Category Archives: Bird People

Steve Wise interview

steve wise2Steve Wise is a long time member of The Great Speckled Bird staff. He is working on his book concerning the times and underground papers.

(This was shot on the very northern edge of Piedmont Park across from [The Great Speckled Bird]  office at 240 Westminster Drive. and down the wooded hill from the Atlanta Botanical Gardens. We occupied that office from the fall of 1971 until May, 1972, when it was fire-bombed. My guess is that the pic was shot in December, 1971)

First row: Barbara Aiken, Stephanie Coffin, and Marjorie Jordan.  Second row: Roger Friedman (wearing the ram's horns), Robin Boult, and Bob Dorland [RIP].  Third row: Lucia Droby, Morris Brown [RIP], Teddi Vaile, and me. Back row: Ron Ausburn [RIP], Candy Hamilton, Zachary Coffin being held by Joaquín Eugene Guerrero, Charlie Cushing, someone hidden, Nancy Jones Presley, Blues (Michael Teece), and Carter Tomassi.
First row: Barbara Aiken, Stephanie Coffin, and Marjorie Jordan.
Second row: Roger Friedman (wearing the ram’s horns), Robin Boult, and Bob Dorland [RIP].
Third row: Lucia Droby, Morris Brown [RIP], Teddi Vaile, and me. Back row: Ron Ausburn [RIP], Candy Hamilton, Zachary Coffin being held by Joaquín Eugene Guerrero, Charlie Cushing, someone hidden, Nancy Jones Presley, Blues (Michael Teece), and Carter Tomassi.

 

 

 

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All recordings copyright the strip project 

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emory conservative

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beyond bird

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future media

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music biz

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radio

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Tom and Stephanie Coffin interview

The Coffin’s art house

 

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Tom and Stephanie Coffin are among the most creative and industrious people you could ever meet.  Since arriving here in the mid sixties for Emory grad school, they have contributed much to the quality of life in Atlanta. They were among the group that birthed and raised The Great Speckled Bird to be “the Wall Street Journal of Underground newspapers”, as 60 Minutes called them. Without The Bird it is unlikely Atlanta would have had such a counter culture.

All recordings copyright the strip project

 

Arriving in Atlanta

hard work of creating a newspaper

The Bird introduces counter thought to the region

The Bird introduces counter thought to the region

West Coast influences

The Albany Movement

stepping on the Atlanta stage

protective aura of a woman with small child

too hot at the Byron Pop Festival

trouble finding housing

Seattle roots and Beat bloodline

1968

Stephanie and son stroll The Strip

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Stephanie with son Zac in stroller in front of Atlantis Rising on The Strip

 

 

 

 

 

 

2014 Zac Coffin by hois sculpture at 10th and Peachtree
2014 Zac Coffin by his sculpture at 10th and Peachtree

Caught for history

The Strip to 14th Street

Talkin’ to Tom Coffin

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Atlanta’s Lorax; Tom speaks for the trees.

Tom was later the head arborist for Atlanta, charged with protecting our tree canopy. The developers were upset with  him for doing a good job and not giving them free reign, so fellow travelers in city government fired him as incompetent. He sued the city and he won in court as a whistleblower on corruption. Now he continues the fight to keep Atlanta’s trees healthy through The Tree Next Door organization.

 

 

 

starting The Great Speckled Bird

Most memorable moments

Mini-riot on 14th Street

Colony Square developers destroy the street

Life at The Birdhouse on 14th

Emory Herald Tribune leads to The Bird

1970s bring back harder times

 

 

 

Miller Francis interview

miller1Miller Francis grew up in Anniston, Alabama in a working class family. He was in high school when a Freedom Rider bus was attacked and burned just outside of town.

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Inspired by the example of Harper Lee and “To Kill A Mockingbird”, he studied fiction writing at the University of Alabama. There he watched as then-Governor George Wallace took his stand for racial segregation in the schoolhouse door, and met Vivian Malone and James Hood after they were admitted as students.
He joined thousands at a rally in the former capitol of the Confederacy to welcome those who had marched for civil rights from Selma to Montgomery. In 1967 he refused induction into the Army in protest against the Vietnam War. He married Kathy McLaughlin, once in the Catholic student center with family members, and second in a large, public Wed-In on the campus quadrangle on the day “Sgt Pepper” was first released. They moved to Atlanta, where he was later arrested and where the ACLU took his legal case. (The Army ordered a second physical exam in which it discovered a pre-diabetic condition; charges were dropped only two weeks before trial was to begin.) For several years, Miller did legal secretarial work for Attorney Charles Morgan at the Southern Regional Office of the ACLU, and the Atlanta Legal Aid Society, as well as free lance work for Angela Davis’ attorney, Howard Moore.

