Chapter 8

THERE WAS THE STORY about Dr. Aderhold’s wife’s chicken. Dr. O.C. Aderhold, was president of the University of Georgia, and he lived in a stately mansion on Prince Avenue.

Mrs. Aderhold had a pet chicken. I seem to remember the chicken’s name was Hilda, but it could have been Rhonda. No, Rhonda was the waitress at the Open House who didn’t have any teeth and used to sit at the counter during her breaks gumming pickles out of the counter pickle jar, which was something to see and something the Daily News should have done a story about. Hilda was a girl who worked back in the mail room, I think. It was twenty-five years ago. Who cares what the chicken’s name was?

Anyway, one day, Mrs. Aderhold’s pet chicken (maybe it was Veronica) climbed up in a tree in Mrs. Aderhold’s yard and wouldn’t come down. Mrs. Aderhold tried to get her chicken down out of the tree for hours, but the chicken wouldn’t budge. Mrs. Aderhold was afraid the chicken would catch cold at that altitude, or would be carried off to the Casbah by a lecherous chicken hawk. You know how they are.

When she panicked, she did what any wife of the president of a large southern institution would do when she couldn’t get her pet chicken (Florence?) to come down out of a tree.

She called the fire department.

Larry Young covered the story. We had photographs. Glenn Vaughn made it the lead story in the Daily News the next morning. Who remembers what the Banner-Herald led with?

“THE RESCUE OF MRS.
ADERHOLD’S CHICKEN”

screamed the 72-point, eight column headline.

And then:

By LARRY YOUNG
Daily News City Editor

A pet chicken owned by Mrs. O.C. Aderhold, wife of University president Dr. O.C. Aderhold, wouldn’t come down from a tree in front of her stately Prince Avenue home yesterday, so the Athens Fire Department came to the rescue.

Answering a call from Mrs. Aderhold at 2:17 P.M., Athens fireman arrived on the scene at exactly 2:20 and had the chicken safely out of the tree in a matter of moments.

“I just love that chicken,” Mrs. Aderhold said. “I don’t know what I would have done had it been carried off by a chicken hawk. You know how they are.”

The chicken was rescued when hook and ladder engine No. 8 was driven under the tree and fireman Arnold Spintz was hoisted to the limb where the chicken was perched. With great care not to injure or alarm the chicken, he brought it down and placed it into the waiting arms of Mrs. Aderhold.

As for President Aderhold, he had no other comment except to say he appreciated what the fire department had done and was going to sleep.

The story had Athens talking for weeks. Some reacted, of course, by whispering, “How could the wife of the president of the university become so attached to a chicken?” Others simply thought it was pretty funny, while others called in with their own chicken-in-a-tree story.

A man from nearby Comer, Georgia, called to say, “Any fool knows a chicken will come down out of a tree soon as it gets hungry enough.”

A Watkinsville woman commented, “Mrs. Aderhold ought to go ahead and eat that chicken before she becomes even more attached to it.

“I had a pet chicken once, but the preacher came to eat one Sunday, and Daddy went out an’ wrung its neck and Mama fried it and served it to the preacher. I wouldn’t eat none of it myself, on account of I was so attached to it, and I was hungry all Sunday afternoon until Mama opened a can of Spam for dinner.”

A journalism professor of mine said it was embarrassing to see a daily newspaper carry a story about a chicken rescue as the banner, but that he’d had a pet chicken once and his dog killed it trying to have sex with it.

How stories get on the front page of most morning newspapers goes like this:

There’s a late-afternoon news meeting of the editors. The managing editor usually conducts the meeting, and he asks each of his or her various underlings what stories they are preparing for the first edition. Once all this information is in, there’s a roundtable discussion to decide which stories are important enough go to on the front page.

As I mentioned earlier, there is the wire budget to consider.

The managing editor will ask the wire editor, “What’s on the budget?”

The wire editor will respond, “Congress has voted to give statehood to American Samoa, the Supreme Court (which the budget always refers to as SCOTUS—you figure it out) has ruled it’s unconstitutional to turn right on red, the Russians have invaded Argentina, there’s a piece on tangerines causing cancer, and Willie Nelson has decided to shave off his beard.”

Then the city editor will come forward with the local stories of the day:

“City Council is studying a proposal to sell the entire town and all its citizens to the Japanese; something ate an entire garbage truck. Lon Dinkle’s pit bull “Skippy” is the prime suspect; the mayor has admitted he is a homosexual and will seek reelection as a Whig; a sinkhole swallowed the bowling alley and the entire Pin-Busters team; and a drive-by mooning incident has been reported by the weekly meeting of the United Daughters of the Boxer Rebellion.”

