|
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Speaking today at The University of Alabama’s
winter commencement ceremony, Brandt Ayers, editor and publisher
of The Anniston Star, said that the Baby Boomer generation, like
the World War II generation, should be considered great for what
they have accomplished.
“Our generation faced an agenda of tyranny, war, poverty
and race about which it was impossible to be ambivalent. So with
apologies to Tom Brokaw, you might call our generation the ‘Second
Greatest Generation’,” said Ayers.
“Our generation achieved a victory over fear and prejudice
which made the Founding Fathers balk and lose heart, a victory that
even 620,000 dead in Civil War couldn’t secure. We helped
bring down the curtain on an entire civilization, which was a denial
of the Declaration of Independence. We have stood at the Berlin
wall and seen it chewed to bits, as if by giant rats, and witnessed
the sudden disappearance of an Iron Curtain. We have seen the triumph
of Democracy from the Urals to the Rhine,” he said.
However, Ayers said current events have put America on the defensive.
“Wrestling in the desert with a puny dictator isn’t
a real test of either military or moral power. Surely we should
hunt down and swat cold-eyed, murderous terrorists wherever we find
them, but Homeland Security is merely a chain link fence - no more
effective against the pestilence of terrorism than disease-bearing
mosquitoes,” he said.
Ayers encouraged UA graduates to also become a great generation.
“You can end the defensive crouch, regaining the offensive
with the most powerful weapons we have, America’s most admired
weapons: the incredible transforming power of our ideals and our
economy.”
“ To achieve a final victory over terrorism, the Next Great
Generation will need to focus the arsenal of diplomatic, economic,
intelligence, informational and moral power on draining the swamp
of Islamic hatred, replacing the feudal breeding ground of terrorism
with 21st century democratic capitalism in the Middle East.”
In his speech, Ayers also spoke of the Institute the Anniston
Star will form to train journalists at The University of Alabama.
“As our day lengthens into twilight, we want to leave something
worthwhile: an Institute that will keep our newspapers from becoming
just an undistinguished link in a long corporate chain and, in partnership
with the University and the Knight Foundation, advance the art of
community journalism,” said Ayers.
Yesterday, The Anniston Star announced the formation of a nonprofit
institute that will train journalists through The University of
Alabama and eventually own the northeast Alabama newspaper. The
Star and three smaller newspapers comprise Consolidated Publishing
Co., of which Ayers is chairman. Consolidated Publishing eventually
will transfer all its stock to a nonprofit foundation that will
support the newspapers, the institute and other projects. Under
the plan, the company will form the Ayers Institute, which will
work with the university to establish an honors graduate program
in community journalism, with classes taught at the papers.
For the past three generations, the Ayers’ family has run
The Anniston Star, which the Columbia Journalism Review recently
ranked among the 35 best newspapers in the nation. Time Magazine
has twice named it “one of the best small newspapers in the
United States.” Ayers, a 1959 alumnus of UA, has also had
articles, essays, and reviews appear in The New York Times, The
Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times and many other papers and
magazines. Over 30 newspapers carry his syndicated column, “Out
Here.” He has co-authored or contributed chapters to five
books, including “Dixie Dateline: A Journalistic Portrait
of the Contemporary South” and the highly acclaimed “You
Can’t Eat Magnolias.” He is also a frequent commentator
for National Public Radio’s Morning Edition. He was inducted
in UA’s Communication Hall of Fame in October 2000. His other
honors include a Nieman Fellowship to Harvard University, serving
as a Pulitzer Prize juror, and receiving an honorary doctorate from
The University of Alabama at Birmingham.
With this graduating class of 1,100, UA has awarded more than
183,000 degrees since its founding in 1831 as the state’s
first public university. UA holds commencement ceremonies three
times a year.
|