Best Miller Francis Articles from The Great Speckled Bird

Miller Francis

  All recordings copyright the strip project

Alabama when the Freedom Riders came through

Miller Francis
Miller Francis

As forces for radical change gained momentum in the Sixties, Miller was drawn from fiction writing to another road. He became more active politically, writing only non-fiction, while continuing to demonstrate for civil rights and against the Vietnam War. At the height of the social upsurge, he lived for a time in an Atlanta commune called The Heathen Rage, and wrote music and film reviews for “The Great Speckled Bird”, a weekly underground newspaper. Some of his articles were reprinted by other underground newspapers, and he also contributed briefly to Rolling Stone and Cream (including a review of Music To Eat by The Hampton Grease Band). He covered national events such as the Woodstock Music Festival, the Memphis Blues Festival and the Ann Arbor Blues & Jazz Festival. His enthusiastic “discovery” article about The Allman Brothers Band’s first performance in Piedmont Park is still being quoted (Scott Freeman, “Midnight Riders: The Story of the Allman Brothers Band”). As early as 1969, Rolling Stone Magazine called Miller “one of the best rock and roll writers the underground has produced. . .unique in his ability to place rock in the perspective of the revolution”. In his book “The Paper Revolutionaries”, Laurence Leamer called Miller “the most articulate of the cultural radicals. [He] maneuvers the symbols of cultural radicalism with the subtlety and sureness of Marx working with the tools of economic determinism.” As different social movements began to develop, Miller also wrote articles dealing with the oppression of women and homosexuals.

Changes come to The South

Atlanta calls!

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Miller awaits the GBI with “Boy”, Tracy Shepard, at Heathen Rage on 14th Street

1967 caught in the draft

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Miller and his first wife

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Miller Meets The Bird

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Movie freak starts writing movie reviews

 

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Tracy Shephard, Lenden Sandler, Miller Francis, Dee McCargo on at Heathen Rage 14th

Draft resistors

Gay Declaration

About these photos

Heathen Rage – At the height of the social upsurge, Miller lived for a time in an Atlanta commune called The Heathen Rage, and wrote music and film reviews for “The Great Speckled Bird”, a weekly underground newspaper.

Heathen Rage at Piedmont Park concert
Heathen Rage at Piedmont Park concert

Awaiting arrest by the GBI

Piedmont Park and the Allman Brothers

Allman Brothers story

And all the other Freaks will share my cares…

writing for The Bird

Miller’s Woodstock experience

Miller Googles himself

Living on 14th Street

Liberation for all!

You may say I’m a dreamer …

 

 

Og King of Basham aka Bud Foote

http://tigernet.princeton.edu/~cl1952/FooteAJC.htm

 A letter from Mikki Foote

Bud Foote, 74, activist, pursued a better world

> By HOLLY CRENSHAW
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
> Published on: 03/16/05

Bud Foote was a folk-singing, rabble-rousing, protest-marching, storytelling, left-leaning activist. But only in his spare time.

The rest of the time he was a French-speaking, speed-reading, book-reviewing, poetry-writing, Princeton-educated scholar.

He hung out with ’60s folkies Joan Baez and Pete Seeger — who recorded one of his songs — became friends with science fiction author Isaac Asimov, penned articles for academic journals and such underground newspapers as Atlanta’s now-defunct The Great Speckled Bird, and wrote dozens of songs for political demonstrations and civil rights rallies.

“Bud had a continuing concern for the people who somehow get left out of the political equation,” said his wife, Ruth Anne Foote of Atlanta. “He was a radical and he was a feminist and he always had a vision of a better world where the doors are open to more people.”

Irving Flint “Bud” Foote, 74, died of complications from a stroke Saturday at his Atlanta home. The body was cremated. The memorial service is 4:30 p.m. today at Oakhurst Presbyterian Church. Wages & Sons Funeral Home, Stone Mountain, is in charge of arrangements.

He had a bachelor’s degree from Princeton University and a master’s from the University of Connecticut and taught at Georgia Tech from 1957 to 1999.

He delighted in teaching survey English classes to technically inclined students and became legendary for freewheeling lectures that hitchhiked through the galaxy. He started a speed-reading program, based on his own practice of racing through a couple of books a day, and developed courses in African-American literature.

Mr. Foote, who named his cats after mythological characters, founded Tech’s hugely popular science fiction studies program.

He donated his collection of 8,000 volumes to its library. He collected musical instruments, a habit fueled by his early coup of scoring a valuable Martin guitar at a used furniture store for $10.