The managing editor will decide all these stories are much too interesting to go on the front page (“This ain’t no tabloid,” he will say), and the editors will be told to go back and find a lot of stuff about South Yemen and rezoning hearings.

That’s not the way we did it at the Athens Daily News. Glenn, ever the journalistic pioneer, insisted every story on the front page was worth reading, shocking other journalism instructors, who said, “If the Daily News keeps this up, it won’t last six more weeks.”

But we never let up. For instance:

* In neighboring Jackson County, the local solicitor had decided to crack down on an infamous car-theft operation. One morning, he went outside and cranked his car and his car blew up with him in it. We covered it like the Second Coming.

Three men were arrested in the incident, but a fourth was still at large. Fearing for his life because of the outrage the bombing brought, the suspect finally called Larry Young and said he would turn himself in to the newspaper if we could guarantee his safety.

The headline went something like:

“BOMBING SUSPECT GIVES
UP TO DAILY NEWS”

Scoop.

* Georgia was to play at Clemson the following Saturday. On Sunday morning, I happened to catch The Frank Howard Show. Frank Howard was head coach at Clemson and talked as if he had a mouth full of mud, which was really tobacco.

I wrote a Tuesday column, lampooning the show and quoting Coach Howard saying such words as “Heah” (here), “co-atch” (coach), “big-un” (large person), as in “Jawja’s gone brang in some big-uns ovah heah Satdy and Co-atch Dooley always has his boys ready to play.”

Wednesday morning, I was having lunch at my apartment. The phone rang. I answered it. A gravel mixer on the other end asked, “Yo’ name Grizzud?”

“That’s close,” I said.

“This is Co-atch Frank Howard at Clemsun, and I done read what you had to say ’bout me, and I’m gon’ sue you butt.”

Having not yet taken Journalism Law and knowing very little about libel laws, I panicked and drove quickly to the office to tell Glenn about the phone call from Co-atch Howard. I assumed he would go into a rage and say, “This could cost us millions.” Instead, he started hitting his fist into his palm and said, “This is great!”

He interviewed me, wrote a story, and the next day we lead with, “Clemson’s Howard Threatens Suit Against Daily News.”

Of course, there never was a suit, but it beat the Banner-Herald’s lead on rioting in South Yemen.

One evening, there was nobody but me to go to a neighboring community and investigate what various callers had told us was the local police chief running a speed-trap operation.

It was my first nonsports assignment for the paper. I had no idea what to do, since there’s no press box to sit in when you investigate a police chief operating a speed-trap operation.

What I did was drive to the little community, walk into the oneroom police station, and ask the man I saw sitting there, “Are you the police chief?”

He said that he was, and I said, “Glad to meet you. I’m Lewis Grizzard of the Athens Daily News, and I wonder if you would comment on the fact we’ve had several calls about you running a speed-trap operation.”

The chief responded with something that went like this: “Get your ass out of my office, and if I catch you back in my town again . . .”

I didn’t hear the rest of the quote because I was halfway back to Athens by this time.

“What did you get?” Glenn asked me when I got back to the office.

“Nothing,” I said. “The chief told me to get my ass out of his office, and that if he ever caught me back in his town again . . .”

Glenn didn’t need the rest of the quote. By this time he was writing a story that appeared on the front page the next morning under the headline

“POLICE CHIEF THREATENS
DAILY NEWS REPORTER”

Charges eventually were brought against the chief, incidentally, and he was run out of town. Journalism at work.

Glenn would take risks.

Dr. Aderhold had retired as president of the university, and the Board of Regents had launched a search for his replacement.

The Sunday Atlanta Journal-Constitution had run a story naming eight finalists for the job. The new president was to be introduced at an Atlanta news conference Wednesday morning.

Tuesday afternoon, Glenn said, “We’ve got to find out who it is. I want the new president’s name on the front page in the morning.”

Glenn got on the phone. Larry Young got on the phone. They called one of the candidates at his home in Missouri. The man was there, so he was ruled out. The new president would be in Atlanta, waiting to be introduced at the press conference the next morning.

For one reason or the other, six of the candidates were eliminated. That left two, a guy from Ohio or someplace and Dr. Fred Davison, vice-chancellor for the University system of Georgia.

Glenn and Larry couldn’t find either one of them by phone. It was nearing deadline.

“It’s got to be Davison,” Glenn said.

“But what if it’s not?” Larry asked him.

“Sometimes,” Glenn said, “you’ve got to roll the dice.”

The headline was above the mast the next morning. It read:

“DAVISON TO BE NAMED UNIVERSITY
PRESIDENT TODAY”

The Atlanta news conference was scheduled at eleven. Glenn and Larry, armed with copies of the paper, drove to Atlanta to be at the conference.

