximum of intensity without compromising his good health.
IX.
O Sport, you are Peace! You promote happy relations between peoples,
bringing them together in their shared
devotion to a strength which is controlled, organized and
self-disciplined. From you, the young worldwide learn self-respect, and
thus the diversity of national qualities becomes the source of a
generous and friendly rivalry.
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