“Bud was definitely a raconteur, and I could listen to him for hours,” said friend Bill Hoffman of Silver Spring, Md. “He could be talking about something completely different and the next thing you know, he was quoting Keats or some philosopher. Everything he read, he took in.”

Harlon Joye of Atlanta, host of WRFG-FM radio’s “Fox’s Minstrel Show,” said Mr. Foote wrote scores of original songs and would take a melody such as Woody Guthrie’s “This Land Is Your Land” and add lyrics that lambasted Georgia’s Department of Transportation when it was planning construction through Atlanta’s intown neighborhoods.

Mr. Foote’s daughter, Anna Copello of Atlanta, who sang with him as part of the Adamantly Egalitarian String and Reed Corps, said folk, jazz and blues musicians — from Buffy Sainte-Marie and Bernice Johnson Reagon, to brothers Nat and Cannonball Adderley — would stop by their home while passing through town.

“No party was complete unless Dad got out his guitar and we sang,” she said, “and no dinner conversation was ever the same twice.”

Survivors include five sons, William Lewis Foote III and James Murray Foote, both of New York, and Joseph Nathaniel Foote, Samuel Joshua Foote and Lewis Ford Foote II, of Atlanta; his mother, Margaret Flint Foote of Concord, N.H.; his brother, William Lewis Foote II of Wolfeboro, N.H.; and four grandchildren.

 

http://tigernet.princeton.edu/~cl1952/Foote.htm

Irving Flint Foote

Irving Flint “Bud” Foote, was born August 19, 1930, in Linconia, New Hampshire to Lewis Ford and Margaret Flint Foote. He grew up in Lincoln, Northwood and Goffstown, New Hampshire and graduated from Goffstown High School in l947.

Bud was an Eagle Scout.

Bud attended Princeton University. He spent his junior year in France studying at the Sorbonne and hitchhiking around Europe. This year of adventure was the source of many of his ideas about food, drink, jazz clubs and how to live the good life. He crafted his adventures and ideas into the stories he told, perhaps to you. He was fluent in French, opening doors to many friendships.

Princeton shaped Bud’s intellectual life and critical capacities and afforded him strong friendships that he maintained throughout his life. He was awarded honors in English when he received his Bachelor of Arts, Summa Cum Laude, from Princeton in l952; Phi Beta Kappa, First in English. In l958 Bud earned a Master of Arts in English from the University of Connecticut. He credits the UConn graduate school with teaching him how to teach college students. Friends from UConn included Mary Arnold Twining, retired Director of Doctor of Arts in Humanities and Undergraduate Humanities Programs at Clark Atlanta University, with whom he maintained a lifelong friendship.

At UConn he met and married Caryl Kenig. They had two sons, William Lewis Foote, II, and James Murray Foote, both residents of New York City.

After Bud and Cayrl divorced, he met and married Martha (Miki) Rush. They had two children, Anna Kathleen Copello and Joseph Nathaniel Foote. Both live with their families in Atlanta. Bud and Miki divorced in 1967.

Bud and Ruth Anne Quinn married in l968. They had two sons, Samuel Joshua Foote and Lewis Ford Foote, II, both of Atlanta.

Bud became an instructor in English at the Georgia Institute of Technology in the fall of l957, beginning a career that spanned 40 years. Students, books and colleagues at Georgia Tech nurtured his interests and pursuits, which included teaching, reading and writing. He developed courses in speed reading, African American literature and science fiction, and brought noted science fiction authors to campus. He also wrote topical songs in support of peace, civil rights and women’s rights. His songs of protest opposed war, highways, and a variety of other issues. He played guitar and banjo and co-founded The Atlanta Folk Music Society.

Bud was an author and poet. His publications include The Connecticut Yankee in the Twentieth Century; Travel to the Past in Science Fiction and Between Me and the Beach; Poems from Dauphin Island, and St. Petersburg Poems: A Multimedia Presentation. He wrote jacket blurbs for noted science fiction authors and book reviews for The National Review, The Atlanta Constitution and the Detroit News. Unpublished works include the poems for Ruth Anne that are included in this booklet.

Bud wrote more than 100 “Foibles” for The Great Speckled Bird, an alternative Atlanta newspaper published in the ’60s & ’70s under the pen name “Og, King of Bashan.” He presented and published scholarly papers and served as a visiting professor at the Academy of Science in St. Petersburg, Russia. He retired in 1999 as a professor from Georgia Tech’s School of Literature, Culture and Communication, and was named Professor Emeritus.