I had a nine o’clock journalism class that morning. One of my professors said, “If you’re not right, your paper is going to look pretty stupid.”

The Banner-Herald had only speculated the day before. Neither the Journal nor the Constitution had gone out on a limb, either.

There was an Associated Press teletype in the journalism building. At eleven, I walked over to it and waited for the Georgia split (national and international news would be interrupted for state news).

My loyalty to Glenn and the paper had grown to living-and-dying proportions by this time. What if we were wrong? Would we go out of business? Would Glenn be fired? Would my future be clouded because of my association with a newspaper that might be deemed irresponsible if we had guessed and missed?

The AP machine typed the dateline, “ATLANTA . . .”

This was it. The first letter was a D. The second was an r. A period followed.

ATLANTA—Dr. Fred Davison, vice chancellor for the University system of Georgia, was named president of the University of Georgia. . . .

I skipped my next class and went directly to the paper. When Glenn came back, he was ecstatic:

“You should have seen it!” he laughed, beating his fist into his palm. “We were standing there with all those Atlanta reporters, and as soon as Dr. Davison was announced, I started handing out copies of the paper.

“They couldn’t believe it. They couldn’t believe a little paper in Athens had scooped the world.”

Glenn also had sent a reporter to the Davisons’ home. She came back with an exclusive interview with Mrs. Davison for the following day’s paper.

The beer was cold that night. We stopped celebrating when the sun came up and Glenn had a great idea (most ideas that were crazy, and worked, were Glenn’s) about a catfish with false teeth.

Yeah, a catfish with false teeth.

If you can make the lead story in a daily newspaper a report on a chicken that wouldn’t come down from a tree, certainly you could run a story about a catfish with false teeth.

In late March, Glenn said to Larry, Wade, and me over a grease burger at the Open House, “We need to do something for April Fool’s.”

Other newspaper editors sit around and ponder series on China, suburban sewerage problems, the environment, large cracks in the earth, needed changes in the tax codes, and the coming crisis someplace in Chad, which you thought was a folk singer not a place.

Not Glenn Vaughn. Every day’s newspaper presented him with the opportunity for an adventure. If there were more newspaper editors like Glenn, there actually would be a lot of interesting things to read in the paper, like somebody broke into Lurleen Furgesson’s house down the street last night and stole her La-Z-Boy recliner and skinned her cat. Who cares about Chad when there is great stuff like that?

So Glenn had this idea. He dispatched Larry Young and a photographer out to Pete Dickens Lake, west of Athens. Pete Dickens had one of those lakes where you could pay a dollar or so and catch all the catfish you could haul out of the lake.

Catfish make tasty eating, unless you’ve seen one up close. Up close, they look like skinned, slimy cats. It’s also unappetizing to see somebody clean a catfish. What you do—and I’m not making any of this up—is you find a tree and nail the catfish’s head to it.

Then you take a tool like a pair of pliers and you pull the catfish’s skin off the catfish. Then, of course, you have to cut the catfish open and remove everything you wouldn’t want to eat, such as the catfish’s gallbladder.

I’ve seen catfish up close and I have seen catfish being cleaned, but I have a strong stomach and I still have been able to eat catfish through the years, which also has something to do with newspapers other than the obvious tie-in that newspapers make great wrapping for fish.

Most newspapers have started to pay decent wages, but in 1965 a person could starve on a newspaper salary. That’s where all-u-can-eat catfish places come in. All over the South there were those kinds of places with names like “Catfish King” and “Catfish Corner,” that advertised “All the Fried Catfish U-Can-Eat, $2.95.”

That usually included all the French fries and coleslaw you could eat, not to mention all the rolls, butter, and iced tea you could consume.

I would expect that I ate catfish around thirty times a year during my early career as a newspaper man. I also used to hide some of the rolls in my pocket and walk out with them. I tried getting out with a couple of extra catfish one night, but the waitress noticed a dorsal fin sticking out of my back pocket and summoned the manager. He made me put it back on my table, but at least some of the tartar sauce was left to give the roll a little flavor.

So Glenn’s idea was for Larry to catch a catfish out of Pete Dickens Lake, put on it a pair of false teeth—procured from I know not where—then have a picture taken of it.

I’m not certain how much the catfish Larry caught weighed, but it was a fairly good-sized catfish, certainly too large to fit inside anybody’s back pocket.

Somebody, I’m not clear who, hit the catfish on the head with a hammer, rendering it unconscious, which is a good idea when you’re trying to put a pair of false teeth into a catfish’s mouth. Otherwise, the catfish will be jumping all around with all that slime, which makes them hard to hold on to. Plus, catfish will fin the dickens out of you, unless they are dead or knocked out.

