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Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States

Monday, November 24, 2008

Remembering Gov. Cecil Underwood

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Cecil Underwood, a high school teacher who went on to hold the distinction of being West Virginia's youngest and oldest governor, died Monday at a Charleston hospital. He was 86.

Gov. Joe Manchin's office confirmed the death.

Underwood was admitted to Charleston Area Medical Center Sunday and died Monday, hospital spokesman Dale Witte said. Details about the cause of death were not immediately available.

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Former Gov. Cecil Underwood
Funeral arrangements were incomplete, Witte said.

Underwood became West Virginia's youngest governor when he won his first term in 1956 at the age of 34. He won his second term 40 years later on his 74th birthday.

"This is a very sad day for all of West Virginia,'' Manchin said in a statement released by his office. "We have lost a governor who, through his two separate terms, served our state and its citizens with honor and dignity and, most importantly, with class.''

Underwood entered politics at the age of 22, when he successfully ran as a Republican for the state House of Delegates representing Tyler County. After serving six terms in the House, he won his first four-year term as the state's chief executive.

He fought the Democratic-controlled Legislature for four years, but was unable to run for re-election because West Virginia's Constitution then limited a governor to one four-year term.

Underwood was drafted to run for governor in 1996, and defeated Democrat Charlotte Pritt, carrying 38 of the state's 55 counties.

He called his triumphant return to the governor's office "the most gratifying political experience I ever had.''

"I feel very saddened for his family,'' Pritt said. "He, as an educator, had a long, distinguished service for the state of West Virginia in many capacities.''

In 2000, Underwood attempted to serve a consecutive four-year term as governor, but lost to Democrat Bob Wise.

Wise, who is now president of the Alliance for Excellent Education, said Underwood devoted his life to West Virginia.
"He left a legacy that in so many ways has improved life for generations of West Virginians,'' Wise said in a statement. "He constantly demonstrated how to govern effectively in a bipartisan manner. He was a gentleman in the finest sense of the word.''

The success of the 1996 election came after several failed attempts to win elected office after his first term as governor.

In 1960, Underwood unsuccessfully tried to unseat popular U.S. Sen. Jennings Randolph. He lost a 1964 attempt to regain the governor's office.

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Former Gov. Cecil Underwood
Four years later, he lost the GOP's nomination for governor to U.S. Rep. Arch Moore. After losing to Moore in a close primary race, Underwood went into political exile for eight years.

Moore said the state lost a "fine West Virginian'' with Underwood's death.

"He served our state in a very excellent way,'' he said.

Underwood's return to statewide politics in 1976 was not successful. He lost to Democrat Jay Rockefeller by 250,000 votes, the worst defeat in Underwood's political career.

"He'll be remembered as someone who dedicated his entire life and career to the causes of people around him,'' Rockefeller said in a statement. "I always enjoyed working with him on opportunities to move our state forward.''

Underwood held a number of jobs between his terms as governor, including serving as president of Bethany College. He also held positions at Huntington-based Island Creek Coal Co., Monsanto Corp. and the New York Life Insurance Co.

Born in 1922 in Josephs Mills, Underwood spent all of his early years in Tyler County, graduating from Tyler County High School in 1939 and Salem College in 1943. He earned a master's degree from West Virginia University in 1952.

A high school teacher from 1943 to 1946, Underwood joined the staff of Marietta (Ohio) College in 1946. He went to Salem in 1950 as vice president, a post he held until being elected governor.

He and his wife Hovah, a native of Grantsville, were the parents of a one son, Craig, and two daughters, Cecilia and Sharon. He also had five grandchildren. Hovah died in 2004 after suffering a stroke.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Some Videos I Made of Tina Turner at Her Second Show in San Jose

Got some video of Tina Turner in concert in San Jose. This could be the last time I get the opportunity to see The Queen of Rock and Roll! Phenomenal show that leaves me exhausted every time. I don't know how a 69 year old can do what she does but I'm totally ok with her doing it!


Some shots of the Tina Turner show in San Jose!





Sunday, October 19, 2008

San Francisco hears about mountaintop removal mining.

I'm out in San Francisco this week visiting Alisha and she found a viewing of a new documentary called "Burning Our Future" playing at one of the local theaters in town. It is a documentary on the effects of mountaintop removal coal mining in West Virginia and takes a harsh look at those effects. All sides are given air time, from Bill Raney, President of the West Virginia Coal Association and Governor Joe Manchin to those that claim ill effects from the process. The film is made as an advocacy film for that second group and is focused mainly on the struggles of the Gunnoe family in Boone County.
Below, you'll find a two minute trailer on the movie which sets the tone for the piece. The lady in the black t-shirt in NYC is the Gunnoe matriarch in the movie and was at the screening and did a question and answer session following the movie here. Below that you'll find a quick review by me of the movie.




My Thoughts...
Overall, I thought that the quality of the movie was high and that the director presented West Virginians as intelligent and thoughtful (which oftentimes isn't the case)and dealt with some of the realities of coal politics in Southern West Virginia well. While I despise mountaintop removal mining I'm torn as to what should be done in exchange and the movie doesn't address that issue either but it wasn't its point. The movie does oftentimes confuse several subjects and presents them as an indictment of the industry which I found unfair. In particular the movie discusses both the effects of the actual extraction of the coal and the resulting damage to water tables, land and the flooding and declining quality of the ecosystem as well as the conversation about the burning of "clean coal" as one argument. These are two totally separate conversations and should be treated as such in my opinion.
I do suggest a look at this movie to at least understand what is happening in places like McDowell, Mingo, Boone and other counties in West Virginia, southwestern Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee but also understand that the movie has a viewpoint and it wants you to agree with it. My overall thoughts....

B+ or ***(out of four) or "Thumbs Up" which ever scale you want to you.