In late 1979 Bud and Ruth Anne sponsored a family recently arrived from Vietnam; Ngoc (Kim) Nuegen, her brother Thein and her two young daughters Li and Lynn, who, with their families, continue to be dear friends.

After a pin-point stroke in May 2004, Bud confronted several challenging physical episodes over the year with his usual New England stoic tenacity. On March 12, he died peacefully at home from complications of a stroke, surrounded by his wife and family members, close friends and pastor.

He is survived by a rainbow of friends from many places and the close knit family which was so important to him:

Wife Ruth Anne
Son and Daughter-in-law William Lewis II and Monica
Sons James Murray, Joseph Nathaniel, Samuel Joshua and Lewis Ford II
Daughter and Son-in-law Anna Kathleen and Roger Copello
Grandchildren Cayrl Lucia, Matthew Tyler Copello, Kathrine Margaret and Victoria Rose
Mother Margaret Foote
Brother and Sister-in-law William Lewis and Mary
Nieces Debbie Merrit and Lisa Mullin & her daughter Allison Nicole
Sister-and-brother-in-law Martha Jane Quinn and Fred Raedels
Nephews John Mark Raedels and children Elizabeth Schuyler and Jarod Mark, and Christopher Quinn Raedels, wife Edna Lynette and children Quinn Walter and Carson-Faye.

In lieu of flowers donations may be made to, The Georgia Tech Library, Bud Foote Fiction Memorial, Georgia Tech School of Literature, Communications and Culture attn: Ken Knoesple at GA Tech, Atlanta, GA, 30332-0165; or Clifton Sanctuary Ministries, Inc. 369 Connecticut Ave. NE, Atlanta, GA 30307.

The family will receive visitors at home; Tuesday March 15 from 4:00 to 8:00. Memorial services will be held at Oakhurst Presbyterian Church, 118 Second Ave. Decatur; March 16 at 4:30.

Great Speckled Memories: Back when The Bird really was The Word

http://www.politicalaffairs.net/article/view/3403/1/167

Great Speckled Memories: Back when The Bird really was The Word

By Jonathan Springston

5-10-06, 9:16 am

(APN) ATLANTA – It’s difficult to talk about the leftist scene in Atlanta in the 1960’s and 70’s without someone bringing up The Great Speckled Bird, the leftist alternative newspaper which influenced so many minds of the time. But what was The Bird? Who ran it and how did it operate?

Atlanta Progressive News has conducted extensive interviews and uncovered vast archives of The Bird’s back issues, to explain this historical phenomenon to our progressive readers of today.

In the 1960s, there were 800 underground newspapers in the United States. Many lasted a short time, but for eight and a half years, The Great Speckled Bird told the other side that other Atlanta newspapers were afraid to touch.

In 1971, Mike Wallace of CBS’s “60 Minutes” called The Bird “The Wall Street Journal of the underground press.”

But, what does it mean?

First, the name, The Great Speckled Bird, comes from a country-gospel tune of the same name.

When the initial staff members, who were considering starting an alternative paper, heard this song in 1967, they knew they had a perfect title.

A history of controversy

The first issue came out March 15, 1968 and immediately generated controversy.

The first story was titled, “What’s It All About, Ralphie?,” a eulogy for Atlanta legend and then-publisher of the Atlanta Journal Constitution, Ralph McGill. The article was highly critical of McGill’s advocacy of dropping nuclear bombs on Vietnam.

 

This would not be the last controversy. On May 26, 1969, The Bird ran a cover that featured a muscular, bearded man holding a large weapon shouting, “C’mon and Get It Motherfuckers” against a Coca-Cola background.

A month later, Atlanta Police arrested then-Business Manager of The Bird Gene Guerrero and three paper vendors for selling obscene literature to minors and violating the city’s profanity ordinance. The charges were later dismissed. When The Bird ran the news, that they had clarified the freedom of the press in Atlanta for everyone, staffers added wittily, “I wondered what made the motherfuckers change their minds?”

The Bird had a habit of criticizing the local establishment, be it the police who harassed local hippies and Bird vendors, real estate developers, or City Hall, especially then-Mayor of Atlanta Sam Massell.

The 1972 Office Firebombing

In May 1972, an unknown assailant(s) firebombed The Bird office at 240 Westminster Drive in the middle of the night.

Most of the house was destroyed along with back issues of the paper and other artifacts. A police report was filed but no arrest was ever made in connection with the crime. Most Atlanta residents denounced the attack.

But like the Phoenix rising from the ashes, The Bird emerged from the fire and continued publishing without missing a beat. Benefit dinners were held and donations were made to help the paper recover.