Larry put the false teeth in the comatose catfish’s mouth (Good name for a catfish restaurant, huh? The Comatose Catfish), and the photographer took a picture of it.

We ran the picture of the fish on the front page of the paper the next morning, accompanied by a story written by Wade Saye that began:

Anglers from all over the Southeast were astounded to learn that a catfish caught out of Pete Dickens Lake, west of Athens, was wearing a pair of false teeth.

The story went on about a fictitious fisherman who caught the fish.

“Dangest thing I ever saw,” the fisherman was quoted as saying.

Fictitious game and fish wardens were also quoted, and the story came off as completely straight.

We got a call from Australia. A local minister phoned and said it was a sign the world was going to end soon.

I answered one call. The man said, “Y’all made that up about the fish, didn’t you?”

I said, “Absolutely not”

And he said, “Come on. You can tell me the truth. Y’all just made it up, didn’t you?”

Again, I assured the man the story was for real.

The man said, “Hold on a minute.” Then he turned away from the phone and said, “Earl, come over here. This man at the paper said they just didn’t make that up about that fish.”

Then he talked to me again, and said, “I told Earl y’all didn’t make that up about that fish, but he won’t believe me.”

Earl came on the line.

“Y’all didn’t just make that up about that fish?” he asked.

“It’s all true,” I said.

“Caught on a red wiggler or a Loosiana pink?” the man asked.

“Wiggler,” I answered.

“Blue cat?”

“Channel.”

“You ain’t shittin’ me?”

“I’m not.”

“Well, ’bye.”

“Good-bye,” I said.

The fish captured Athens’s imagination. It was the main topic at Rotary. Bubber, down at Bubber’s Bait and Beer Store, said, “I caught a fish one time in Florida, and when I cut him open, there was a man’s watch inside. I wonder if the paper wants to do a story on me?”

A week after the April 1 catfish story ran, Glenn put the photograph back on page one with a headline that said, “APRIL FOOL, ATHENS!”

Nobody got mad.

Somebody did phone in to say he had spotted a large black bear on the outskirts of Athens. Page one. For several days.

“BEAR STALKS ATHENS”

We never knew if there was a bear or not, but people talked about it for days, and Glenn milked the story for all it was worth.

There was a legendary whorehouse in Athens, known to generations of University of Georgia students as Effie’s. When Effie died, Glenn put her obit on page one, under a headline that said, “PROMINENT BUSINESS WOMAN DIES.” Later, when they tore down Effie’s old place, somebody went by and loaded a trunk with bricks from the house and passed them out with a plaque that read, “A LITTLE PIECE OF EFFIE’S.”

 

Newspapers really should print more rumors. There’s nothing like a good rumor to attract readership.

Sportswriters are best when it comes to planting a rumor. On a slow news day, you simply call the manager of, say, the Atlanta Braves, and ask him, “Is there any truth in the rumors that say you’re going to trade Dale Murphy to the Mets?”

The manager says, “Are you crazy?”

And then you write a story with a headline that says, “BRAVES PILOT DENIES MURPHY TRADE RUMORS.”

I don’t think Glenn made up the alleged Jeane Dixon rumor in Athens, but he did have a good time with it.

The rumor was simple: Clairvoyant Dixon was supposed to have predicted the University of Georgia coliseum would fall in during upcoming graduation ceremonies. Most newspapers would have ignored such a rumor. Not us. We reported the rumor, then investigated and ultimately told our readers Jean Dixon had forecast no such thing. A good story, a public service, and, twenty-five years later, the coliseum is still standing.

The Banner-Herald, under its old ownership, was an easy prey for Glenn Vaughn’s aggressiveness and understanding of what a small-town daily should be, above all a mirror of the community.

But the Banner-Herald was sold in 1965 to the Morris newspaper chain, out of Augusta and Savannah. Naturally, the Daily News reported a story that people from Augusta and Savannah were buying the Banner-Herald, and what does that say to you? It says, “We’re Athens. We’re your local paper.”

The new owners of the Banner-Herald put a new staff in place, moved the offices to a modern building, and changed over to offset printing, from the old hot-type method. The Daily News had been offset from the beginning, which, for one thing, enabled it to reproduce much clearer photography than our competitor.

The Morrises even attempted to buy the Daily News after they had acquired the Banner-Herald. When the owners wouldn’t sell, the Banner-Herald, with much greater resources than the Daily News, simply vowed to run us out of business.

It wouldn’t happen. By this time, the Daily News had become the legal organ of the county, and its ad lineage was way ahead of its competition.

And, as I mentioned earlier, we were charmed. The Newspaper God saw our need and filled it. He sent us Brown Cline Stephens.