A Volunteer and Freelance Staff

From 1968 through 1976, things went on this way. The work was hard, the pay was low, and the harassment constant. Staff members came and went, contributing what they could when they could. The Bird retained the sporadic services of various printers willing to print the paper.

Many staff members worked on and off for pay, depending on the financial situation. Those who were paid made between $40 and $60 per week, maybe less.

Bob Goodman and Krista Brewer took extra jobs to supplement their incomes. Goodman sold copies of The Atlanta Journal Constitution out of his Volkswagen Bug. Brewer worked as a waitress.

Ted Brodek earned a satisfying wage as a Professor at Emory University and was strictly a Bird volunteer.

One volunteer who asked for her name not to be used in this article was a volunteer who lived on 14th Street. Depending on the time period, this person worked as a college English teacher, a waitress, and sold The Bird on the street.

Howard Romaine worked on and off as a volunteer and was a staff member of the Southern Student Human Relations Project for a time.

Nan Orrock was a legal secretary for Maynard Jackson, who later became Atlanta’s Mayor, and was an office manager at the ACLU’s regional office.

The early days saw the paper produced at The Birdhouse, a 1920s era two-story house, on 187 14th Street in the heart of Midtown.

The Bird cost 15 cents (20 cents outside Atlanta) and came out bi-weekly. By the end of 1968, staffers produced the paper weekly. At its peak, The Bird produced 20,000 copies, 36 pages long with 2 and 3 color covers.

Vendors made a nickel for every copy they sold and later as much as 10 cents. Subscriptions proved a valuable revenue source throughout the life of The Bird as well.

There was no explicit leadership structure, though there might have been an unspoken, implied structure. Most decisions were made democratically.

The more psychedelic midtown that once in fact existed

In those days, Midtown was the hippy and artistic haven of Atlanta. Between 10th and 14th Streets, the counterculture held sway. Many free concerts and other gatherings were held in Piedmont Park, including an early performance by The Allman Brothers.

Suburban residents would come to Midtown on the weekends to see the “freaks.” In fact, the area would become so jam-packed that it was hard to travel in the area.

The police made a habit of harassing the residents of the area for various, often bogus, reasons. The Bird produced many accounts of these incidents in their pages and made it their habit to expose unwarranted police harassment to the public.

In 1969, a police riot broke out in Piedmont Park when officers clashed with “loiterers” and “trespassers.” Police clubbed and chased people through the park and out onto 14th Street, where some who were running were caught right in front of The Birdhouse. Some Bird staffers later took affidavits from some of the victims.

The late ‘60s and early ‘70s was a low period as far as development was concerned in Midtown. Residents had abandoned the homes in the area and The Bird staff was able to negotiate a cheap rent deal for The Birdhouse.

Later, real estate developers and other business interests snatched up the land at low prices.

During the eight and half years of The Bird’s prime existence, the city continued to rezone and raise rent in Midtown to the point where the colorful inhabitants increasingly could not afford to live there. When Colony Square appeared, it marked the beginning of the kind of development seen in Midtown today.

Today’s residents of Midtown would be unable to recognize their surroundings if they traveled back in time. Small businesses and homes have been replaced with towering skyscrapers, fancy residential complexes, and hotels.

The Bird shuffled locations several times, leaving The Birdhouse for other nearby Midtown locations, including 253 North Avenue in 1970 and 956 Juniper Street in 1973, before ending up on 449 and half Moreland Avenue in Little Five Points in 1976.

A spectrum of leftist writings

For a long time, The Bird was able to operate without competition from other local alternative newspapers, allowing them to make a full-throated defense of liberal, progressive, socialist, Marxist, and Leninist issues.

The degree of how far a story was to the left depended on what the issue was and who was writing it at what time. The early years saw more radical viewpoints than the later years. The diversity of the staff led to these varying editorial positions.

The early years saw many stories about anti-war and anti-draft rallies, tales of conscientious objectors’ struggles with the law, civil rights, accounts of police harassment, geopolitical and moral stories dealing with Vietnam, labor strikes, and so much more.

Unlike today’s Atlanta Progressive News, which is written in hard news format, Bird stories ran the gamut from rigid, traditional news style pieces, to stream-of-consciousness, poetry, and freeform.

Advertisements for clothing stores, bookstores, music stores, and music festivals splashed across the pages. There were arguments about whether to include advertisements early on but advertising was another valuable source of revenue.

There were pictures; letters to the editor, some more friendly than others; cartoons; and reviews.

The Bird volunteer who asked not to be named for this story said she had worked for The Bird from 1968 until 1973 covering student and political news, helped put together a calendar of events. She told Atlanta Progressive News the task was difficult because staff members had to pound the pavement, travel by foot to universities, and keep up with the mail to create the calendar.

The Bird would learn of lectures and antiwar marches, as well as other events, by looking at university bulletin boards. This was before Creative Loafing, the Internet, and other sources existed to provide that kind of information.

Many of the freakish but brilliant sketches and drawings adorning the pages from 1968 to 1972 were created by the talented late Ron Ausburn and were reminiscent of the macabre style of gonzo sketch artist Ralph Steadman.

Writers for The Bird were united by one thing: the search for truth. The Bird existed during perhaps the most chaotic period in American history. Production played out against the Vietnam War and the Civil Rights, Free Speech, and Women’s Rights Movements.

News and Activism as Overlapping Goals

For many staffers, involvement in progressive politics did not begin with work at The Bird. Many early staffers were already well trained in civil rights, anti-war demonstrations, and organizing.

Goodman, who wrote for The Bird for four years starting in 1968 covering transportation, labor, and anti-war issues, was opposed to the Vietnam War before reaching The Bird.

The time Goodman spent at the University of Missouri allowed him to work with the Congress of Racial Equality to organize sit-ins before moving to Atlanta in 1966 to teach at Morehouse College while doing graduate work. Goodman left before he could finish his doctoral degree.

Brewer, who wrote for The Bird in the early ‘70s covering local issues, came from “liberal, non-activist” parents and wrote some for her high school and college newspapers. She became interested in feminism and joined The Bird after seeing an advertisement.

Brodek was opposed to the Vietnam War strictly for geopolitical reasons. It was during the two years he spent in Germany before coming to Atlanta in 1967 that he heard about the atrocities happening in Vietnam that turned his opposition into a moral one.

Romaine, who also came to Atlanta in 1967 with his wife Anne after finishing his Master’s Degree in Philosophy, was interested in the Civil Rights Movement in the South and the electoral politics that grew out of that.

These issues were the main topics Romaine covered during his time at The Bird. Anne also wrote for The Bird, including a review of a Joan Baez book.M

Orrock became involved in progressive politics when she participated in 1963’s March on Washington, the site of Martin Luther King Jr.’s famous “I Have a Dream” speech. That march “really changed my thinking” on racism and segregation, Orrock said.

In 1967, Orrock and her husband moved to Atlanta. Along with five others, including Anne and Howard Romaine, Orrock helped start The Bird with the goal of providing a different perspective on the issues. Orrock sold papers, set type, and wrote stories, particularly about labor and women’s issues, working on and off for pay.

The End of the Beginning

By late 1972, things began to change at The Bird. One office had been firebombed, leaving the paper and its staff in limbo for months. The cost of the paper had risen to 20 cents and would later climb to 25 cents per issue in March 1973.

1972 and 1973 marked the time some original staffers began leaving The Bird to pursue political activities full-time.

New members came on board and began toning down the paper, both in layout and content, putting more emphasis on local news and investigative pieces. Female staffers had also begun to demand equal pay and opportunities, as the feminist movement grew stronger.

The death of Ausburn in 1972 also contributed to a more basic format. Clever graphics and sketches gave way to simpler drawings and more photographs.

The Midtown community was changing too. The hippies and the rest of the artistic community slowly departed the area, leaving mainly winos and dope peddlers, thus leaving the paper with fewer vendors.

The Bird tried putting the paper in more stores and purchasing several vending boxes at $35 to $40 a pop to boost sagging sales. This method created some success but the move was not extensive enough.

Falling finances forced staffers to work for free again. Financial issues forced the paper back to biweekly publication in 1973 and finally to monthly in 1976.

The Atlanta Gazette and Creative Loafing both launched in the mid-1970s, drained advertising from The Bird, and proved to be formidable competition.

Ominous signs of closure began looming in 1973 when staffers kicked around the idea of folding the paper before a last ditch effort was made to save The Bird.

Throughout 1976, staffers held benefit dinners, rummage sales, and asked for money and resources to save the paper but to no avail. October 1976 saw the last issue of The Bird published with the caveat that production would be suspended “indefinitely.”

Several other factors contributed to The Bird’s demise in addition to those mentioned above. A lack of a political consensus and the heavy workload for little or no pay factored greatly in the decision. Staffers, after all, needed funds to eat and pay rent.

The Great Speckled Revival

In 1984, two separate groups tried to revive The Bird. One group was comprised of some original staffers while the other was comprised of newcomers. Lack of interest, misunderstandings, and lack of funding made for a short revival.

The third and latest reincarnation of The Bird was recently launched at the April 1, 2006, antiwar rally at Piedmont Park. This is the same day The Atlanta Progressive News print edition also debuted. In full disclosure, Barry Weinstock of The Bird currently does the printing for The Atlanta Progressive News.

Barry Weinstock, who helped print The Bird during the initial run and edited during the second run, is leading the latest charge to bring back the paper along with Tom Ferguson and Darlene Carra, both involved with the second Bird run.

Volunteers launched bird.thinkspeak.net to supplement the monthly publication.

Content includes international and national political news as well as some cartoons, letters, and stories from other writers who wish to send their work in to the paper for consideration.

They were wild. Where are they now?

Former staffers continue to work for progressive causes. Brodek does not participate in journalism anymore, instead working as a translator and a mediator. He is involved with the Georgia Peace and Justice Coalition and antiwar rallies.

Brewer left The Bird in early 1974 to pursue an opportunity to start a third political party in New York. Today she is a volunteer for a local chapter of the Women’s Action for New Direction.

Goodman participates in the antiwar rally at the CNN Center every Thursday and is involved with other antiwar efforts.

The Bird volunteer who asked not to be named said she left The Bird in 1973 to help Radio Free Georgia (WRFG-FM) get off the ground. “I really missed it when the paper folded,” she said. “It was an exciting time.”

Romaine organized George McGovern’s Georgia primary campaign in 1972 and helped deliver the state’s primary to the Democratic Party’s future nominee. After being involved in a serious accident that left him with a broken back in 1973, Romaine went on to attend law school at Louisiana State University in 1974.

His wife Anne passed away in 1995. He is now an attorney in Atlanta who writes poetry from time to time.

Orrock left the paper around 1971. She did attend some planning meetings of The Bird’s second revival but was not heavily involved in the reincarnation. In 1986, Orrock won a seat in the Georgia House and has been there ever since.

This year, she is running for an open state Senate seat that incorporates the area running south from Lennox Square to Clayton County and encompasses much of the east side of Atlanta. Orrock was featured in an Atlanta Progressive News article recently, “Georgia at a Crossroads, Orrock Says.”

APN could not interview all the people who contributed to The Bird over the years because their numbers are great. And there was certainly a lot of history that has gone uncovered here, so let this be not the end but the beginning of our journey down memory lane.

Weinstock hopes the newest incarnation of The Bird will become as successful as the original.

Issues of The Bird from 1968 through 1976 are archived on microfilm in the Woodruff Library at Emory University and some hard copies are available through Emory’s rare manuscript section. This is an excellent historical resource highly recommended by APN.

From Atlanta Progressive News

–About the author: Jonathan Springston is a Staff Writer covering local issues for Atlanta Progressive News and may be reached at jonathan@atlantaprogressivenews.com

Best Miller Francis Articles from The Great Speckled Bird

Here are some of the best of Miller Francis’ articles from The Great Speckled Bird:

First Allman Brothers public concert

Bob Dylan

“Suck Rock”  Oct 13, 1969 (Hampton Grease Band with interview)

“Mass Music”  Dec 8, 1969 (Review of first Allman Bros album)

“War On Rock”  March 30, 1970 (Allman Bros, Sanatana, and the Atlanta garbage strike)

“Contradictions Among the People”  May 4, 1970 (hip community fails to show up for benefit)

“Woodstock movie review”  May 4, 1970

“Cosmic Ripoff”  June 22, 1970 (scathing review of stadium concert, music industry)

“Talkin’ Bout My Generation”  June 15, 1970  (The Who/Abbie Hoffman, written before The Who performs in Atlanta)

“Jefferson Airplane concert”  Aug 31, 1970 ( Municipal Auditorium)

The Great Speckled Bird 9/28/70 vol 3 #38 11 Nothing but The Blues Johnny Jenkins

Miki Foote and Jeannie Muse

Hi,

From 2 old Hippies who have both lived in The Dump — now living in San Diego — Miki Foote (now Miki Davis) and Jeannie Muse (now Jeannie Canaday) !!!

 Bud Foote and I lived in The Dump (ground floor in what is now the back of the house) from 1961 to late 1964 – early 1965, when Gino Venzani bought it so the House of Eng Chinese restaurant that sat back-to-back with The Dump couldn’t buy it, tear it down, and turn it in to a parking lot.

Gino is also the one who had it declared a National Historical Site so no one could tear it down. He loved that old building. I was living there when Gino first renovated it.  He kept it as apartments for quite some time.

Our son Joseph Nathaniel Foote was born in October 1964 while we were still living there. He now lives in Decatur.

Would you like some pictures of our family taken in The Dump when we lived there?

Hope you got some of Jim Bray’s Art for display.  His studio was on the ground floor in the center in the rear.  Bud Foote and he were great friends.

One night Jim was having a family fight, got drunk, came to The Dump, took all of his paintings out in to the yard, piled them up, poured paint thinner over them and set them on fire.  A couple of the guys who lived there tried to put it out with the garden hose (not very successfully), Naomi Brown decided to get down on her knees and bow to the Great Fire Gods, and it was altogether quite a bonfire party until the fire brigade got there.

Darn near burned down The Dump that night !!

I could tell at LOT MORE stories … but most of them are unpublishable.

Can you put me in touch with Bill Fibben or any of the others.  Only ones I know how to contact in Atlanta now are Van and Martha Hall.

By the way, my daughter Anna Foote (now Anna Copello) sent me the info on this.  She was only a year old when we moved in to the Dump — she now lives in Atlanta near the Plaza Drug Store and will be at the “gathering” on July 26th.

Jeannie and I would give just about anything to be able to be there.  We’ll be think of you all.

I’ll be sending out the info on this to some more of the old crew and I’m sure you all will be hearing from some more of them.

 “Mother” Dave Braden — knew and loved him well.  He lived in The Dump when we did.

Will confer with Jeannie and we’ll send you some info.

If I remember right, he was one of the driving forces of the underground coffee house “The Catacombs.” I remember it well, too …. all black walls, black-light artwork, great wooden platters of cheese and fruit.

So dark in there you couldn’t see your hand in front of your face.  Seemed to be a forerunner of “Gothic”! It was in the basement of a house on 14th, between Peachtree and Piedmont, if my memory is still working right.

You really should include info on The Castle in your Web page.  You familiar with it?

How about Baltimore Block.  These were both very much a part of the 60s Hippie community.

Jeannie also has some great pictures — but they’re in her son’s house in Las Vegas.  We’ll try and get them to you soon.

Sorry to hear about Bill Fibben.  Many of the old originals have died:

Bud Foote

Dickie Espina (just last month), wife of Jeff Espina, now a sea captain out of Tampa, FL

Naomi Brown

Ernie Marrs

Jim Bray

(and many more I’m sure I’ve lost track of)

I’ve sent the message on to some of the old timers:  Eleanor Walden, Bill Hoffman, Pat Sky. You may hear from them, too.

Love,

Miki

greg gregory

Oh, my; I am so sorrowfully out of touch. I did not know that John Cippolina had died. He in particular, as well as QuickSilver Messenger Service have been a part of my personal story (you know, the one that makes folks politely drift away when they hear it coming for the fourteenth time) since 1968.

Actually, it was with John’s mother I first spoke. He was in the shower. She relayed conversation back and forth, at the end of which I was very excited: John had invited me to the Avalon for their gig that night–guest list, see us in the dressing room (which was not “back” stage, but out front, back a ways, and adjacent to the dance floor). Reason being–I was under recent indictment (May ’68; this was maybe mid-late summer) for “refusal to submit to physical examination for the purposes of induction into the armed forces of the savior of the free world…lada,lada, lada). The purpose of the meeting at the Avalon was to see if there were some way that QSD could play for–my trial!

Well, that never happened, even though John thought it worth looking into. I always have remembered (obviously) the way they treated me. I think John said, in response to my gratitude for inviting me to meet with them, something about how they were only musicians–but I was really stepping out to fight against that war that truly exemplified the “Pride of Man.” (That, of course, was the song that gave me the idea.) So I miss him, I miss the easy confidence that somewhere, probably in Marin Co. he’s getting old (we were born the same year), regrouping with the old crew. But he’s not.

I offer this tribute so that others of his fans may know that he cared about the humanity of this planet, in those dangerous (but truly alive!) days. -greg gregory 

[Greg Gregory and David Harris , the husband of Joan Baez, were tried at the same time for draft refusal. Greg Greg convinced the jury  of his convictions and was given a conscientious objector status; David got jail.  Greg, wife Bobby, son Quint and his rolling stuffed seal toy named Seal of the Woodstock Nation moved to Atlanta and worked for The Great Speckled Bird. They were my neighbors and later Greg hired me at Richard Abel book distribution center where several friends from Little Five Points also worked. The old sign out back said, “No Parking! Violaters will be Toad!” – very amusing when discovered stoned. Greg was an early mover and shaker in the Little Five Points B.O.N.D. neighborhoods organization that laid the groundwork for making the neighborhoods humanly liveable.]